Apple Music Classical has formed a new partnership with London’s Wigmore Hall, marking a shift toward digital-only releases for the historic venue. The collaboration, announced as part of Wigmore Hall’s 125th anniversary, sees the prestigious concert space relaunch its Wigmore Hall Live platform exclusively online, with all recording royalties flowing directly to the performing artists.
Wigmore Hall, a 550-seat venue in Marylebone known for its exceptional acoustics since opening in 1901, has long served as a cornerstone for chamber music, early music, and vocal recitals. It hosts more than 500 concerts annually in a Grade II listed building that has welcomed generations of musicians. Under the new arrangement, the hall will shoulder all production costs for its releases and claim no share of the income, ensuring artists receive 100 percent of royalties. This artist-first approach stands out in an industry where streaming payouts have often drawn criticism for their meager returns, especially for classical performers who rely on live work and niche audiences.
The platform plans to issue four digital-only recordings each year, captured from live performances and shaped in collaboration with the artists involved. These will debut exclusively on Apple Music Classical for an initial three-month window. Director John Gilhooly highlighted the potential for listeners to experience the hall’s concerts with a sense of closeness to the original event, pointing to the service’s audio quality as a key factor.
The inaugural release features pianist Boris Giltburg performing Beethoven’s Piano Sonatas Nos. 4, 8, 9, 20 (Pathétique), and 26 (Les Adieux), recorded live in February 2025. Sonata No. 26 is available immediately, with the full album following shortly after, accompanied by an artist commentary track offering Giltburg’s personal insights into the works.
This deal adds Wigmore Hall to Apple Music Classical’s roster of institutional partners, which already includes major orchestras and venues such as the Berlin Philharmonic, Carnegie Hall, and the Vienna Philharmonic. The app itself emerged in 2023, building on Apple’s 2021 acquisition of the classical specialist Primephonic. Bundled with a standard Apple Music subscription, it provides access to over five million tracks, catering to a genre that has struggled with discoverability and fair compensation in the broader streaming landscape.
While the partnership promises better visibility and direct financial benefits for artists, it also reflects broader tensions in classical music’s digital transition. Live venues like Wigmore Hall have faced mounting pressures from post-pandemic recovery and shifting audience habits, making online distribution an increasingly vital revenue stream. Yet reliance on a single tech company’s platform raises familiar questions about long-term control and the preservation of independent cultural spaces in an era dominated by subscription ecosystems. For listeners, it offers convenient high-quality access to intimate performances that might otherwise remain ephemeral. Whether this model proves sustainable for smaller institutions remains to be seen, but it underscores the ongoing negotiation between tradition and technology in classical music.
