News | 03.12.2025

Concerts with Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Sergey Khachatryan

In December 2025, Pietari Inkinen makes his debut with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, conducting concerts on the 4th and 6th at Atlanta Symphony Hall. The program brings him together again with violinist Sergey Khachatryan, with whom he appeared earlier this season in Armenia.

The evening opens with Sibelius’ Finlandia, followed by Khachaturian’s Violin Concerto with Sergey Khachatryan as soloist. After the interval, Inkinen conducts Sibelius’ Symphony No. 2, a work whose broad arcs and distinctive orchestral colour have made it a cornerstone of the composer’s symphonic output.

More information and tickets: https://www.aso.org/events/detail/sibelius-khachaturian

News | 07.03.2026

March 2026 Concerts in Japan

In March 2026, Pietari Inkinen returns to Japan for a series of concerts with four leading orchestras across the country. The tour includes performances in Hiroshima, Nishinomiya, Tokyo and Maebashi and features collaborations with pianist Kit Armstrong and cellist Yō Kitamura in programs ranging from Sibelius and Brahms to Prokofiev, Ravel and Beethoven.

News | 05.02.2026

Kuopio Symphony Orchestra: Sibelius, Dvořák and Wagner

Pietari Inkinen returns to the podium of the Kuopio Symphony Orchestra on 5 February 2026 for a concert at the Kuopio Music Centre featuring works by Wagner, Dvořák and Sibelius.

News | 15.01.2026

Pietari Inkinen makes debut with Orquestra Simfònica Illes Balears

On 15 January, Pietari Inkinen conducts a concert with the Orquestra Simfònica Illes Balears at the Auditorium de Palma de Mallorca. The programme brings together three contrasting works of the 20th century: Maurice Ravel’s “Ma mère, l’oye”, Frank Martin’s Violin Concerto - performed by Frank Peter Zimmermann - and Béla Bartók’s “Concerto for Orchestra”, which concludes the evening.

News | 12.12.2025

Concerts with Utah Symphony and Shai Wosner

Pietari Inkinen makes his debut with the Utah Symphony in two concerts at Abravanel Hall on December 12 and 13, 2025. The program brings together three contrasting works, spanning more than a century of orchestral writing.