American Music Takes Center Stage all Summer in E Pluribus Unum: From Many One
Programs Showcasing the Many Voices of our Collective Experience
Music Director and Head of Conducting at Tanglewood Andris Nelsons Leads the Boston Symphony Orchestra in Programs (July 10–Aug. 2) with Returning Star Soloists Including Emanuel Ax, Joshua Bell, Seong-Jin Cho, Renée Fleming, Augustin Hadelich, Thomas Hampson, and Daniil Trifonov, and the Debut of Exciting Young Violinist Himari
Nelsons Also Leads an Opening Night All-Tchaikovsky Program Featuring Principal Dancers from Boston Ballet (July 10) and a Concert Opera Performance of Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro with Baritone Michael Sumuel Making his BSO Debut in the Title Role Opposite Sopranos Ying Fang (Susanna) and Hanna-Elisabeth Müller (Countess), and Mezzo Susan Graham (Marcellina) (Aug. 1)
Celebrated Guest Artists in Other BSO Programs (through Aug. 23) Include Yefim Bronfman,Renaud Capuçon, Yo-Yo Ma, and Jean-Yves Thibaudet
Yo-Yo Ma Curates a Weeklong Residency (We the People: Our Shared Past, Present, and Future) and Performs in Five Programs (Aug. 4–9)
Esa-Pekka Salonen Directs the Tanglewood Music Center’s Annual Festival of Contemporary Music (July23–27), and Conducts the BSO (July 31) and the TMCO (Aug. 3)
Four-Day America 250 Celebration Offers James Taylor (July 3 & 4) Bookended by Two Performances by the Boston Pops, “America’s Orchestra”(July 2 & 5)
The Boston Pops Presents its Annual John Williams Film Night with Keith Lockhart Conducting (Aug. 15) and Performs with Superstar Cynthia Erivo (Aug. 21)
New Additions to the Popular Artist Series Include Tedeschi Trucks Band with Lukas Nelson, Ziggy Marley with Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue, and Yacht Rock Revue
Previously Announced Popular Artists are Jason Isbell with Patty Griffin, Carrie Underwood, and “Weird Al” Yankovic
Other 2026 Season Highlights (in Date Order):
Jazz at Lincoln Center OrchestraReturnswith Wynton Marsalis for the First Time since 2015(June 26)
Ozawa Hall Recitals Include Boston Symphony Chamber Players (July 8), Augustin Hadelich and Seong-Jin Cho Together (July 9), and Yuja WangSolo (Aug. 19)
Eric Lu, the 2025 International Chopin Piano Competition Winner, Makes His Festival Debut with the BSO and Conductor Fabio Luisi (July 12)
Acclaimed Ensembles Les Arts Florissants, The Boston Camerata, and the Danish String Quartet Perform in Ozawa Hall
(July 15, 16, & 30)
Legendary Film Composer Joe Hisaishi (Spirited Away,The Boy and The Heron, Ponyo) Makes his BSO Conducting Debut (July 18)
Historian Heather Cox Richardson in a “Spotlight Series” Conversation with Legal Scholar Bryan Stevenson of the Equal Justice Initiative as part of Yo-Yo Ma’s We the People residency (Aug. 8)
Laurie Anderson Makes Her Tanglewood Debut in Programs that Include Sexmob and the Lou Reed Drone Sonic Installation (Aug. 13–16)
Crossing Open Ground, an Outdoor Work for 40 Musicians by Pulitzer Prize-Winning Composer John Luther Adams (Aug. 13 & 14)
Martha Graham Dance Company Performs Bernstein-inspired For Martha and Copland’s Appalachian Spring with the BSO in a Debut Collaboration with Jacob’s Pillow (Aug. 14)
“Tasting Notes” Food and Wine Festival Brings Best of the Berkshires (Aug. 15)
Marin Alsop Conducts the Tanglewood Debut ofViolin Virtuoso Ray Chen (Aug. 16)
Silkroad Ensemble Returns with Rhiannon Giddens for a 25th Anniversary Performance (Aug. 20)
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Season Overview
Tanglewood—the famed music and learning campus and summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra (BSO)—announces details of its 2026 season, opening in late June and continuing to Labor Day weekend. The jam-packed schedule brings many of the world’s most exciting musicians and innovative minds to the beautiful Berkshire hills of western Massachusetts, making Tanglewood a quintessential cultural playground. In celebration of America’s 250th, this season offers an abundance of iconic American artists as part of the BSO’s multi-season E Pluribus Unum: From Many One theme, as well as programs exploring music inspired by nature and faith.
Late June brings the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis to the Koussevitzky Music Shed. The Fourth of July long weekend features James Taylorand his All-Star Band (July 3 and 4) bookended with two all-American programs featuring the Boston Pops (July 2 and 5).
From July 10 through August 23, weekly classical programs (Friday, Saturday, and Monday evenings and Sunday afternoons) offer performances by the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra (TMCO) led by Music Director and Head of Conducting at Tanglewood Andris Nelsons and top guest conductors. Programs feature world-renowned soloists including pianists Emanuel Ax, Yefim Bronfman, Seong-Jin Cho, Paul Lewis, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, and Daniil Trifonov and violinists Joshua Bell, Renaud Capuçon, and Augustin Hadelich. BSO programs also feature members of Boston Ballet and Martha Graham Dance Company and the Tanglewood debuts of 2025 Chopin Piano Competition winner Eric Lu and exciting young violinists Randall Goosby and Himari. Internationally celebrated conductor Marin Alsop, a Tanglewood Music Center (TMC) alumna, leads the TMCO in Ray Chen’s much-anticipated festival debut.
Late July brings the TMC’s annual Festival of Contemporary Music (July 23–27), directed this summer by composer and conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen, who stays to lead BSO and TMCO programs and to give a talk with BSO President and CEO Chad Smith.
August offers two more exciting artist-led curations: We the People, an innovative week-long residency in which Yo-Yo Ma explores the past, present, and future of the American experience alongside an eclectic roster of artists; and several events with pioneering multimedia artist Laurie Anderson in her first Tanglewood appearance.
Other August highlights are the Boston Pops’ annual John Williams Film Nightwith Keith Lockhart leading a new tribute program to Williams and Cynthia Erivo’s performance with the Pops.
Throughout the season Ozawa Hall features a variety of recitals and performances by renowned artists and ensembles including superstar pianist Yuja Wang, Les Arts Florissants, the Danish String Quartet, the Boston Symphony Chamber Players, and Silkroad Ensemble with Rhiannon Giddens.
The Tanglewood Learning Institute (TLI) and TMC present humanities events and educational workshops in both Ozawa Hall and at the Linde Center for Music and Learning led by guest artists and speakers including tenor Nicholas Phan, flutist Claire Chase, historian Heather Cox Richardson, and documentary photographer Peter van Agtmael.
From late June to early September, the Popular Artist Series welcomes celebrated rock, country, reggae, and jazz artists to the Shed. New additions to the lineup include: Tedeschi Trucks Band with special guest Lukas Nelson, Ziggy Marley with Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue, and Yacht Rock Revue. Previously announced artists are Jason Isbell with special guest Patty Griffin, Carrie Underwood, “Weird Al” Yankovic, and Taylor. More dates to be announced in the coming weeks.
We the People: Our Shared Past, Present, and Future
A Week of Programs Curated by Yo-Yo Ma
In an innovative collaboration with Tanglewood and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Yo-Yo Ma curates and appears in a week of concerts and events (Aug. 4–9) that explores the wisdom and contributions of the many people who make up this country—past, present, and future. Gathering artists and thinkers from the Berkshires community and far beyond, We the People will ask us to reflect on our shared histories and experiences, to consider our relationships to each other and to the natural world, and to think about how we—human beings who are a part of nature and therefore as creative and destructive as nature itself—can together choose a path of creation for the next 250 years. These concert programs and events are described in date order in other sections that follow.
Statement from Andris Nelsons, Music Director and Head of Conducting at Tanglewood
“The Berkshires are the perfect setting for world-class music-making and have been a profoundly inspiring environment for me since my first visit in 2012. This summer, the musicians of the BSO and I are proud to present concert programs featuring some of our favorite musical masterpieces, including symphonies by Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, and Mahler, alongside a special focus on the timeless music of Mozart. This will include a Tanglewood first: a full concert performance of The Marriage of Figaro. We also look forward to presenting contemporary masterpieces, such as selections from John Adams’ Nixon in China, as well as recent commissions and new works by Carlos Simon and Sarah Kirkland Snider. We are delighted to collaborate once again with Boston Ballet and to welcome some of the world’s most outstanding soloists, including Seong-Jin Cho, Emanuel Ax, Augustin Hadelich, Daniil Trifonov, Renée Fleming, Thomas Hampson, and many more. This season also marks the Tanglewood debuts of two exceptional young violinists, Himari and Keila Wakao. I am especially excited to work with the talented young Fellows of the Tanglewood Music Center, including our Conducting Fellows, and to experience once again the infectious energy of Tanglewood as an exceptional place of learning.”
Statement from Chad Smith, BSO President and Chief Executive Officer
“Each summer Tanglewood renews its promise as one of the world’s great gathering places for music, ideas, and community at the highest level. As we mark America 250, we are especially excited to continue exploring the American experience through our E Pluribus Unum: From Many One programming. In addition to a compelling set of programs led by BSO Music Director Andris Nelsons, we are thrilled to have artist-led curations by three visionary leaders in the arts: Yo-Yo Ma, Esa-Pekka Salonen, and Laurie Anderson. This summer, more than ever, Tanglewood is a destination for people of all ages to experience the life-changing power of creative expression amidst our campus’ idyllic natural setting embedded in the vibrant cultural landscape of the Berkshires.”
BSO Programs Led by Music Director Andris Nelsons
During the first four weeks of the classical season (July 10–Aug. 2), BSO Music Director and Head of Conducting at Tanglewood Andris Nelsons leads nine BSO programs in the Shed with a concentration on Tchaikovsky and Mozart, opening with principal dancers from Boston Ballet in excerpts from Swan Lake and culminating in The Marriage of Figaro. The theme of music inspired by natureis explored in works by Schumann, Sarah Kirkland Snider, and the Tchaikovsky ballet. In addition to programs that feature celebrated returning guest soloists Emanuel Ax, Joshua Bell, Seong-Jin Cho, Augustin Hadelich, Paul Lewis, Erin Morley, and Daniil Trifonov, Nelsons introduces two emerging young talents, violinists Himari and Keila Wakao. Renée Fleming and Thomas Hampson perform excerpts from Nixon in China, reprising their spring 2026 BSO programs in Boston and at Carnegie Hall. Nelsons also conductstwo TMCO programs with this year’s TMC Conducting Fellows (Mon., July 13 & 20, 8 p.m.) and coaches them in an open “Art of Conducting” workshop (Sun., July 12, 11 a.m.).
The BSO programs led by Andris Nelsons are described in chronological order below; his two TMCO programs are described separately in the section dedicated to Tanglewood Music Center programs.
Opening the BSO’s summer season, its 89th at Tanglewood, Nelsons conducts an all-Tchaikovsky program that features soloist Seong-Jin Cho in the composer’s popular Piano Concerto No. 1, which had its world premiere in Boston in 1875. Cho, winner of the prestigious Chopin International Piano Competition in 2015, impressed a full house in Ozawa Hall last season with his marathon recital of Ravel’s complete solo piano works, having also recorded both of the composer’s concertos with the BSO and Nelsons on the Deutsche Grammophon label. The opening program also welcomes principal dancers from Boston Ballet (Mikko Nissinen, artistic director) performing an excerpt from Swan Lake (Fri., July 10, 8 p.m.). The annual Summer Celebration gala for Tanglewood donors takes place before the concert, starting at 5 p.m. with a cocktail reception, followed by dinner at 6 p.m. For more information about Summer Celebration 2026, please contact SummerCelebration@bso.org.
The following evening, Nelsons and the BSO are joined by a favorite returning pianist Emanuel Ax, who has performed at Tanglewood every summer since 1982, in Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 25. The program also offers Mahler’s sublime Symphony No. 4 with world-renowned soprano Erin Morley, the 2021 Beverly Sills Artist Award winner, in the finale’s rhapsodic “Life in Heaven” (Sat., July 11, 8 p.m.).
The second weekend of the BSO season offers Friday evening and Sunday matinee programs led by Nelsons. Friday’s concert pairs two of the greatest American voices of their generation, soprano Renée Fleming and baritone Thomas Hampson, in excerpts from John Adams’ groundbreaking 1987 opera Nixon in China, which the two are scheduled to perform with Nelsons and the BSO at Symphony Hall and Carnegie Hall in April. The program also includes Meditations on Grace (2024) by BSO Composer Chair Carlos Simon and Barber’s famously melodic and technically demanding Violin Concerto, with young soloist Keila Wakao in her Tanglewood debut with the BSO. Wakao began studying with former BSO concertmaster Joseph Silverstein at age 6 and won First Prize at the 2021 Menuhin International Violin Competition Junior Division at age 15. She made her BSO debut at the BSO’s Opening Night Gala at Symphony Hall in 2024 (Fri., July 17, 8 p.m.).
In Sunday’s matinee the same weekend, Nelsons leads the extraordinary pianist Daniil Trifonov and BSO Principal Trumpet Thomas Rolfs in Shostakovich’s witty Piano Concerto No. 1. Nelsons and the BSO are nominated for a 2026 Grammy award for their recording on the Deutsche Grammophon label of the Shostakovich piano concertos with pianist Yuja Wang and Rolfs as soloists. The program also offers Haydn’s contemplative Symphony No 22, The Philosopher, with its striking horn chorale, and Beethoven’s exuberant Symphony No 2 (Sun., July 19, 2:30 p.m.).
The third weekend offers three Nelsons-led programs that pair a Mozart concerto with one of Tchaikovsky’s symphonies. The Friday evening program brings acclaimed violinist Augustin Hadelich, the BSO’s 2025-26 artist in residence,to perform Mozart’s adventurous Violin Concerto No. 5 (nicknamed the “Turkish Concerto”). Tchaikovsky’s balletic, five-movement Symphony No. 3, Polish rounds out the first program of the Mozart-Tchaikovsky cycle (Fri., July 24, 8 p.m.).
The Saturday evening program offers one of the world’s foremost interpreters of the Viennese classical piano repertoire, Paul Lewis, in Mozart’s serene and introspective Piano Concerto No. 27, followed by Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4, featuring brilliant orchestration, gorgeous melodies, Romantic emotional intensity, and Russian folk song (Sat., July 25, 8 p.m.).
The third weekend’s Sunday matinee program introduces Himari, a young violinist often described as a “once-in-a-generation talent. Himari (who turns 15 this June) is set to perform Mozart’s youthful Violin Concerto No. 1. The afternoon program also includes Finnish composer and this year’s Festival of Contemporary Music Director Esa-Pekka Salonen’s Gambit and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5(Sun., July 26, 2:30 p.m.).
Nelsons’ summer season would not be complete without the performance of a concert opera, and this year he returns to Mozart. Building on the success of 2023’s Così fan tutte and2022’s Don Giovanni—and completing the Da Ponte trilogy of operas co-created by Mozart’s favorite librettist—Nelsons leads the BSO and a chorus composed of TMC vocalists in The Marriage of Figaro, the first time the opera will be performed in full at Tanglewood.Directed by James Darrah, the stellar cast is headed by baritones Michael Sumuel (Figaro) and Joshua Hopkins (Count) opposite sopranos Ying Fang (Susanna) and Hanna-Elisabeth Müller (Countess) and mezzo-soprano Emily D’Angelo (Cherubino). Baritone Patrick Carfizzi (Doctor Bartolo), mezzo-soprano Susan Graham (Marcellina), soprano Eden Bartholomew (Barbarina), and tenors Joshua Sanders (Don Curzio) and Rodell Rosel (Don Basilio) round out the cast. Making their festival debuts with the BSO are Sumuel, Hopkins, D’Angelo, Müller, and Bartholomew who is a 2025 alumna of the Tanglewood Music Center (Sat. Aug. 1, 8 p.m.).
In his final summer program, Nelsons welcomes violinist Joshua Bell back for his 37th consecutive season with the BSO at Tanglewood to perform Bruch’s virtuosic Scottish Fantasy, for which his 2018 recording earned him a Grammy nomination.The matinee program also offers Schumann’s Symphony No. 3, Rhenish, his last symphony and a paean to the beauty of the Rhineland as well as Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Marmoris, which was inspired by the sea and oceanic movement (Sun., Aug. 2, 2:30 p.m.).
BSO Programs Led by Acclaimed Guest Conductors
This season offers some of the world’s top guest conductors to lead BSO programs with favorite returning and exciting new artists, beginning with the first appearance at Tanglewood by Dallas Symphony Orchestra Music Director Fabio Luisi to lead 2025 International Chopin Competition First Prize winner Eric Lu in Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2. Lu, who grew up outside Boston and was the first American to win the Chopin competition since 1970, performed with the BSO at Symphony Hall in 2023 and is making his Tanglewood debut. The program also includes two works inspired by nature: Brahms’ enchanting Symphony No. 2 and Sophia Jani’s mysterious What do flowers do at night? The Dallas Symphony’s composer in residence since 2023, Jani wrote her piece about a night-blooming cactus species that flowers only once a year (Sun., July 12, 2:30 p.m.).
The following weekend, composer Joe Hisaishi makes his Tanglewood debut to conduct the BSO in three of his own works: Adagio for strings and harps, DA·MA·SHI·E, and the Symphonic Suite from Princess Mononoke. Known for his many collaborations with the great Japanese animator and filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli, Hisaishi scored Miyazaki’s films The Boy and the Heron (2024)and Spirited Away (2023), which both won the Academy Award for Best Animated Film. Hisaishi also scored Princess Mononoke, whichMiyazaki wrote and directed in 1997. The program also welcomes back the celebrated French pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet to perform Ravel’s jazzy Piano Concerto in G (Sat., July 18, 8 p.m.).
Following the conclusion of his directorship of the 2026 Festival of Contemporary Music, Finnish conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen stays to lead a Friday BSO performance in the Shed as well as a Monday TMCO concert in Ozawa Hall (described separately in the TMCO section below). In the Friday evening BSO program, Salonen conducts Beethoven’s towering Piano Concerto No. 5, Emperor, with Yefim Bronfman, a beloved guest artist at Tanglewood for more than three decades. The program also features Wagner’s passionate Prelude and Liebestod from Tristan and Isolde and Sibelius’ single-movement Symphony No. 7 (Fri., July 31, 8 p.m.).
The following long weekend (Aug. 7–9) offers three BSO programs as part of We the People: Our Shared Past, Present, and Future, curated by Yo-Yo Ma. In the first, inspired by the historic links between the United States, France, and Tanglewood’s own history, BSO Assistant Conductor Samy Rachid leads program host Ma and acclaimed French violinist Renaud Capuçon in Brahms’ Double Concerto for violin, cello, and orchestra. The Friday evening program also offers Fauré’s Cantique de Jean Racine withBerkshire Lyric (Jack Brown, conductor)and Brahms’ String Sextet No. 2 in G, Op. 36 (arranged by Atterberg) (Fri., Aug. 7, 8 p.m.).
In Saturday’s program, Yo-Yo Ma, the BSO, and special guests including Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Aoife O’Donovan (of the bands Crooked Still and I’m With Her) and Emmy-nominated Native American vocalist Jennifer Kreisberg (a founding member of the Native women’s trio ULALI) will explore the many voices of American music and how it reflects the nation’s triumphs, tragedies, and vitality(Sat., Aug. 8, 8 p.m.).
In Sunday’s Ma-curated BSO matinee, Rachid shares the podium with his fellow BSO Assistant Conductor AnnaHandler,both of whom conclude their terms with the BSO at the end of the Tanglewood season. Handler, who last fall began her work as Kapellmeister of the Deutsche Oper Berlin, was recently appointed Chief Conductor of the Ulster Orchestra, starting this September. The program looks to the future with three modern compositions that feature cellists: Ma joins in Tavener’s Mahámátar, for cello, voice, chorus, and orchestra with Grammy-winning vocalist Arooj Aftab and the BUTI Chorus. Cellist Karen Ouzounian, a member of SilkroadEnsemble,is the soloist in Iranian-American composer Kayhan Kalhor’s Venus in the Mirror, for kamancheh, cello, and orchestra, with the composer as co-soloist. BSO cellist Christine Lee is the soloist in Argentinian composerOsvaldo Golijov’s Azul, for cello and orchestra, a BSO commission from 2006 (Sun., Aug. 9, 2:30 p.m.).
Handler returns the following Friday eveningto lead a BSO program that brings the Martha Graham Dance Company (Janet Eiber, artistic director) to Tanglewood for the first time as part of the Company’s 100th anniversary celebration at Jacob’s Pillow. The dancers perform Christopher Rountree’s For Martha (Variations on a Theme of Leonard Bernstein) with choreography by Hope Boykin commissioned by the BSO and Jacob’s Pillow. The dance-themed orchestral program also includes Copland’s Appalachian Spring performed to Martha Graham’s original 1944 choreographyand Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 (Fri., Aug. 14, 8 p.m.).
The BSO’s final weekend offers two programs with the Tanglewood Festival Chorus (TFC).On the last Saturday of the festival’s classical season,BSO Artistic Partner Thomas Wilkins leads the Tanglewood debut of exciting young violinist Randall Goosby, a 2022 Avery Fisher Career Grant Winner, in the first BSO performance of Florence Price’s Violin Concerto No. 2. The program also includes Bernstein’s life-affirming Chichester Psalms with the TFC and boy soprano Edward Njuguna and Dvořák’s songful Symphony No. 8 (Sat., Aug. 22, 8 p.m.).
The BSO’s final performance of the season, the traditional Beethoven Symphony No. 9 with the Tanglewood Festival Chorus,marks the debut of conductor Gustavo Gimeno, music director of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra.Soloists include Mané Galoyan (soprano), Zoie Reams (mezzo-soprano), Benjamin Bliss (tenor), and Soloman Howard (bass). The TFCalso performs a to-be-announcedwork for unaccompanied chorus (Sun., Aug. 23, 2:30 p.m.).
Tanglewood Music Center Programs &Festival of Contemporary Music
The Fellows studying at the Tanglewood Music Center (TMC) perform in eight concerts as the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra (TMCO) from July 6 to Aug. 16. This year’s TMC Conducting Fellows Julian Gilewski and Lauren Smithjointly lead several of the TMCO programs along with Andris Nelsons and guest conductors. TMCO performances take place on Monday evenings in Ozawa Hall except for Tanglewood on Parade (Tues., Aug. 4, 8 p.m.) and the final program with conductor Marin Alsop and debuting violin soloist Ray Chen (Sun., Aug. 16, 2:30 p.m.), which are in the Shed.
TMC Fellows perform numerous vocal and instrumental recitals throughout the season, with the annual Festival of Contemporary Music (FCM) as the centerpiece of their summer. Directed this year by Esa-Pekka Salonen,FCMtakes place in Ozawa Hall from July 23 through 27 and offers five concerts performed by Fellows with a focus on works by Salonen and other Nordic composers. Each FCM program is organized by theme: Those We have Lost Too Soon; Meta Music: Music About Other Music; The Next Generation; Gen Z Paired with Iconic Works; and Nordic Boomers. Salonen conducts the TMCO in the final FCM program, which features the debut of highly acclaimed young Finnish cellist Senja Rummukainen.
Concerts that feature the TMCO are described below:
TMC conducting fellows Julian Gilewski and Lauren Smith make their Tanglewood debuts on the TMCO’s first Monday evening program in Ozawa Hall. The program offers Ives’ Variations on America and Vaughn Williams’ Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis as well as an unconducted performance of Beethoven’s beloved Symphony No. 6, Pastoral. (Mon., July 6, 8 p.m.)
The following week, Andris Nelsons conducts the TMCO in Beethoven’s iconic Symphony No. 5 and Leonore Overture No. 3, as well as Haydn’s Symphony No. 31, nicknamed Hornsignal due to the prominent use of four horns throughout the piece and Brahms’ Variations on a Theme by Haydn, Op. 56a (Mon., July 13, 8 p.m.).
Nelsons then conducts the TMCO in two tone poems by Strauss, Don Juan and Till Eulenspiegel. Nelsons has long held an affinity for Strauss’ music, having recorded all the composer’s major orchestral works in a 2022 Deutsche Grammophon 7-CD set that included contributions from the BSO, Gewandhaus Orchestra, Yuja Wang, and Yo-Yo Ma. The TMC Conducting Fellows lead Beethoven’s Overture to Egmont, Op. 84 and Hindemith’s Konzertmusik for strings and brass, Op. 50 (Mon., July 20, 8 p.m.).
Concluding the annual Festival of Contemporary Music, festival director Esa-Pekka Salonen leads the TMCO in a program titled “Nordic Boomers,” with music by Hans Abrahamsen, Anders Hillborg, and Magnus Lindberg. Finnish cellist Senja Rummukainen makes her Tanglewood debut performing Salonen’s own Cello Concerto (Mon., July 27, 8 p.m.).
Salonen is joined by Gilewski and Smith for the following week’s program of three seminal works from the first half of the twentieth century: Debussy’s La Mer and Ravel’s Le Tombeau de Couperin (Fellows conducting), and Bartók’s Concerto for Orchestra (Salonen conducting), commissioned by Serge Koussevitzky, Tanglewood’s founding music director, and premiered by the BSO in 1944 (Mon., Aug. 3, 8 p.m.).
The TMC Fellows play a central role in the annual Tanglewood on Parade (TOP),which this year kicks off We the People, the week of concerts and events curated by Yo-Yo Ma. Starting at 2:30 p.m., groups of Fellows and BUTI students perform throughout the afternoon in various indoor and outdoor locations, and at 6 p.m. the Shed opens for a TMC performance of the Brahms Sextet in G. Square dancing on the Shed lawn begins at 7 p.m. followed by a grand parade of all BSO and TMC musicians to the Shed stage for the evening’s concert. The TMCO performs Beethoven’s Symphony No. 6, Pastoral, unconducted, along with members of the BSO. Samy Rachid conducts the BSO in Allison Loggins-Hull’s Rhapsody on a Theme by Joni with BSO principal flute Lorna McGhee as soloist, and Keith Lockhart conducts Copland’s El Salón de México with the Boston Pops. The combined forces of the BSO and TMCO conclude the concert with Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture, conducted by Lockhart (Tues., Aug. 4, 8 p.m.).
The TMCO led by Gilewski and Smith accompanies the vocalists of the TMC for an evening of American opera, with works by Aaron Copland, Tania León, John Adams, John Harbison, Osvaldo Golijov, and Missy Mazzoli (Mon., Aug. 10, 8 p.m.).
The final TMCO concert is a Sunday afternoon performance in the Shed, conducted by Marin Alsop. The first woman to serve as the head of major orchestras in the United States, South America, Austria, and Great Britain, Alsop is an alumna of the Tanglewood Music Center, where she studied with Leonard Bernstein. She leads a crowd-pleasing program of Bruch’s Violin Concerto with virtuoso Ray Chen (Tanglewood debut) and Mahler’s Symphony No. 5 (Sun., Aug. 16, 2:30 p.m.).
Programs Featuring the Boston Pops
To kick off Tanglewood’s four-day celebration of America 250, the Boston Pops, “America’s Orchestra,” performs an American-themed program; guest artist and other details to come. (Thurs., July 2, 8 p.m., tickets go on sale at a later date)
Following James Taylor’s July 3 and 4 shows, the Pops returns with Damon Gupton on the podium to lead an afternoon of quintessential American classics, including iconic works by Gershwin, Copland, Bernstein, and John Williams, as well as favorites from the Great American Songbook (Sun., July 5, 2:30 p.m.).
Keith Lockhart, now in his 31st season as Pops Conductor, arrives in August to lead the Pops in a portion of the evening concert at Tanglewood on Parade as part of We the People, curated by Yo-Yo Ma (Tues., Aug. 4, 8 p.m.).
Lockhart also leads the Pops in the ever-popular John Williams Film Night curated by Williams, his predecessor as Pops conductor (Sat., Aug. 15, 8 p.m.). This year’s Film Night program, titled Maestro of the Movies: A Tribute to John Williams, features more than 50 minutes of specially edited scenes and clips from John Williams’ best-loved films, projected in HD and in sync to his spectacular music.
As previously announced, Grammy, Tony, and Emmy award-winning actress, singer, and Wicked star Cynthia Erivomakes her Tanglewood debut with the Boston Pops along with conductor Anthony Parnther and pianist and music director Mark G. Meadows (Fri., Aug. 21, 8 p.m.). Tickets for this date are on sale now at tanglewood.org.
Ozawa Hall Recitals
World-renowned soloists and ensembles perform unique programs in the intimacy of Seiji Ozawa Hall. The recital series opens with the Boston Symphony Chamber Players performing Composer Chair Carlos Simon’s Gardner Suite along with Barber’s Summer Music and Dvořák’s String Quintet No. 2. Premiered by the Chamber Players in January 2026, Gardner Suite is a BSO commission inspired by works from the collection of Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum (Wed., July 8, 8 p.m.).
The following evening, two favorite BSO guests, Augustin Hadelich and Seong-Jin Cho, perform works for violin and piano by Brahms, Janáček, Beach, and Prokofiev. This program, which Hadelich and Cho also present at several festivals across Europe this summer, marks the artists’ first performance collaboration (Thurs., July 9, 8 p.m.).
Acclaimed Baroque ensemble Les Arts Florissants returns to Ozawa Hall to perform two chamber operas by seventeenth-century French composer Marc-Antoine Charpentier: La descente d’Orphée aux enfers and the eponymous Les Arts florissants. The performance, music directed by Les Arts Florissants’ founder William Christie, features vocal soloists from the organization’s Jardin des Voix training academy and dancers choreographed by Martin Chaix and Eleanor Freeman (Wed., July 15, 8 p.m.).
Early music ensemble The Boston Camerata returns to Tanglewood to present Free America! Early Songs of Resistance and Rebellion. Led by the Camerata’s artistic director Anne Azéma, the program explores the vital and life-affirming sounds of the young Republic, as its citizens stood and played forth their love of freedom and their rejection of tyranny (Thurs., July 16, 8 p.m.).
In anticipation of the upcoming weekend’s Festival of Contemporary Music, July 22 brings a uniquely designed program that gathers five prominent pianists (Timo Andres, Bruce Brubaker, Daniela Liebman,Lisa Moore, and Christian Sands)to perform composer Philip Glass’ complete Etudes for Piano. Composed between 1991 and 2012, these works represent some of Glass’s most evocative and inventive music and have become a staple of contemporary piano repertoire (Wed., July 22, 8 p.m.).
The Grammy-nominated Danish String Quartet returns to Tanglewood on July 30 to perform Stravinsky’s Suite italienne, Beethoven’s String Quartet No. 16 in F, Op. 135, and their own arrangements of Danish folk songs (Thurs., July 30, 8 p.m.).
On August 6, as part of his We the People residency, Yo-Yo Ma curates and performs in a one-of-a-kind program of music for multiple cellos, joining forces with the cellists of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Ma has enjoyed a close relationship with the BSO cello section for many years, frequently joining them for encores and special appearances (Thurs., Aug. 6, 8 p.m.).
Kicking off a series of events spotlighting groundbreaking artist Laurie Anderson is an Ozawa Hall recital featuring a selection of her compositions for string orchestra led by conductor Dennis Russell Davies, principal conductor of the MDR Leipzig Radio Symphony Orchestra and artistic director and chief conductor of the Filharmonie Brno. The program includes Anderson’s Amelia, which draws upon text from Amelia Earhart’s pilot’s log from her final international trip (Thurs., Aug. 13, 8 p.m.).
Superstar pianist Yuja Wang, a longtime BSO collaborator,performs a solo recital on August 19 (program details to come). Wang’s recording of Shostakovich’s Piano Concertos with the BSO and Andris Nelsons is nominated for a 2026 Grammy for Best Classical Instrumental Solo (Wed., Aug. 19, 8 p.m.).
The Ozawa Hall recital program concludes with the Silkroad Ensemble with Rhiannon Giddens, celebrating the ensemble’s 25th anniversary. Their programSanctuary: The Power of Resonance and Ritual explores how we can experience music to better understand our world, find comfort, process loss and a changing environment, and rebuild community (Thurs., Aug. 20, 8 p.m.).
Popular Artist Series & Other Special Events
Since 1968, the Popular Artist Series (PAS) at Tanglewood has brought many of the most celebrated contemporary pop artists and groups across all genres to perform in the Shed, including: Judy Collins, Joni Mitchell, Janis Joplin, The Who, B.B. King, Chicago, Miles Davis, Ray Charles, Seals and Crofts, Gordon Lightfoot, Jackson Browne, Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris, Willie Nelson, Joan Baez, Jimmy Buffet, The Beach Boys, Peter, Paul and Mary, Neil Young, Diana Ross, Whitney Houston, Crosby, Stills and Nash, Lyle Lovett, Dolly Parton, Bob Dylan, Herbie Hancock, Wilco, Carol King, Earth, Wind & Fire, Indigo Girls, Tony Bennett, Lady Gaga, Audra McDonald, Sting, Van Morrison, Ringo Starr, Bonnie Raitt, Brandi Carlile, Barenaked Ladies, Pretenders, John Legend, Nas, and Jon Batiste. James Taylor first performed in 1974 and has returned almost every year since. (History of the PAS at Tanglewood)
Paul Simon, one of the most celebrated and beloved singer-songwriters of all time, is set to make his Tanglewood debut this summer as part of the festival’s Popular Artist Series. The 16-time GRAMMY® Award winner and two-time Rock & Rock Hall of Fame inductee brings his highly acclaimed “A Quiet Celebration” tour to the Koussevitzky Music Shed on Saturday, June 27, at 7:30 p.m.
The show will be in two parts, opening with the performance of the GRAMMY-nominated masterpiece Seven Psalms. This beautiful 33-minute continuous piece of music was heralded by the press worldwide—Variety called it “Quietly stunning…unlike any other Simon album” and Rock Cellar hailed it as, “a stunning achievement from an artist with a career full of them.” After a brief intermission, the show resumes with Simon performing many of his greatest hits and many deep cuts celebrating the breadth of his career.
Tickets go on sale Friday, February 6 at 10 a.m. at tanglewood.org.
As previously announced, James Taylor and his All-Star Band return to celebrate Independence Day on July 3 and 4 with fireworks to follow the Independence Day show. The six-time Grammy winner and Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee is marking his 52nd season at the festival (Fri., July 3 and Sat., July 4, 8 p.m.).
Other previously announced Popular Artist Series events include: “Weird Al” Yankovic with guest Puddles Pity Party (Tues., July 21, 7 p.m.), Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit with guest Patty Griffin (Tues., July 28, 7 p.m.), and Carrie Underwood (Sat., Aug. 29, 7 p.m.). Prior announcements and full bios of these artists are available in the online press kit.
Tickets to the previously announced shows above are currently on sale at tanglewood.org.
New Popular Artist Additions
Yacht Rock Revue, which Rolling Stone called the “world’s premier soft-rock party band,” opens the Shed’s 2026 season. With “dy-no-mite” renditions of hits by Kenny Loggins, Michael McDonald, Steely Dan, Christopher Cross, and more, Yacht Rock Revue is widely recognized as the driving force behind the yacht rock resurgence, sharing stages with icons and garnering a devoted following of “Anchorheads.” 2026 marks their most ambitious production yet, but with the intimacy and interactive touch that harkens back to their days as a club band, making this Sunday afternoon concert a perfect way to launch the summer (Sun., June 21, 2:30 p.m.).
The following week brings the world-renowned Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestrato the Shed with Wynton Marsalis for the first time since 2015. Comprised of 15 of the finest jazz soloists and ensemble players today, the group has been the Jazz at Lincoln Center resident orchestra since 1988. Under Music Director and Grammy-winning trumpeter and composer Marsalis, the JLCO performs a vast repertoire of jazz standards and new commissions. Note: This event follows standard ticketing policies and is not subject to Popular Artist Series restrictions (Fri., June 26, 7 p.m.).
Celebrate the revolutionary spirit of Bastille Day with Ziggy Marley and Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue in a rollicking evening of high-energy reggae, funk, blues, and jazz. A nine-time Grammy winner, Emmy winner, and humanitarian activist, Marley extends his father’s reggae legacy to new frontiers, fusing its traditional sound with other genres, modern sounds, and new recording techniques. He is making his first appearance at the festival. A Grammy-winning NOLA icon, Trombone Shorty performed America the Beautiful at the 2025 Super Bowl in New Orleans, leads his own Mardi Gras parade atop a giant float crafted in his likeness, was part of the inaugural class inducted in the NOLA Walk of Fame, and has taken over the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival’s hallowed final set (Tues., July 14, 7 p.m.).
Known for its electrifying blend of rock, blues, jazz, and country and regarded as one of the best live acts touring today, Grammy Award-winning Tedeschi Trucks Band keeps the Tanglewood party going into September as part of their Future Soul 2026 tour behind their forthcoming sixth studio album of the same name, out March 20 (the infectious single “I Got You” is out now). Making their Tanglewood debut, the 12-piece band is led by wife-and-husband duo Susan Tedeschi (vocals/guitar) and Derek Trucks (guitar), whom NPR has called “two of the best roots rock musicians of their generation.” The band won the Grammy for Best Blues Album in 2012 and performed at the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in honor of Joe Cocker, one of their biggest influences. Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Lukas Nelson opens as special guest (Wed., Sept. 2, 7 p.m.).
Tickets to the newly announced dates above go on sale March 5 at 10 a.m. at tanglewood.org.
Humanities Programs by the Tanglewood Learning Institute (TLI) & Tanglewood Music Center (TMC)
Showcasing Tanglewood’s prominence as a music and learning campus, the Tanglewood Learning Institute’s expanded schedule of humanities-inspired programs offers a rich array of events, some in partnership with the Tanglewood Music Center, including:
TLI and TMC Event Series:
New this season! A special weekly course, Art and the Rule of Law with Julliard’s Lesley Rosenthal, exploring the Rule of Law through musical and visual works (weekly 10:30 a.m., July 3 through Aug. 14, Volpe Studio at the Linde Center)
New this season! The TLI 101 series featuring presentations ondance, classical, jazz, and opera led by renowned experts (weekly 4:00 p.m., July 9 through 31, Studio E at Linde)
Spotlight Series, which brings prominent speakers and luminaries from the humanities to dive into some of the big ideas of our time, returns this summer:
Historian Heather Cox Richardson and founder and Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative Bryan Stevenson, as part of Yo-Yo Ma’s We the People week (Sat., Aug. 8, 5 p.m., Ozawa Hall)
Writer, director, composer, visual artist, musician, and vocalist Laurie Anderson (Sat., Aug. 15, 2 p.m., Studio E at Linde)
Guests to be announced for additional Spotlight Series events.
Audubon Tours, “Time Traveling with Tanglewood’s Trees and the Lenox Landscape” (Wednesdays and Thursdays at 10 a.m., July 1 through Aug. 19, meet at Main Gate)
Focal Point workshops offer hands-on instruction in smartphone and DSLR photography. (Saturdays at 11 a.m., July 11 through Aug. 22, meet at Main Gate)
The Art of Conducting series offers two-hour open workshops with the TMC Conducting Fellows led by Music Director Andris Nelsons, appointed head of conducting at Tanglewood in 2024, and guest conductors. Scheduled workshops include one led by Nelsons (Sun, July 12, 11 a.m.) and Marin Alsop (Thurs., Aug. 13, 1:30 p.m.). Both take place in Studio E at Linde). Other dates may be added.
Weekly Open Workshops featuring BSO musicians and guest artists leading public classes for TMC Instrumental and Vocal Fellows (Wednesdays at 1:30 p.m., July 1 through Aug. 19, Studio E at Linde)
Talks and Walks BSO’s VP of Artistic Planning Anthony (Tony) Fogg talks with a guest artist drawn from that week’s BSO programs (Thursdays at 1 p.m., July 2 through August 20, Tent Club). Boston Symphony Association Volunteers lead a tour of the Tanglewood grounds following each talk.
Featured Performances and Events:
The New Fromm Players, a select group composed of current and recent alumni TMC Fellows focused on new music, perform works by the TMC Composition Fellows (Mon., July 13, 1:30 p.m., Studio E at Linde)
“I am alive because of music” with Fulbright Holocaust music scholar Mark Ludwig, exploring the lives and works of composers imprisoned in the Terezín concentration camp through archival materials and live chamber music (Sat., July 18, 2 p.m., Studio E at Linde)
The return of acclaimed tenor Nicholas Phan to present his signature recital program Fellow Citizens, a wide-ranging collection of songs with narratives of immigration and migration in the United States, followed by a Meet the Makers conversation with the performers(Sat., July 25, 2 p.m., Studio E at Linde)
The year-round TLI Jazz series brings the Ted Rosenthal Quintet with special guests Ingrid Jensen (trumpet) and Jimmy Greene (saxophone) to present 100 Years of Miles and Coltrane (Sun., July 26, 7 p.m., Ozawa Hall).
Shaping Sound: The Future of Orchestras, conductor and composer Esa-Pekka Salonen and BSO President and CEO Chad Smith in conversation(Tues., July 28, 12 p.m.)
Documentary photographer Peter van Agtmael, a Guggenheim Fellowship recipient,gives a talkon his acclaimed book Look at the USA, a powerful photographic exploration of America’s contradictions, complexities, and everyday realities (Thurs., July 30, 2:30 p.m., Studio E at Linde).
A world premiere reading with music of an adaptation of Uwe Wittstock’s February 1933: The Winter of Literature, which traces the swift collapse of Weimar Germany’s literary world(Sat., Aug. 1, 2 p.m., Studio E at Linde)
Innovative flutist Claire Chase performs Marcos Balter’sPan, a musical drama for solo flute, live electronics, and an ensemble of musicians from the Berkshires community (Sat., Aug. 8, 2 p.m., Studio E at Linde).
TMC Composition Fellows and musicians again collaborate on two presentations of the ever-popular TLI Silent FilmProject (Sun. Aug. 9, 7 & 9 p.m., Studio E at Linde).
Pianist Adam Tendler makes his Tanglewood debut with Inheritances, a Grammy-nominated collection of 16 commissioned works exploring memory, grief, and renewal (Wed., Aug. 12, 8 p.m., Studio E at Linde).
John Luther Adams: Crossing Open Ground, a collaborative performance of the environmentalist composer’s outdoor work for winds, brass, and percussion on the Boston University Tanglewood Institute (BUTI) campus. Conductor Christopher Rountree and director Dimitri Chamblas lead 40 BUTI and guest musicians in the original and immersive work. (Thurs, Aug. 13, 5 p.m. and Fri., Aug. 14, 4 p.m. at BUTI, 45 West Street in Lenox)
A Meet the Makers conversation with the Martha Graham Dance Company creative teamahead of the evening BSO performance of Christopher Rountree’s For Martha and Copland’s Appalachian Spring (Fri., Aug. 14, Studio E at Linde)
A Movement Workshop on the Tappan Lawn led by Dimitri Chamblas, choreographer and co-director of Crossing Open Ground, with live music by pianist Adam Tendler (Sun., Aug. 16, 12:30 p.m., Tappan Manor House Lawn)
Lou Reed Drone, a drone-based sonic installation curated by Laurie Anderson using guitars from her late husband Lou Reed’s collection, performed by his former guitar tech Stewart Hurwood and a roster of rotating guest artists (Sun., Aug. 16, 12 p.m. to 6 p.m., Studio E at Linde)
Laurie Anderson — The Republic of Love, an evening of music and storytelling reflecting on America’s past and present, featuring the genre-defying ensemble Sexmob in their Tanglewood debut along with special guests (Sun., Aug. 16, 7 p.m., Ozawa Hall)
The Goldberg Variations Reimagined with pianist Simone Dinnerstein and Boston-based chamber orchestra A Far Cry in their BSO debut. (Fri., Aug. 21, 1 p.m.) Join Dinnerstein and the group for an Open Workshop ahead of their performance (Wed., Aug. 19, 1:30 p.m.). Both events at Studio E at Linde.
Saturday Morning Open Rehearsals &
Pre-Concert Prelude Performances
Ticketed Open Rehearsals for each Sunday’s BSO program are offered at the Shed on Saturday mornings at 10:30 a.m., from July 11 through August 22. Open Rehearsals offer audience members a unique perspective on the creative dynamic between orchestra and conductor and a more relaxed atmosphere. The Saturday morning ticket also includes a pre-concert talk at 9:30 a.m. and Yoga on the Lawn led by an instructor from Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health from 10:15 to 11:15 a.m.
Throughout the season, PreludeConcerts are offered Fridays and Saturdays from 6:00 to 7:00 either in Ozawa Hall or Studio E at the Linde Center. Prelude Concerts are exclusively available to ticketholders for the 8 p.m. Shed concerts on those evenings at no additional charge. Seating is general admission.
Programs & Activities for Families and Children
Family-friendly fare includes the annual BSO Family Concert, an engaging morning matinee in the Shed,led by BSO Youth and Family Concerts Conductor and Artistic Partner Thomas Wilkins (Sun., July 19, 10:30 a.m.) and Tanglewood on Parade (Tues., Aug. 4, 2 p.m. through the evening), a full day of music and activities curated by Yo-Yo Ma, culminating in an evening concert with the BSO, Pops, and TMCO conducted by Keith Lockhart and Samy Rachid with soloist Lorna McGhee and capped by Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture.
Advanced musicians aged 14 through 20 studying at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute (BUTI) perform weekend concerts in Ozawa Hall as the Young Artists Orchestra, Young Artists Chorus, and Young Artists Wind Ensemble (July 18, 19, Aug. 2, 3, 8, and 15, at 1:30 p.m.).
TLI for Families events include:
A Whale of a Tale led by Rebecca Sheir of WBUR’s Circle Round returns (Sun., July 5, 10:30 a.m., Studio E at Linde).
Peter and the Wolf, Prokofiev’s beloved setting of a Russian folktale set to music, presented in collaboration with BUTI (Sun., July 26, 10:30 a.m., Studio E at Linde)
Music Moves, Stories Groove with rapper Baba Israel, multi-instrumentalist Sean Nowell, and dancers Audrey Thao Berger and B-Boy Spidey (Sun., Aug. 2, 10:30 a.m. Studio E at Linde)
Since 1968, the BSO has offered Days in the Arts (DARTS), a summer arts immersion program at Tanglewood for middle school students from both the Berkshires and Boston. This year’s day program for students from the Berkshires will take place in July and is free for all students accepted into the program. For more information, please contact the BSO’s Education and External Engagement department at education@bso.org.
Tanglewood welcomes families with children. Up to four free children’s tickets are available per parent/legal guardian per concert at the Tanglewood Box Office on the day of the performance. Please note the following policies and restrictions:
To minimize disruptions, children under 5 are not permitted in the Koussevitzky Music Shed during concerts, except for the BSO Family Concert on Sunday, July 19.
Families with children under 5 may enjoy music on the lawn.
All patrons, regardless of age, must have a ticket.
Free children’s tickets are not valid for any Popular Artist Series event or Popular Artist Series featuring the Boston Pops, or any TLI event.
Food and Dining at Tanglewood
Tasting Notes, the Tanglewood Food and Wine Festival featuring the best local vendors, takes place under the Hawthorne Tent in the gardens behind Tappan Manor House (Sat., Aug. 15, 12–4 p.m.). Ages 21+.
While Tanglewood picnics on the lawn are iconic, patrons have many dining options on the grounds from picnics to-go and carryout meals at Tanglewood Provisions and made-to-order wood-fired pizza at the Food Hall to buffet dinner service at Cindy’s Café and Sunday brunch and elegant dining at Highwood Manor House. Hours and menus vary. There are also snack and concession stands and ice cream carts. Craft beer and wine are available at an on-campus Beer Garden and the Food Hall as well as at Cindy’s Café and Highwood Manor during dinner hours. Alcohol must be consumed at the purchase location. Popular Artist Series concerts offer patrons with Shed seats the option of purchasing beer and wine to consume in the Shed. More info on food and beverage options and policies at Tanglewood is available here).
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Ticketing Information
TICKETS FOR THE 2026 TANGLEWOOD SEASON GO ON SALE MARCH 5 AT TANGLEWOOD.ORG AND 888-266-1200
TICKETS FOR JAMES TAYLOR, CYNTHIA ERIVO WITH THE BOSTON POPS, CARRIE UNDERWOOD, JASON ISBELL, AND “WEIRD AL” YANKOVIC ARE CURRENTLY ON SALE AT TANGLEWOOD.ORG
CLICK HERE FOR TICKETING PHONE LINE AND BOX OFFICE HOURS
To learn about discounts and special ticket opportunities,
Tanglewood.org is the official site for all Tanglewood tickets.Tickets for the newly announced events in this release go on sale Thursday, March 5 at 10 a.m.
Tickets also may be purchased by calling 888-266-1200 on Monday-Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Saturday 12:30-4:30 p.m. Tickets may be purchased at the Symphony Hall Box Office during regular Box Office hours.
The Tanglewood Box Office is currently closed for the season but will open specially on March 5, 6, and 7 (from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.) once tickets for the 2026 season go on sale. Please note that the March sale dates will take place at the Linde Center for Music and Learning Box Office rather than at the Main Gate location. Parking is available in the Bachrach Lot (enter at 3 West Hawthorne Rd., Lenox).
Previously announced concerts are currently on sale. These are: James Taylor, Cynthia Erivo with the Boston Pops, Carrie Underwood, Jason Isbell and Patty Griffin, and “Weird Al” Yankovic.
All tickets for Tanglewood Popular Artist Series concerts are Mobile Delivery or Hold at Box Office. We have adopted this industry standard in order to better protect consumers from price gouging, hidden fees, and other deceptive practices by some third-party ticket resellers. Popular Artist concerts have ticket limits per purchaser (4, 6, or 8 tickets per buyer). Popular Artist Series restrictions also apply to the Boston Pops concert featuring Cynthia Erivo.
Lawn Ticket Booklets are available at a significant discount (10 tickets for $250) to purchase through Aug. 16. These passes are not valid for any Popular Artist Series concerts including PAS events featuring the Boston Pops or TLI events.
Berkshire Resident Season Lawn Passes are available for $150 to Berkshire County residents with proof of address. These may be purchased in person at the Tanglewood Box Office starting June 20 at 12 p.m. Resident passes are not valid for any Popular Artist Series concerts or TLI events. The annual Berkshire Day concert (free to Berkshire County residents) will be announced at a later date.
Group Sales: Groups of 15 or more are eligible for advance sales, discounts, waived fees, and the use of private tents for most performances. Contact the Group Sales Office at 617-638-8345 or groupsales@bso.org.
Accessibility
The BSO is committed to providing access to Tanglewood for everyone. For information about accessible seats, parking, programs, and other accommodations, call 617-638-9431, email access@bso.org, or visit our website.
About Tanglewood
Tanglewood, one of the country’s premier summer music festivals and summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra since 1937, is in the Berkshire Hills of Lenox and Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Tanglewood is also the home of the Tanglewood Music Center, the acclaimed summer music academy founded by Serge Koussevitzky in 1940. Launched in 2019 with the opening of the Linde Center for Music and Learning, the Tanglewood Learning Institute in collaboration with the BSO’s Humanities Institute, created in 2024, offers a year-round schedule of dynamic and leading-edge performances and events connecting audiences with musicians, artists, students, scholars, and cultural leaders through wide-ranging humanities-focused programs. Tanglewood also presents an annual Popular Artist Series in the Koussevitzky Music Shed (opened in 1938) and recital and chamber music concerts in Seiji Ozawa Hall (opened in 1994). Click here for more Tanglewood history.
Summer Employment at Tanglewood
Staff from BSO Human Resources and Boston Gourmet will be on site in early March to recruit for the upcoming season. They will be filling about 300 seasonal roles including: Event Setup Assistants, IT support, Box Office Representatives, Gate Attendants, Grounds Crew, Patron Services Representative, Guides, Wheelchair Attendants, Parking Attendants, Concessions Cashiers, Servers, Bartenders, Catering Staff, Line and Prep Cooks, and Kitchen Utility Workers. BSO and BG representatives will be at the Linde Center on Thursday, March 5 and Saturday, March 7 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. for a meet and greet and to accept applications.
Sponsorship
The BSO is proud to welcome back Berkshire Health Systems as the Official Health System of Tanglewood.
Formal Titles for BSO Conductors, Leadership, and Guest Composers
Andris Nelsons, Ray and Maria Stata Music Director and Head of Conducting at Tanglewood
Chad Smith, Eunice and Julian Cohen President and Chief Executive Officer
Keith Lockhart, Julian and Eunice Cohen Boston Pops Conductor
Thomas Wilkins, Artistic Partner, Education and Community Engagement and Germeshausen BSO Youth and Family Concerts Conductor
Carlos Simon, Deborah and Philip Edmundson Composer Chair
John Williams, George and Roberta Berry Boston Pops Conductor Laureate
Edward Gazouleas, Director of the Tanglewood Music Center, endowed in honor of Edward H. Linde by Alan S. Bressler and Edward I. Rudman
Esa-Pekka Salonen, The Merwin Geffen, M.D. and Norman Solomon, M.D. Festival of Contemporary Music Director
To make sure our email updates are delivered to your inbox, please add mybso@bso.org to your email address book. E-mail customerservice@bso.org. This message was sent to indearts@aol.com by Boston Symphony Orchestra, 301 Massachusetts Avenue Symphony Hall, Boston, MA 02115, United States.
LENOX ~ MASSACHUSETTS
Tanglewood Learning Institute Announces Its Fall/Winter/Spring Season, With Over Three Dozen Programs September 2025 Through May 2026
TLI’s biggest season yet brings star performers from across genres, BSO musicians, and local talent and collaborators to Tanglewood’s Linde Center for Music and Learning
New this year: A TLI Jazz series and the expansion of TLI for Families
The Tanglewood Learning Institute (TLI) is pleased to announce its 2025–26 season to take place at the Linde Center for Music and Learning on Tanglewood’s campus in the Berkshires. With over three dozen programs running from early September through May, this year’s series represents a significant expansion of TLI’s year-round offerings to fulfill its founding mission to welcome audiences to experience Tanglewood year-round. The season includes a new jazz series, solo and chamber recitals, holiday programming, a film series, and several events for families.
TLI programming echoes, deepens, and complements the BSO’s artistic vision for the 2025–26 season, including the themes Where Words End: Music and the Natural World—inviting us to contemplate our relationship with nature, Faith in Our Time—encouraging us to search for meaning and transcendence, and E Pluribus Unum: From Many, One—celebrating the rich diversity that defines American music and society.
New this year, TLI Jazz kicks off fall programming with vocalist Lucía (Sept. 12), followed by the Berkshires Jazz 20th Anniversary Concert with Emmet Cohen and Georgia Heers (Oct. 10), drummer Ulysses Owens, Jr. and his band Generation Y (Nov. 7), the Ted Rosenthal Trio(Nov. 28), and vocalist Stella Cole (Dec. 13). For Valentine’s Day, vocalist Tammy McCann gives two performances of With Love from the Legendary Ladies of Jazz honoring Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Dinah Washington, and Billie Holiday and featuring cabaret-style table seating and food and beverage service (Feb. 14 & 15). Rounding out the jazz series are the Sullivan Fortner Trio (March 20), saxophonist Nick Hempton (April 10), and, back by popular demand, trumpeter Jumaane Smith (May 9).
The annual TLI Presents series this year offers Palaver Strings (Sept. 28), Sandbox Percussion (Oct. 5), classical guitarist Raphaël Feuillâtre (Nov. 1), the Catalyst Quartet (Nov. 14), violinist Joshua Brown (Jan. 30), Irish music quintet Goitse (March 15), and Arcis Saxophone Quartet (March 22) to Studio E to present innovative and intimate solo and chamber recitals. The series also includes two Berkshire Bach Portals, pairing films about Bach with live performances and conversations, presented in collaboration with Berkshire Bach Society (Nov. 8, with film Bach & Friends, and March 21, with film In the Key of Bach). Another highlight is a back-to-back set of programs inspired by Schubert’s Winterreise (“A Winter’s Journey”) with bass Andrew Munn and pianist Elenora Pertz; the first, a traditional performance of the beloved song cycle, and the second,a new work entitled postWinterreise by composer and sound artist Kat Austen (Apr. 24 & 25). The final program of the series, Mirage with Hub New Music and Daniel Wohl, includes a performance of Wohl’s UFO-inspired work as well as specially-made arrangements from his 2019 album, État (May 1).
Once again, TLI Chamber Concerts bring small ensembles of BSO musicians to perform throughout the year on Sunday afternoons at the Linde Center, with repertoire to be announced at a later date (Oct. 19, Nov. 23, Feb. 1, Feb. 22, and March 8). Each concert highlights a local Berkshires nonprofit through TLI’s In Concert with Community initiative. BSO players also return for four presentations of BSO Holiday Brass, a program of cheerful and uplifting seasonal music complete with festive decorations and a holiday-themed menu, including one morning performance aimed at families with children (December 19– 21).
In addition to the Holiday Brass family show (Dec. 21), TLI for Families welcomes Baba Israel back to the Linde Center for Music Moves, Stories Groove(Oct. 26) and offers Magic Piano & The Chopin Shorts(Apr. 12).
TLI Cinematics, a film series in collaboration with Great Barrington’s Triplex Cinema, will offer three screenings on Saturdays, Nov. 15, March 14, and April 11. Additional details will be announced at a later date.
Quote from Chad Smith, BSO President and CEO:
“We have been thrilled and humbled to see the Tanglewood Learning Institute (TLI) embraced as a year-round destination for a breadth of exceptional programming, including classical, jazz, and family friendly events. Our 2025–26 fall, winter, and spring season reflects our deepening commitment to engaging the vibrant, year-round Berkshires community and to fully exploring the potential of TLI as a space where BSO programs make thought-provoking connections between music, art, and society. This ongoing work is also a passion project for our musicians, who form deep ties to the area and are eager to remain active in the Berkshires beyond the summer months. TLI Chamber Concerts and a festive TLI Holiday Brass series, curated by BSO players especially for the Linde Center, bring a personal and dynamic touch to our program. We look forward to welcoming new and returning audiences to experience all that TLI offers—all year long.”
TLI Jazz
Opening the new TLI Jazz series is 23-year-old Mexican vocalist Lucía, whose singular artistic vision bridges the gaps between Jazz, Latin, and Pop music. Her soulful, multicultural rendition of “What a Difference a Day Makes,” is now the opening cut of her self-titled debut album that showcases the luminous qualities of her voice, and her superb technique and versatility (Sept. 12).
Founded in 2005, the local jazz performance and education nonprofit Berkshires Jazz presents a 20th Anniversary Celebration with Emmet Cohen and his trio and special guest vocalist Georgia Heers (Oct. 10). A pre-concert reception includes tapas, beverages, a video retrospective, and other tributes celebrating Berkshire Jazz’s two decades of performances, education, and advocacy.
Three-time Grammy award-winner Ulysses Owens Jr. is known for being a drummer who “take[s] a back seat to no one,” and “a musician who balances excitement gracefully and shines with innovation” (New York Times). His eighth and most recent album release, A New Beat, features his new band Generation Y, who will join for his Tanglewood debut (Nov. 7).
Celebrating the release of his new CD Classics Reimagined, acclaimed pianist Ted Rosenthal, his Trio, and special guests Sara Caswell and Anat Cohen will perform themes of Chopin, Rachmaninov, Brahms, and more (Nov. 28). Stella Cole, known for bringing classic American songs to new platforms, brings her vocal stylings to Studio E for a holiday program (Dec. 13).
For Valentine’s Day, powerhouse vocalist Tammy McCann presents two performances of With Love from the Legendary Ladies of Jazz. Paying homage to Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Dinah Washington, and Billie Holiday, the romantic event features cabaret-style table seating and food and beverage options available for pre-order and purchase (Feb. 14 & 15).
Pianist, composer, and band leader Sullivan Fortner and his Trio (with Tyrone Allen and Kayvon Gordon) make their Tanglewood debut on March 20. The series concludes with saxophonist Nick Hempton and his all-star rhythm team presenting A Night of Soul Jazz from NYC (April 10) and the return of trumpeter Jumanne Smith and his band for a program entitled Sweet Baby!, combining blues, funk, jazz, shuffles, boogaloo, and New Orleans style street beats (May 9).
TLI Presents
A variety of exciting guest performers and ensembles visit the Linde Center for TLI Presents programs, beginning with the return of the Grammy-nominated ensemble Palaver Strings for Port Strings, a survey of tango music. The program features bandoneon visionary Heyni Solera as soloist and composer as well as dancers Sheila Solis-Arroyo and Luna Beller-Tadiar (Sept. 28). Recent Avery Fisher Career Grant recipients Sandbox Percussion, known for championing contemporary chamber music, bring their innovative sound to Tanglewood the following week (Oct. 5). Hailed as the new face of classical guitar worldwide, Raphaël Feuillâtre presents a solo recital (Nov. 1).
On November 8, TLI presents the first of two film collaborations with Berkshire Bach Society (BBS) entitled Berkshire Bach Portals, with this program spotlighting the film Bach & Friends. Pianist Simone Dinnerstein and BBS Artistic Director and violinist Eugene Drucker introduce the film with a live performance and share thoughts about their own journeys with Bach’s music in a conversation after the screening.
TLI Presents programs continue with the Grammy award-winning Catalyst Quartet performing “Cinematic Refuge,” which features composers who wrote music for motion pictures and is centered around the ideals of freedom from oppression (Nov. 14). After four presentations of BSO Holiday Brass (Dec. 19–21), 2025 Avery Fisher Career Grant recipient Joshua Brown gives a violin recital with pianist Dina Vainshtein (Jan. 30).
Shortly before St. Patrick’s Day, the popular and multi-award-winning quintet Goitse brings traditional Irish tunes, interspersed with their own compositions, to the Linde Center (March 15). Later that month is the second installation of Berkshire Bach Portals with the film In the Key of Bach, accompanied by a conversation between Eugene Druckner and filmmaker Hilan Warshaw (March 21). The spectacular Arcis Saxophone Quartet returns to perform works by Bach, Shostakovich, Nikolai Kapustin, Brad Mehldau, and others in their kaleidoscopic program JSB:48 (March 22).
A pair of programs shortly after Earth Day this April examine Franz Schubert’s song cycle Winterreise. Based on poems by Wilhelm Müller (1794–1827)—whose texts Schubert had set for his great 1823 cycle Die schöne Müllerin—Winterreise was one of Schubert’s final works, and like his late chamber music, solo piano works, and symphonies, is an innovative and powerful example of Romanticism. Bass Andrew Munn and pianist Elenora Pertz perform the cycle on April 24; the following day, they reappear for postWinterreise, a composition by Kat Austen for voice, piano, electronics, and projections, inspired by both the soundscape of the original composition and contemporary climate issues.
In the final TLI Presents program, Hub New Music performs Daniel Wohl‘s UFO-inspired piece, Mirage. Noted as one of his generation’s most “imaginative, skillful creators” (New York Times), Wohl asks in Mirage, “Are UFOs just products of our imagination, projections of our hopes, or something truly alien?” One movement specifically recalls the famous 1969 Berkshire UFO Incident, an encounter that lives on in public memory. Wohl will also join Hub New Music on piano and electronics for the premiere performance of specially-made arrangements from his 2019 album, État (May 1).
TLI Chamber Concerts
TLI Chamber Concerts offer our year-round audience the opportunity to experience intimate performances with BSO musicians. These concerts feature everything from familiar favorites to classic mainstays and new music by contemporary composers, often performed with special guests. This season, programs are planned for Oct. 19, Nov. 23, Feb. 1, Feb. 22, and March 8, with repertoire and players to be announced at a later date.
Each TLI Chamber Concert highlights a local mission-driven organization as part of TLI’s service organization initiative, In Concert with Community. Organizations featured this season include Thanksgiving Angels (Oct. 19), Construct (Feb. 1), Berkshire Community Diaper Project (Feb. 22), and Literacy Network (March 8).
TLI for Families
TLI for Families welcomes young people to the Linde Center for Music Moves, Stories Groove with hip-hop and theater artist Baba Israel, who returns to Tanglewood after a sold-out event for families in July (Oct. 26). Multi-instrumentalist Sean Nowell, contemporary dancer Audrey Thao Berger, and hip-hop dancer B-Boy Spidey join to bring music, poetry, and stories to life through interactive dance.
New this winter, TLI offers a shorter, family-friendly morning performance of the BSO Holiday Brass program, complete with festive decorations and seasonal treats (Dec. 21, 10:30 a.m.).
Combining enchanting visuals with live piano accompaniment, the final TLI for Families pairs two short films(Magic Pianoand The Chopin Shorts) with some of Polish composer Frédéric Chopin’s most famous works for solo piano(Apr. 12).
TLI Cinematics
TLI Cinematics, a film series in collaboration with Great Barrington’s Triplex cinema, will offer three screenings on Saturdays November 15, March 14, and April 11. Additional details will be announced at a later date.
How to Get Tickets
Tickets to year-round TLI events go on sale Tuesday, August 12 at 10 a.m. and may be purchased online at bso.org or by calling the BSO Box Office at 888-266-1200. Tickets may also be purchased at the Tanglewood box office through the end of the summer season on August 31.
Please note that TLI Cinematics programs will go on sale at a later date.
About the Linde Center for Music and Learning and the Tanglewood Learning Institute
The four-building Linde Center for Music and Learning opened in the summer of 2019 and serves as the home for the Tanglewood Learning Institute (TLI)—a wide-ranging enrichment and education initiative offering a variety of activities for exploration and discovery alongside Tanglewood’s traditional concert schedule. The Linde Center is Tanglewood’s first new performance facility since the highly acclaimed Seiji Ozawa Hall opened in 1994, and its climate-controlled studios with webcasting and broadcast capabilities provide additional concert and rehearsal space for the Tanglewood Music Center—the BSO’s acclaimed summer music academy for young professional musicians—and also play an essential role in establishing Tanglewood as a multi-season facility. The Tanglewood Learning Institute has presented over 300 programs since 2019.