The Encyclopedia of Classic Opera · Thursday, July 2, 2026
No CCCXLVII · Established MMXXVI
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Opera House · Premiere Venue

Salzburg Festival

8 operas premiered here, catalogued in our records.

The stage of Salzburg Festival is, on the evidence of OperaPedia's catalogue, one of the documented birthplaces of the operatic literature. 8 works currently catalogued by this encyclopaedia received their premieres here, between 1928 and 2014. The earliest work in this catalogue dates from 1928, squarely within the early modern tradition, while the most recent reaches forward to 2014, a span of 86 years that traces the evolving shape of the operatic stage as a whole.

The repertoire associated with the house is dominated by composers working in the Modern and Early Modern traditions. The composer roster includes Krzysztof Penderecki, Werner Egk, Kaija Saariaho, Hans Werner Henze, and Wolfgang Rihm. Each is represented in the catalogue by works that received their first hearings on this stage, and many returned to the house repeatedly across their careers, tailoring new compositions to the particular acoustic, the orchestra in residence, and the audience that filled the gallery on opening night.

Among the earliest works in this catalogue tied to Salzburg Festival are Die schwarze Maske (1928), Irische Legende (1955), and Die Schule der Frauen (1957). Each is treated in a full editorial entry on this site, with synopsis, libretto credits, and the history of subsequent productions. The early premieres are particularly valuable to the historian because they document the house's programming priorities at the moment when its reputation was being established, and they reveal the close working relationships between the resident impresario and the composers of the day.

The most recently catalogued premieres at Salzburg Festival include L'Upupa und der Triumph der Sohnesliebe (2003), Dionysos (2010), and Charlotte Salomon (2014), a sequence that demonstrates how the house has continued to participate in the living tradition of the lyric stage rather than functioning as a pure heritage institution. Programming of this kind requires a steady relationship between commissioning bodies, librettists, and the singers around whom new works can be built.

Operas premiered at this venue were composed in German, Polish, and Finnish. For the encyclopaedia, this linguistic profile is significant: it reveals the cosmopolitan habits of the singers and audiences who passed through, the international circulation of libretti and orchestral scores, and the way a single house could host musical traditions that developed in geographically distant capitals. Below, the complete list of works premiered at Salzburg Festival is set out by date, with each title linked to its full editorial entry. Readers interested in following the same composers into adjacent venues may wish to consult the linked composer biographies; readers interested in adjacent traditions may follow the linked language and era pages.


Complete Catalogue of Premieres at Salzburg Festival

An Intermission