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Recorded Live at Carnegie Hall

You can experience concerts recorded live on Carnegie Hall’s stages no matter where you are. From legendary albums to on-demand broadcasts and videos of recent performances, there’s always something from our stage to explore.

Carnegie Hall+: From Carnegie Hall

Selected concerts recorded live at the Hall are now available for viewing on Carnegie Hall+, from archival treasures like Lang Lang’s Carnegie Hall recital debut to recent performances, including an acclaimed concert by Orchestre de Paris with conductor Klaus Mäkelä and a special program by the NYO-USA All-Stars with Yannick Nézet-Séguin and Daniil Trifonov.

Explore the catalog on Carnegie Hall+.

NYO Jazz at Carnegie Hall with Alicia Olatuja

Carnegie Hall’s jazz big band of young musicians from across the United States performs a program of standards and new works under the leadership of trumpet great Sean Jones with multi-genre singer Alicia Olatuja.

On-Demand WQXR Broadcasts

Listen to the newest WQXR broadcast from Carnegie Hall. Browse the full list of broadcasts currently available for listening.

Igor Levit, Piano

Broadcast from January 12, 2025

Igor Levit is always persuasive, giving even the most standard repertory the spark of revelation,” The New York Times writes of his “sumptuously glamorous” recording of J. S. Bach’s Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue that opens this matinee recital. Within the four emotional piano works that comprise Brahms’s Ballades, Op. 10, an alluring wealth of interpretive possibilities await, while Beethoven’s kinetic Seventh Symphony—arranged for solo piano by Liszt—is a grand and utterly engrossing musical world unto itself.

Albums

New Release from Natalia Lafourcade

Listen to a recently released recording of Natalia Lafourcade’s 2022 Carnegie Hall concert.

Explore more albums recorded at Carnegie Hall.

From the Stage

This regularly updated YouTube playlist features carefully chosen excerpts from extraordinary Carnegie Hall performances. Explore the full playlist on YouTube.

Ensemble Modern with Wallis Giunta in “Pride” from Weill/Brecht’s The Seven Deadly Sins

Ensemble Modern and conductor HK Gruber are joined by mezzo-soprano Wallis Giunta in Gruber and Christian Muthspiel’s arrangement of The Seven Deadly Sins, a biting satire composed in 1933—the same year Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht fled their native Germany.

As part of our festival exploring the fall of the Weimar Republic, the delicate “Pride” waltz expresses the heartbreaking tension between self-worth and societal demands through Weill’s clever compositional style and Brecht’s satirical lyrics.

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