Swansong Kobayashi season ticket / 2
Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 9 in D major
Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 9 in D major
Ön egy múltbeli eseményre keresett rá. Kérjük, válogasson aktuális kínálatunkból a Jegy.hu keresőjében!
Last event date: Thursday, January 13 2022 7:30PM
Thursday, 13 January 2022, 7.30 pm
Approx. until 8.50 pm
Müpa Budapest – Béla Bartók National Concert Hall
Kobayashi season ticket / 2
Swansong
Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 9 in D major
Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra
Conductor: János Kovács
After Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, various composers developed a phobia of the number nine. They feared that, just like the immortal master of the First Viennese School, after completing their own ninth symphony, they too would never write a tenth. Mahler was no different: after his Symphony No. 8, instead of the number nine he gave his next symphony a title: Das Lied von der Erde. Much relaxed, he could then begin work on what was recorded as his Ninth, yet fate was ever vigilant – it would be Mahler’s final symphony, and he would only succeed in writing the first movement of the Tenth.
Mahler composed Symphony No. 9 in 1908/09. Though this symphony brings a period in music history to a close, as you listen to the work you can also detect the stirrings of a new era and the identification of new paths that Mahler would never have the chance to fully explore. It has the four movements of a classical symphony, yet is of epic duration, ranging from around 75 to 90 minutes in length. The order of the movements deviates entirely from a traditional symphony, with the composition opening and closing with a slow movement. The second and third movements are given the names Ländler and Rondo-Burleske. Another unusual feature is that though the work officially is in the key of D major, in reality the tonal scheme changes time and again, with the closing movement, for example, in D-flat major. Some see the work as a farewell to the world, while others emphasise its affirmaton of life. It is safe to say that the Ninth is a complex, mysterious work that always offers the listener new discoveries. As Herbert von Karajan described it: “It is music coming from another world, it is coming from eternity.” The conductor for the concert, the 70-year-old János Kovács, graduated from the Liszt Academy in 1973. He is a demanding artist of exceptional knowledge and ability, at home in a range of styles and genres and always a true pleasure for any orchestra to work alongside.
A világsiker most Budapestre érkezik! Gyerekeknek álomszép kaland, felnőtteknek mélyen megérintő történet – közös családi élmény, amire még évek múlva emlékeztek!
A darab hat különböző hátterű nőről szól, akik látszólag semmiben sem hasonlítanak egymásra, mégis ugyanarra az önbizalom-növelő rúdtánckurzusra jelentkeznek – ám hamar kiderül, hogy nem csupán a szexi mozgás miatt jöttek.
Sacré Cœur : Son règne n'a pas de fin French documentary, 95 min, 2026 in French, with Hungarian subtitles
World-renowned pianist Péter Bence returns to Budapest with a spectacular new show On October 10, 2026, an extraordinary musical experience…
Will you come at midnight and listen to some classical music while lounging on a beanbag, just an arm’s length…
Marius Petipa / Sir Peter Wright / Sir Frederick Ashton / Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky THE SLEEPING BEAUTY Fairy tale ballet…
item(s) in basket
total:
Time limit has expired. Please, put item(s) in to basket again.