“Goldberg Variations”: Additional Seats Available as a Package

The three performances of Bach’s Goldberg Variations in Meggen (8–10 May) sold out within hours of going on sale. No surprise: this marks Víkingur Ólafsson’s first-ever collaboration with the Danish-Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson, who has created a new light installation for the performances at the Piuskirche, famed for its translucent marble walls.

To allow more music lovers to attend, we have expanded the seating capacity and are now releasing additional tickets for all three performances of the Goldberg Variations. These are available exclusively as part of a package that combines the Goldberg Variations in Meggen with a second Pulse Festival concert the following week at the KKL Luzern. For the KKL concert, tickets may be selected in Price Categories I–IV.

Each performance of the Goldberg Variations is paired with a specific Pulse Festival concert the following week, and tickets are available only in these fixed combinations. Tickets for the Goldberg Variations on 8 May are available when purchased together with tickets for the Pulse concert featuring the Danish String Quartet on the following Friday (15 May). Tickets for the 9 May performance are offered in combination with Víkingur Ólafsson’s recital on 16 May. And the Goldberg Variations performance on 10 May is available as part of a package that includes the Pulse Festival closing concert on 17 May, featuring Víkingur Ólafsson, Patricia Kopatchinskaja, and the Mahler Chamber Orchestra conducted by Elim Chan.

Víkingur Ólafsson on ...

  • … Lucerne Festival Pulse

    I love to program things that go back to the Baroque or even Renaissance and all the way up to the present. To me, those three or four hundred years are just the blink of an eye. In terms of human history, it’s nothing. It’s just a very tiny part of human existence here on Earth. That’s classical music. People say it’s old, but by doing this festival, I think we will prove that it’s young and even still in its infancy. There’s so little difference and distance between you and Johann Sebastian Bach and Ligeti, for instance. They belong together. And so we’ve chosen the theme of “Time and Space.”

    The pulse is an unmistakable sign of life and the foundation of music itself. Like the pulse of the human heart, the musical pulse beats evenly yet is never static. It is not mechanical but allows for interpretative freedom. It responds to our emotions and experiences, its pace ever-changing, yet it sustains equilibrium, ensuring that the lifeblood of the music reaches all its extremities.

  • … “Time and Space,” the theme of the festival

    Why this theme? Why this program? Because music is time in space, pitch and acoustic. And the theme of “Time and Space” enables us to do a little time traveling, connecting different decades, different centuries, very different personalities. There will be traces of Bach throughout the festival. Bach is the most modern composer of all time, while sometimes what’s just been written is the most Romantic. “Time and Space” simply allows us to explore music in the widest possible perspective. And to really jump between incredibly different styles. It’s a playground of ideas.

  • … Olafur Eliasson

    Olafur Eliasson is a great and sort of explosive personality. He will visualize my musical interpretation of the Goldberg Variations in real time. It is all very futuristic. It’s going to be that kind of beautiful colliding of ideas, of art forms, of minds. Olafur thinks incredibly musically in his work and that’s what makes our collaboration so productive.

  • … the “Goldberg Variations” in the St. Pius Church

    The Goldberg Variations are pure architecture. I think the piece lends itself very well to a visual expression. The St. Pius Church in Meggen, with its thin marble, is incredibly beautiful. It’s an intimate space and I think it’s perfect for the Goldberg Variations and for this new kind of experience. It will be a very personal one, very intimate and very exciting. But as I always say: Bach is the future, and this is just one step into that future.

Olafur Eliasson on ...

  • ... “The Shadows of Sounds And the Unforeseeable Shapes of Love”

    On the occasion of Víkingur Ólafsson’s performance of Bach’s Goldberg Variations at the St. Pius Church in Meggen, I will create a temporary, site-specific work that dialogues with the architecture of the church and the music. My artwork explores the relations among space, light, and sound to activate the building and to extend the concert out into the world, beyond the exact time and place of its emergence.

    I have long been fascinated by the potential of translating soundwaves into light to create synaesthetic experiences that transcend the boundaries of both media. The Shadows of Sounds and the Unforeseeable Shapes of Love extends these investigations with an emphasis on the effects of echoes and reverberations on our perception of time and space.