Italian star composer on arena tour through Germany
Eight concerts planned for spring 2025
The pianist and composer Ludovico Einaudi was born in Turin on November 23, 1955. Perhaps it was his mother, an amateur pianist, who introduced him to music for the first time and thus laid the foundation for his later brilliant career.
brilliant career. He studied music at the Turin Conservatory and the Milan Conservatory. His talent earned him a scholarship to the Tanglewood Music Festival in 1982, where he first came into contact with American minimalism. He is a composer and artist who now feels at home in many genres. He composes for ballet, cinema and theater as well as numerous pieces for orchestra and ensemble.
With "Le Onde" The Waves, his first solo album, Ludovico Einaudi gained the undivided attention of the piano world. He followed this up with his next releases, "Eden Roc" (1999), "I giorni" (2001) and "Diario Mali" (2003). On his next studio album "Una mattina", released in 2004, Einaudi's music became more concentrated and introspective, while it expanded on the following album "Divenire". Both albums, which had already topped the classical music charts, also made it into the pop charts for the first time.
The film music he wrote for the 2002 remake of "Doctor Zhivago" won an award at the New York Film Festival. It was not long before Ludovico Einaudi began to perform in increasingly important concert halls. Even
he did not stop writing new music during extensive world tours. The album "Elements", released in 2015, was born "out of a desire to start afresh and explore new paths". Over the following three years, the accompanying tour sold out the world's most important pop arenas as well as the most prestigious classical concert halls, including a concert at Derby Park in Hamburg.
In February and March 2025, Ludovico Einaudi will pay another visit to Germany, this time with a large-scale arena tour comprising eight concerts. There will be opportunities to listen to the sounds of the Italian star composer in Cologne, Hanover, Mannheim, Munich, Stuttgart, Leipzig, Dortmund and Hamburg.