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Music in Barcelona

A reason to come back every season

 

What makes Barcelona’s music scene so special? Where to hear classical music, jazz or electronic music in Barcelona? Which music festivals should you not miss in Barcelona in 2026 and 2027?

 

There are musical cities that specialise. Barcelona does not. On the same weekend that the Palau de la Música Catalana hosts a baroque cycle, Razzmatazz programmes techno until dawn and the Jamboree welcomes a jazz trumpeter from New Orleans. The city does not choose: it accumulates. And that capacity to contain opposing registers without either losing authenticity is, perhaps, the most singular trait of its musical life.

 

This is not a recent phenomenon. Since the Liceu opened its doors in 1847, Barcelona has been the setting for one of the most active music scenes in southern Europe. The Catalan bourgeoisie of the nineteenth century built theatres and concert halls with the same ambition with which they built Modernista houses: music was also a way of proclaiming identity and aspiration. That founding impulse is still recognisable today in the three institutions that form the backbone of the city’s classical music life: the Gran Teatre del Liceu, the Palau de la Música Catalana and L’Auditori.

Music in Barcelona

A reason to come back every season

 

What makes Barcelona’s music scene so special? Where to hear classical music, jazz or electronic music in Barcelona? Which music festivals should you not miss in Barcelona in 2026 and 2027?

 

There are musical cities that specialise. Barcelona does not. On the same weekend that the Palau de la Música Catalana hosts a baroque cycle, Razzmatazz programmes techno until dawn and the Jamboree welcomes a jazz trumpeter from New Orleans. The city does not choose: it accumulates. And that capacity to contain opposing registers without either losing authenticity is, perhaps, the most singular trait of its musical life.

 

This is not a recent phenomenon. Since the Liceu opened its doors in 1847, Barcelona has been the setting for one of the most active music scenes in southern Europe. The Catalan bourgeoisie of the nineteenth century built theatres and concert halls with the same ambition with which they built Modernista houses: music was also a way of proclaiming identity and aspiration. That founding impulse is still recognisable today in the three institutions that form the backbone of the city’s classical music life: the Gran Teatre del Liceu, the Palau de la Música Catalana and L’Auditori.

우리와 함께 이점으로 예약하세요

  • 최고 가격 보장

  • 유연한 조건

  • 얼리 체크인 / 레이트 체크아웃
    (가능 여부에 따라 다름)

  • 무료 주차

  • 저희 레스토랑 카테드랄 1951
    에서 15% 할인 (점심 또는 저녁 식사 시 최소 30유로 이상 주문 가능)

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