News | 12.04.2024

Concerts with Mischa Maisky and the DRP

Pietari Inkinen conducts concerts with legendary cellist Mischa Maisky and the Deutsche Radio Philharmonie. The performances on April 12, 13 and 14 take place at the Congresshalle Saarbrücken, Konzerthaus Karlsruhe and Forum am Schlosspark in Ludwigsburg. On the program are the Prelude to Mussorgsky’s Khovanshchina “Dawn over the Moscow River”, Shostakovich’s Cello Concerto No. 1 and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7. The concert on April 19 at the Fruchthalle Kaiserslautern features the same program except for the Prelude to Khovanshchina, which will be replaced by the “Walzerzwischenspiel” from Zemlinsky’s Kleider machen Leute.

SR2 Kultur Radio will broadcast the April 12 concert in Saarbrücken live at 8:04pm CET. Link to listen to SR2’s web radio:

https://www.sr.de/sr/livestream/sr2/livestream_sr2_100.html

 

 

News | 02.06.2026

Pietari Inkinen conducts Oviedo Filarmonía with Steven Isserlis

On 4 June 2026, Pietari Inkinen conducts Oviedo Filarmonía at the Auditorio Príncipe Felipe in Oviedo, joined by the acclaimed British cellist Steven Isserlis.

News | 08.05.2026

May concerts in Finland and Portugal

In May 2026, Pietari Inkinen returns to Finland for concerts with the Tampere Filharmonia and Oulu Sinfonia, before travelling to Lisbon to conduct the Orquestra Metropolitana de Lisboa at the Centro Cultural de Belém.

News | 22.04.2026

Pietari Inkinen returns to Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra

Pietari Inkinen returns to Bergen for two concerts with the Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra at the Grieghallen on April 22 and 23, continuing his long-standing relationship with one of Scandinavia’s leading orchestras.

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.