Blue Sunday – A Concert for All

On Sunday, 17 May at 12:00, Megaron the Athens Concert Hall invites audiences of all ages to a musical journey, with the ERT National Symphony Orchestra guiding us from 19th-century French music to the dance traditions of Latin America.

liminal continues its collaboration with Megaron the Athens Concert Hall, making the concert accessible to people with sensory, neurodevelopmental, and/or mobility disabilities.

A photograph of a large symphony orchestra in a vast performance space with tiered levels and a light wooden floor. The orchestra members are dressed in formal black attire; some are playing their instruments while others are not, yet all are focused on the conductor in front of them, who is standing on a raised platform with their back to the audience. The strings stand out at the front, followed by a smaller group of wind instruments in the middle, and percussion positioned further back. The wooden-paneled walls also feature a massive pipe organ at the rear, its metal pipes arranged in a striking vertical composition.

Sunday noon at Megaron

In this Sunday concert, we will have the opportunity to get to know important works by great composers from different eras and parts of the world.

In our musical journey, we will encounter L’Arlésienne by Georges Bizet, written in 1872 for the eponymous play by Alphonse Daudet, as well as Pavane pour une infante défunte, in which Maurice Ravel’s clear, impressionistic palette creates a nostalgic fantasy around a slow Renaissance dance.

Next, we Next, we turn to George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, composed in under five weeks, before concluding our musical adventures with the immensely popular Danzón No. 2 by Arturo Márquez, a work inspired by a Cuban-rooted dance tradition that took shape and flourished in Mexico.

A portrait photograph of Nadia Kodogeorgi. With brown eyes and short blonde hair parted to the side, she gently rests her smiling face on the palm of her left hand. Her bold rose-red lipstick and red nail polish contrast with her fair skin and her pure white blouse.

Accompanying us on this journey will be actress Nadia Kodogeorgi, who, in her own distinctive way, will connect the musical “stops” along the way.

Megaron open to all

In collaboration with liminal the concert is made accessible to families with children with sensory, neurodevelopmental or/and mobility disabilities.

Children with disabilities are encouraged to come to the space 20 minutes before the concert begins, to attend a touch tour, meet the members of the orchestra and familiarize themselves with the new environment.

During the concert, there will be interpretation in Greek Sign Language, as well as the presence a member of the liminal team.


Useful information

Day: Sunday 17 May 2026
Time: 12:00
Location: Christos Lambrakis Hall, Megaron The Athens Concert Hall (Vas. Sofias & Kokkali 115 21 Athens) Cost: €25, €16, €10 Concessions

Registration for the program and the touch tour for children with disabilities can be made by phone at +30 210 72 82 333 (Monday–Friday, 10:00–17:00 p.m.) or by email at [email protected].


A Megaron The Athens Concert Hall production

The logo of the Megaron Concert Hall of Athens in black. Below it, in black lettering, it reads: “Megaron Concert Hall of Athens”, and underneath that, “With the support of the Ministry of Culture”.

Accessibility Sponsor

The Alpha Bank logo: On a dark blue background appears the white imprint of the reverse side of the Aegina silver stater, one of the first coins of ancient Greece, featuring thick straight lines that intersect.