世界3大音楽祭を楽しむ。

Column|2025.6.24

Text_ Kotaro Sakata
Photo_Kotaro Sakata


Enjoying the World’s Three Great Music Festivals.

This year’s Golden Week saw another resounding success for La Folle Journée TOKYO 2025, Japan’s largest classical music festival, with a total of 193,000 visitors.
The appeal lies in its casual yet high-caliber format—short, one-hour concerts you can hop between, free performances, food stalls, and a full day immersed in music. I also had the honor of joining the live broadcast as a commentator. Globally, three music festivals stand out: Salzburg, Verona, and Bayreuth. Let’s explore what makes each unique.In terms of grandeur and artistic excellence, the Salzburg Festival reigns supreme.It is held in a picturesque Alpine town in western Austria famous as the filming location of The Sound of Music.
The Vienna Philharmonic, one of the world’s finest orchestras, anchors the event, and top conductors and soloists from around the globe give performances of the highest caliber. Don’t let the summer resort setting fool you—casual attire will leave you feeling underdressed. Elegant guests arrive in formal wear, creating a scene as glamorous as a red carpet. In front of the main venue, the Festspielhaus, tourists watch as finely dressed patrons stroll in for a night of opera, adding to the festival’s refined atmosphere. In Italy, the birthplace of opera, the Verona Festival draws large crowds to its open-air Roman amphitheater. This is a festival for everyone: young and old, seasoned fans and newcomers alike. Held outdoors, it offers grand, theatrical productions that make full use of the arena’s monumental setting. From plush seats to ancient stone benches, attendees dress up or come casually—it’s all welcome, and part of the charm. Tickets are relatively easy to obtain, making it the perfect choice for a first international festival. Finally, we come to the most exclusive of the three: the Bayreuth Festival. Securing a ticket is famously difficult—some say it takes ten years. Entry requires both a ticket and matching ID. Only the works of Wagner are performed, drawing devoted “Wagnerians” from across the globe in a kind of pilgrimage.
Is Wagner’s opera too complex? For some, yes. This festival is for seasoned admirers already immersed in his world. It’s no casual summer outing. The venue is a temple to Wagner’s art, solemn and uncompromising. The seating is spartan: thin wooden chairs with a touch of padding, designed purely for acoustics. The full Ring Cycle, Wagner’s magnum opus, spans four evenings and fifteen hours. Wagner’s longest single opera, Tristan und Isolde, runs over five hours—on those same unforgiving wooden seats. It’s as demanding as it is sublime. So—which festival will you choose this summer?

ヴェローナの古代遺跡をそのまま使った会場が圧巻。

大人気のラ・フォル・ジュルネ無料公開コンサート。

ザルツブルクの夜は、
着飾ってオペラから始まる。

ワーグナー詣での聖地、
バイロイト祝祭劇場。