Concerts

Images of orchestra and choir performing in church with audience

Book now

BEETHOVEN’s Ninth Symphony

Programme

BEETHOVEN Egmont Overture
SCHUMANN Piano Concerto
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 9, ‘Choral’

 

Artists

Danny Driver piano
Elin Pritchard soprano
Victoria Simmonds alto
Andrés Presno tenor
Darren Jeffery bass

THE HANOVER  BAND

Covent Garden Chorus
Zvonimir Hačko conductor

 

About

Conductor Zvonimir Hačko returns to Cadogan Hall with The Hanover Band to present one of music’s most iconic and transcendent works: Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, the ‘Choral’. This is the symphony that changed everything – the moment when a great composer dared to add the human voice to the symphonic form, setting Schiller’s Ode to Joy to music that has inspired millions ever since. It remains one of the most joyful, unified and profoundly moving pieces ever composed.

Before the Ninth comes a work of lyrical brilliance: Schumann’s Piano Concerto in A minor, performed by the incomparable Danny Driver – an artist of rare sensitivity and commanding technique. This is a chance to experience one of today’s finest pianists bringing to life a cornerstone of the Romantic repertoire.

Opening the evening is Beethoven’s Egmont Overture, a thrilling symphonic overture to Goethe’s play Egmont for which Beethoven wrote incidental music.

The Hanover Band, specialists in historically informed performance with an international reputation for excellence, brings authentic period-instrument colour to these masterworks, while Zvonimir Hačko’s thoughtful and deeply committed conducting draws out the full emotional and musical depth of these extraordinary scores.

Presented by the International Centre for Contemporary Music, London (ICCM) at Beethoven Summit ’26, produced in collaboration with The Hanover Band.

 

 

 

 

When
30 March 2026
7:30 pm

Where
Cadogan Hall, 5 Sloane Terrace, London SW1X 9DQ
View map

Tickets
£18-£58 (Booking Fee Applies)
Book now

Additional Info
Duration: approx. 2 hours 15 mins (incl. interval)

The Hanover Band

HANOVER (Not Hannover; Germany) In terms of British history the majority of the music we play is from the Hanoverian period. Hanover also refers to Hanover Square in London, where Haydn performed his symphonies and arias in the Salomon Concerts in the 1790’s.

BAND (ref: The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians)
‘An instrumental ensemble, larger than a chamber ensemble. Thus the ’24 violins’ of Louis XIV were called ‘la grande bande’ to distinguish them from Lully’s ‘petits violons’, and Charles II’s similar ensemble was known as ‘the King’s Band’. By extension, ‘band’ came to mean an orchestra in colloquial British usage’.

THE HANOVER BAND a period name for a period orchestra.

Sign up for news