Salut Salon
October 2025 | ||||||
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Two violins, a cello, a piano - and an abundance of creative energy: Salut Salon are “Hamburg’s most charming cultural export” (Hamburger Abendblatt). For over 20 years, the four virtuosos have performed their “Masterpieces of ‘classical’ comedy” (The New York Times) in the most renowned concert halls around the world, delighting audiences with exhilarating feats that blend Vivaldi with vocal acrobatics, tango with crime shows, rap with Rachmaninoff - “Wonderful!” (The Economic Times India).
With their new program “Heimat” (Homeland), Salut Salon will also celebrate the finale of a concert trilogy starting in 2025: Following “Love” and “Dreams,” the next grand, almost all-encompassing theme will be explored. Because: What exactly is Heimat? Is it a place? Tradition? A feeling? Are the people who surround us part of it? Or perhaps words, languages, sounds?
With the dreamlike certainty with which the four musicians transform pieces from all corners of the world into this wonderful concert evening, they also provide their own answer: Salut Salon feel at home in the world - and their homeland is music.
Program and cast
Prinzregententheater
The Prinzregententheater, or Prince Regent Theatre, is a theatre and opera house located at 12 Prinzregentenplatz in theBavarian city of Munich, Germany.
Initiated by Ernst von Possart, the theatre was built in the Prinzregentenstrasse as a festival hall for the operas of Richard Wagner near an area where a similar project of King Ludwig II had failed some decades before. Named after Luitpold, Prince Regent of Bavaria the building was designed by Max Littmann and opened 21 August 1901 with a production of "Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg" by Richard Wagner. Like the Bayreuth theatre, the auditorium was designed to Wagner’s specifications, however an amphitheater has replaced the loges.
After the destruction of the Nationaltheater during World War II, the Prinzregententheater housed the Bavarian State Operafrom 1944 to 1963 even though it also suffered damage during the war which was not repaired until 1958. Since its renovation in 1988, the Prinzregententheater, with 1122 seats, has served also for the Bavarian Staatsschauspiel and now houses the Bavarian Theatre Academy founded by August Everding. Another theatre in the building, the Akademietheateror Academy Theatre, seats 300.
The Prince Regent theater is reached very well both by car and by public transportation MVV.
With the MVV (Munich Transport)
Subway: U4 Prinzregentenplatz
Bus: Lines 54, 100 Prince Regent Place