The Piano (TV series)

British talent show competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Piano is a televised British music competition show that has aired on Channel 4 since 15 February 2023. It is hosted by Claudia Winkleman with Lang Lang and Mika as judges in the first two series, before Lang was replaced by Jon Batiste.[1]

Created byRichard McKerrow
Presented byClaudia Winkleman
Quick facts Genre, Created by ...
The Piano
GenreMusic competition
Created byRichard McKerrow
Presented byClaudia Winkleman
JudgesLang Lang
Mika
Jon Batiste
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series3
No. of episodes19
Production
Running time60 minutes (inc. adverts)
Production companyLove Productions
Original release
NetworkChannel 4
Release15 February 2023 (2023-02-15) 
present
Related
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In July 2023 the programme was recommissioned for a second and third series, a Christmas special and a documentary on the first series winner Lucy Illingworth.[2]

Format

Amateur musicians are invited to publicly perform on street pianos in the concourses of major UK railway stations. Performed pieces include classical standards, contemporary chart hits, and original compositions, with some performers accompanying themselves with vocals.[3]

For the first series the competitive element was kept secret from the performers — the judges observe the performances from a nearby room, selecting one performer from each location to perform at an end-of-series concert at the Royal Festival Hall.[4]

Series overview

More information Series, Episodes ...
Series Episodes Premiere Finale Winner
1 5 15 February 2023 15 March 2023 Lucy Illingworth[5][6][7]
2 7[2] 28 April 2024 9 June 2024 Brad Kella
3 7[2] 13 April 2025 25 May 2025 Diana
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Series 1 (2023)

The first series aired from 15 February to 15 March 2023 and ran for five episodes. The heats were held at London St Pancras, Leeds, Glasgow Central and Birmingham New Street with the final being held at the Royal Festival Hall. The series winner was Lucy Illingworth, a young blind girl who is also autistic and non-verbal. Illingworth went on to perform at the Coronation Concert and a commemoration of Fanny Waterman.[5][6][7]

Series 2 (2024)

The second series aired from 28 April to 9 June 2024.[8] The heats took place at Manchester Piccadilly, Cardiff Central, Edinburgh Waverley, London Victoria and Liverpool Lime Street. The series was won by Brad Kella.

Series 3 (2025)

The third series aired from 13 April to 25 May 2025.

Reception

The Guardian awarded the first episode four stars out of five, asking if it could be considered "Bake Off for pianos".[3][9][4] The Mirror considered the show to be "brilliantly simple" and life-affirming.[10] In contrast, The i Paper considered the show to be "aimless fluff".[11]

International versions

Fremantle holds international format rights.[12] They have sold it to broadcasters in Australia,[13] Denmark, Germany, Netherlands and Spain.[14]

More information Region/country, Local title ...
Region/country Local title Network Winners Judges Presenter(s)
Australia[13] The Piano ABC TV Series 1: 2025 Harry Connick Jr.
Andrea Lam
Amanda Keller
Series 2: 2026 Guy Sebastian
Andrea Lam
Amanda Keller
Denmark Klaveret TV2 Series 1: 2024 Mads Langer
Tanja Zapolski
Sarah Grünewald
Germany The Piano VOX Series 1: 2024 Mark Forster
Igor Levit
Annika Lau
Netherlands De Piano RTL 4 Series 1: 2024 Roel van Velzen
Dominic Seldis
Daria van den Bercken
Chantal Janzen
Spain El Piano LaSexta Series 1: 2024–2025 Pablo López
Mika
Ruth Lorenzo
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References

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