Program


Nincs aktuális előadás

Ön egy múltbeli eseményre keresett rá. Kérjük, válogasson aktuális kínálatunkból a Jegy.hu keresőjében!

Last event date: Monday, April 30 2018 7:45PM

 

Apocalyptic, dark, and sometimes shocking, Bruckner’s Symphony No. 8 is enthralling and infinitely rich. The conductor for this concert will be that favourite of Finnish audiences, Jukka-Pekka Saraste.

At the age of nine, Saraste was conducting with his mother’s knitting needles. While he first took up the piano and later switched to playing violin, he would eventually settle back into conducting. The superstar Finnish conductor Jukka-Pekka Saraste last led the Festival Orchestra in January 2016, in a programme of works from his homeland. This time around he’ll be conducting Bruckner’s dramatic Eighth, a work he once recorded alongside the Cologne Radio Symphony Orchestra (WDR).

“Symphony No. 8 is special to me for its rich atmosphere,” said Saraste about the last symphony the composer ever actually finished. And it was not a simple process; Bruckner rewrote the piece several times and had to wait years before someone ventured out to conduct it. The Festival Orchestra will be playing the second rewrite, the ‘Haas’ version from 1890 which, according to the conductor, best reflects the personality of the composer.

Brought up in a village in a puritanical and rigorous family, it was only after he’d gathered plenty of knowledge that Bruckner, at over forty years old, started composing. His monumental symphony, which is almost ninety minutes long, is dedicated to Emperor Franz Joseph and still divides audiences to this day. Listening to the work forces us to face demons, fears and doubts as the composer’s imagination sweeps us away to shockingly dark places. However, the splendour and monumentality of the symphony is breathtaking, and in it one can also find innocence, fragility and beauty. Hugo Wolf, Bruckner’s friend and the composer of Lieder, wrote this about the work: “This symphony is the creation of a giant and surpasses all the master’s other symphonies in spiritual dimension, richness and greatness.”

Our offer


The World of Ballet Remembers a Hungarian Legend 2014 saw the sudden passing of the international ballet artist and ballet director Iván Nagy. After his retirement, he had returned to serve his country by working as head artistic consultant for the Hungarian State Opera.

Péter Tóth Beauty and the Beast World premiere Fairy tale opera in Hungarian with Hungarian and English surtitle

Singspiel in two acts, in Hungarian, with Hungarian and English surtitles

Suggestions


Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart DON GIOVANNI Opera in two acts, in Italian, with Hungarian, English and Italian subtitles

A 60-minute tour starts every day at 13:30, 15:00 and 16:30 in English. To request a tour in other languages…

Warning! The basket time limit is about to expire!
estimated time left:
00:00

item(s) in basket

total:


Time limit has expired. Please, put item(s) in to basket again.