BBC Proms 2026: a season-long celebration of American music and much more

BBC Proms 2026: a season-long celebration of American music and much more

All you need to know about the 2026 instalment of the world's biggest classical music festival

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BBC Proms 2026 (Friday 17 July-Saturday 12 September 2026, at London’s Royal Albert Hall and venues across the UK) presents 86 concerts over eight weeks: more than 70,000 tickets at £8, every note broadcast on BBC Radio 3 & BBC Sounds, and 24 Proms programmes on BBC TV and iPlayer

• A season-long celebration of American music marks 250 years since the signing of the US Declaration of Independence, with the Proms debut of The Met Orchestra and the highly anticipated return of the Los Angeles Philharmonic after nearly a quarter of a century. The season features the UK premieres of major new works co-commissioned by the BBC from American composers Wynton Marsalis and Jessie Montgomery, and appearances from conductors and star soloists including Marin Alsop, Angel Blue and Joyce DiDonato.

Angel Blue
Angel Blue. Pic: Sonya Garza - Sonya Garza

• The Proms welcomes the finest orchestras from around the world, including the debuts of the Spanish National Orchestra and the Mahler Academy Orchestra and the return of the Berlin, Munich and Oslo Philharmonic Orchestras.

• Internationally renowned pianists Martha Argerich, Kirill Gerstein, Yunchan Lim and Yuja Wang return to the Proms, and siblings Lucas and Arthur Jussen make their Proms debut.

• A celebration of homegrown creativity includes a brass band Prom with the Black Dyke Band, the world premiere of a new concerto by Gwilym Simcock written for Sheku Kanneh-Mason, Jess Gillam and Ben Goldscheider 10 years after they were BBC Young Musician finalists, a Late Night Prom featuring Scottish percussionist Dame Evelyn Glennie, and performances celebrating the breadth and influence of Benjamin Britten, marking 50 years since his death, with early pieces and large-scale concert works.

Yunchan Lim South Korean pianist
Korean superstar pianist Yunchan Lim returns to the Proms - Lisa-Marie Mazzucco

• The season marks a plethora of anniversaries and centenaries, including those of composers John Coltrane, Morton Feldman, Edmund Thornton Jenkins, Betsy Jolas, György Kurtág and Steve Reich, as well as a concert dedicated to the centenary of jazz icon Miles Davis.

• New cross‑genre musical explorations include a 40th anniversary concert of Paul Simon’s Graceland with Ladysmith Black Mambazo, a night exploring Prog Rock, a Prom with Turkish psych-folk band Altın Gün conducted by Jules Buckley, a celebration of soul legend Marvin Gaye, and a Prom with singer-songwriter Nadine Shah.

• The season features 20 premieres, including 17 BBC commissions, from 100-year-old composer Betsy Jolas and 97-year-old Thea Musgrave, to Dani Howard, Mark-Anthony Turnage and Gabriel Kahane, as well as brand new works in the Proms Young Composer concert.

• Across the UK, the Proms returns for weekend residencies in the North-East of England (visiting Gateshead, Middlesbrough and Sunderland) and to Bristol, and makes its debut in Mold, North Wales for a Prom with Sinfonia Cymru, inspired by the popular Radio 3 programme, Words and Music.

• Proms for families include a new collaboration with BBC Children’s Horrible Science, a Prom celebrating the music of composer Alan Menken for Disney, a relaxed matinee with Fantasia Orchestra and a relaxed Prom at Bristol Beacon with the National Open Youth Orchestra, featuring the world’s first concerto written for the Clarion, an app that transforms a tablet computer into a musical instrument, and a new commission from Charlotte Harding, inspired by Benjamin Britten’s Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra.

The BBC Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, led by Dalia Stasevska, performs in the First Night of the Proms (17 July) alongside the BBC Singers, tenor Thomas Atkins and pianist and global phenomenon Yunchan Lim. The concert opens with Aaron Copland’s Fanfare for the Common Man followed by George Gershwin’s An American in Paris, and Lim performs Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G Major.

Composer Aaron Copland and cat in 1947
Composer Aaron Copland and cat in 1947. His Fanfare for the Common Man will be the first piece of music performed at this year's BBC Proms. Pic: Getty Images - Getty Images

The second half opens with a world premiere from Josephine Stephenson, commissioned by the BBC, and culminates with Finzi’s rarely performed For St Cecilia, a work inspired by the patron saint of music.

The Last Night of the Proms (12 September) features a star-spangled array of musical treats, including the first performance at the Proms of Samuel Barber’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Piano Concerto performed by Yuja Wang, returning to the Proms after three years. Classical music’s biggest party features the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Chorus under Chief Conductor Sakari Oramo, alongside the BBC Singers and Scottish tenor Nicky Spence, leading the festivities.

A season of American music marks 250 years since the signing of the US Declaration of Independence, with many of the world’s greatest American orchestras, composers and musicians making appearances this summer. The LA Philharmonic conducted by their outgoing Music & Artistic Director Gustavo Dudamel performs two Proms: a programme of Beethoven and Thomas Adès (11 August) and Beethoven and Gabriela Ortiz (12 August).

Gustavo Dudamel is New York Philharmonic's next music director
Gustavo Dudamel conducts the LA Phil

The Met Orchestra, New York, makes its Proms debut, conducted by Music Director Yannick Nézet‑Séguin, also performing two Proms: a programme of Strauss with mezzo-soprano Elza van den Heever (26 August) and Mahler with mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato (27 August).

Marin Alsop conducts an American Classics Prom featuring music by Bernstein, Gershwin, Copland and more (24 August), and a special Miles Davis Prom marks the centenary of the great jazz musician's birth (20 August). Wynton Marsalis’s Concerto for Orchestra, co-commissioned by the BBC, gets its UK premiere (13 August), as does Jessie Montgomery’s new Cello Concerto, a co-commission between the BBC and Lincoln Center, New York (20 July).

The American soprano and Last Night of the Proms alumna Angel Blue joins the Chineke! Orchestra for a Prom that includes music by the Charleston-born composer Edmund Thornton Jenkins (22 August) and Steve Reich’s 90th birthday is celebrated in two Proms: Paraorchestra performs Music for 18 Musicians (7 August), opening Bristol Beacon’s Proms season, and The Colin Currie Group performs Tehillim in a Late Night Prom at the Royal Albert Hall that includes a programme of early sacred choral music with The Gesualdo Six (2 September).

Steve Reich composer
Steve Reich's 90th birthday is celebrated in two Proms - Dan Porges / Getty Images

The world’s finest orchestras take centre stage, with the Proms debut of the Spanish National Orchestra and their Chief Conductor and Artistic Director David Afkham performing a vibrant programme of Spanish music and works inspired by Spain (19 July). Europe’s Mahler Academy Orchestra makes its Proms debut conducted by Music Director Philipp von Steinaecker, with Mahler’s Symphony No. 9 (11 September).

Sir Simon Rattle conducts three works by the great Romantic composer Robert Schumann with the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra and violinist Isabelle Faust (7 September), and Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla makes a welcome return to the Proms conducting the Oslo Philharmonic and violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja, in a programme that includes Stravinsky’s Violin Concerto (29 August).

Classical music’s global superstars make appearances throughout the season: Martha Argerich performs Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 2 with the Munich Philharmonic, almost 60 years to the day since she made her Proms debut at The Last Night of the Proms in 1966. The concert also includes Louise Farrenc’s Overture No. 2 and Brahms’s Symphony No. 4 (5 September).

Martha Argerich with Daniel Barenboim during a rehearsal session at the Philarmonie, Berlin, September 14, 2013
The great Martha Argerich (here with Daniel Barenboim) is back at the Proms almost 60 years after her debut here - SOEREN STACHE/DPA/AFP via Getty Images

Augustin Hadelich performs Beethoven’s Violin Concerto with the Berlin Philharmonic in a concert that also features Scriabin’s Symphony No. 3, 'The Divine Poem' (3 September). This is the second of two Proms performed by the Berlin Philharmonic; the first features Elgar’s Enigma Variations and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4 (2 September).

Leonidas Kavakos plays Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto with the BBC Symphony Orchestra in a concert that also includes the world premiere of Dani Howard’s Concerto for Brass, ‘SIGNAL’, co-commissioned by the BBC, and Scriabin’s Symphony No. 2 (2 August).

Felix Klieser, who was born without arms and who plays the French horn with his feet, returns to the Proms after two years to perform Mozart’s Horn Concerto No. 3 in a Prom with Academy of St Martin in the Fields, also featuring works by Britten and Elgar and the world premiere of Thea Musgrave’s Bassoon Concerto, Out of the Darkness, performed by Amy Harman (23 August – matinee).

Celebrating the best homegrown creativity, this season marks ten years since Sheku Kanneh‑Mason won BBC Young Musician, and he returns to the Proms alongside his fellow 2016 finalists: saxophonist Jess Gillam and French horn player Ben Goldscheider. They perform the world premiere of Gwilym Simcock’s Triple Concerto for Soprano Saxophone, Horn and Cello, commissioned by the BBC to mark the anniversary (6 September).

Horn player Felix Klieser was born with no arms and plays the instrument with his toes
Felix Klieser - Finnbarr Webster/Getty ImagesFinnbarr Webster/Getty Images

The BBC’s own orchestras and choirs are, as ever, the backbone of the Proms, making 42 appearances this season, with Ryan Bancroft making his final appearances as Chief Conductor of the BBC National Orchestra of Wales. There are performances from 41 orchestras and choirs from across the UK including Aurora Orchestra, returning with Mahler's Symphony No. 1 (1 August and 2 August – matinee). The first half of the concert showcases actors bringing Mahler’s creative process to life, and the second half features the symphony performed by the orchestra, entirely from memory.

British soloists making appearances at the Proms this year include euphonium player David Childs, who appears as part of a programme of brass band music with the Black Dyke Band (19 July – matinee), and tenor Laurence Kilsby, who sings alongside the Jupiter Ensemble in a Late Night Prom which includes music by Dowland, Purcell and Handel (21 July – Late Night).

Soprano Louise Alder, who dazzled at the Last Night of the Proms in 2025, this year performs with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and their Principal Conductor Edward Gardner (27 July). Scottish percussionist Dame Evelyn Glennie makes a highly-anticipated return alongside Fantasia Orchestra and the BBC Singers, in a Late Night Prom that includes music by Caroline Shaw, John Coltrane, Duke Ellington and Radiohead (11 August – Late Night).

The season marks a plethora of composer anniversaries and centenaries, including 50 years since the death of Benjamin Britten, with Guy Johnston performing the Cello Symphony (28 July), Simone Lamsma performing the Violin Concerto (4 September) and the Sinfonia of London and their Principal Conductor John Wilson performing Les Illuminations and Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge (6 September – matinee).

The iconic showpiece The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra, meanwhile, is performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Sakari Oramo (6 September). There are works throughout the season that reflect on the afterlife, including a Visions of the Beyond Prom with music by Lili Boulanger, Szymanowski, Messiaen and Richard Strauss, Berlioz’s dramatic legend The Damnation of Faust featuring an all-star cast: tenor John Osborn, soprano Véronique Gens, baritone Gerald Finley and bass Thomas Dolié, and Parts 1 and 2 of Thomas Adès’s Dante – Part 1: Inferno (11 August) and Part 2: Purgatorio (8 August).

The Proms celebrates some of the most influential sounds of the past century, beginning with a symphonic tribute to the British movement of Prog Rock, as the BBC Concert Orchestra and conductor Robert Ames reimagine classics by Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Genesis, Jethro Tull, Mike Oldfield and more, presented by BBC Radio 6 Music’s Stuart Maconie (18 July). A Late Night Prom honours Paul Simon’s landmark album Graceland (5 August), while Bond and Beyond brings iconic 007 film music to the Royal Albert Hall with Daniel Bartholomew‑Poyser and the BBC Concert Orchestra (25 August).

Emerson, Lake & Palmer, 1974
Emerson, Lake and Palmer are among the prog rock giants being reinterpreted at this year's Proms - Getty Images

The season also celebrates the composer Alan Menken, one of only 22 people worldwide who have won at least one Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony Award, with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra and special guests performing favourites from Disney films including The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, Beauty and the Beast and Enchanted (31 August).

Following the success of Horrible Histories: ‘Orrible Opera in 2023, the Proms partners with BBC Children’s for Horrible Science: The Big Bang Proms Experiment, featuring the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, conducted by Karen Ní Bhroin (25 July – matinee and evening performances).

Radio 3’s Ultimate Calm makes its Proms debut in a Late Night Prom curated by Erland Cooper, blending classical, ambient and electronic sound worlds (27 August, Late Night). Spectacular moments, one-off large-scale performances and rarely performed works of the kind only the Proms can offer include the first ever Proms performance of Weber's final opera, Oberon, 200 years after the composer's death. Soloists Nicky Spence (tenor) and Jennifer Davis (soprano) sing alongside the Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique and the Monteverdi Choir, conducted by Sir Mark Elder (6 August).

Nicky Spence
Nicky Spence. Pic: Ki Price

Kurtág’s Kafka Fragments is performed by Anu Komsi (soprano) and Sakari Oramo (violin) as part of BBC Proms Bristol (9 August – Bristol Beacon). The BBC Symphony Orchestra, led by Oramo, performs Kurtág’s monumental Stele (22 July). There are also performances of Berlioz’s Requiem (Grande messe des morts) (15 August) and Zimmermann’s Märchen‑Suite (4 August).

The Proms shines a spotlight on underrepresented voices, including Czech composer Vítězslava Kaprálová with her radiant Suita rustica (1 September), the prodigiously talented French composer Lili Boulanger, who died at the age of 24, with her haunting Vieille prière bouddhique (23 July), and Nadia Boulanger, whose rarely heard Fantasy for Piano and Orchestra will be performed by Alexandra Dariescu, making her Proms debut (5 August).

We've also got the complete BBC Proms 2026 listings for you.


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