Performances

Sounds of Science is passionate about performing wherever science is celebrated and brought to life.

Our mission is to build bridges with our sounds – from complicated formulas to comprehensible emotions, from skepticism to enthusiasm.

Whether on festival stages like Trieste Next or the MINT Festival Lienz, at the Long Night of Research, or in schools: We make science tangible.

Our performances

February 2026 (planned)

Opening of a special mushroom exhibition at a natural history museum

More details coming soon!

soundofscience | Mikrobiologe Prof. Heribert Insam mit Grawe & Schweige

November 2025

Anniversary celebration of the klasse!forschung association

This event is by invitation only!

November 2024

MINT Festival Lienz, Austria

The MINT Festival Lienz (also “MintLienz”) was a series of events in East Tyrol dedicated to inspiring children, teenagers, and adults in the fields of mathematics, computer science, natural sciences, and technology – in short STEM –.

soundofscience | Mikrobiologe Prof. Heribert Insam mit Grawe & Schweige

October 2024

Innsbruck Nature Film Festival (INFF), Austria

As part of the “Food Matinée,” Heribert Insam brought the world of microorganisms and their role in climate change closer to the audience. He was accompanied by Sebastian Schweiger (piano) and Patrizia Grawe (voice), with the sudden rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide made audible by the shrill violin of Marion Pescoller. The trio “Sound of Science” will continue to explore the topic of microbes, climate, and society from a musical perspective.

September 2024

Trieste Next Science Festival, Italy

with Sara Righetto and Alessandro Pasqual Duo

The talk “Microbes and Climatelooked at the impact of climate change and how scientific research can help address this challenge globally. Heribert Insam (BioTreaT) together with Iris Bertani (ICGEB) and the duo Sara Righetto and Alessandro Pasqual Duo, performed at the Trieste Next Science Festival on September 29 at 15:00.

Trieste Next Science Festival, Italien | soundofscience