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 on this page: 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.
Alan Turing, avagy "egy rejtett zseni élete" című előadás arra tesz kísérletet, hogy más szemszögből, közel hozva Turing alakját a nézőhöz, betekintést enged abba a világba, amibe sokáig csak maga Turing léphetett be.
A világsiker most Budapestre érkezik! Gyerekeknek álomszép kaland, felnőtteknek mélyen megérintő történet – közös családi élmény, amire még évek múlva emlékeztek!
A Walk My World Vergilius eposzát, Aeneas és Dido tragikus szerelmi történetét kelti életre, melyben Trója és Karthágó mitikus hősei…
2026. április 18-án Budapesten az MVM Dome ad otthont annak a kivételes zenei eseménynek, amelyen Plácido Domingo, HAUSER és Dimash…
Közel két évszázada ad reményt és erőt „e rút világban” Liliomfi és Mariska minden ukázt felülíró szerelme, Szellemfi játékkedve és…
item(s) in basket
total:
Time limit has expired. Please, put item(s) in to basket again.