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Classical concerts featuring
Boedapest Festival Orkest

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Upcoming Concerts

Concerts featuring Boedapest Festival Orkest in season 2024/25 or later

May 10, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Mahler Festival: Budapest Festival Orchestra and Iván Fischer - Mahler's Symphony No. 2

Sat, May 10, 2025, 20:15
Boedapest Festival Orkest, Groot Omroepkoor, Iván Fischer (Conductor), Christiane Karg (Soprano), Anna Lucia Richter (Mezzo-Soprano)
'Mahler's beauty always hurts', conductor Iván Fischer said recently. Tonight he conducts his own Budapest Festival Orchestra in Mahler's Symphony No. 2, full of passion, lyricism and brightly shining melodies. Mahler is in good hands with Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra. Fischer knows like no other how to get Mahler's music flowing, there is no composer he understands better. As early as 2006, Fischer and the orchestra recorded Mahler's Symphony No. 2. 'Impressive', wrote Gramophone.He who calls us gives us eternal life - sings the choir towards the end of Mahler's Symphony No. 2. In this emotionally charged work, Mahler expresses his ideas about life after death. Bliss and melancholy are both given space. Pure, insinuatingly and moving.
May 11, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Mahler Festival: Budapest Festival Orchestra and Iván Fischer - Mahler's Symphony No. 2

Sun, May 11, 2025, 11:00
Boedapest Festival Orkest, Groot Omroepkoor, Iván Fischer (Conductor), Christiane Karg (Soprano), Anna Lucia Richter (Mezzo-Soprano)
'Mahler's beauty always hurts', conductor Iván Fischer said recently. Tonight he conducts his own Budapest Festival Orchestra in Mahler's Symphony No. 2, full of passion, lyricism and brightly shining melodies. Mahler is in good hands with Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra. Fischer knows like no other how to get Mahler's music flowing, there is no composer he understands better. As early as 2006, Fischer and the orchestra recorded Mahler's Symphony No. 2. 'Impressive', wrote Gramophone.He who calls us gives us eternal life - sings the choir towards the end of Mahler's Symphony No. 2. In this emotionally charged work, Mahler expresses his ideas about life after death. Bliss and melancholy are both given space. Pure, insinuatingly and moving.
May 13, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Mahler Festival: Budapest Festival Orchestra and Iván Fischer - Mahler's Symphony No. 5

Tue, May 13, 2025, 17:00
Boedapest Festival Orkest, Iván Fischer (Conductor)
'The beauty of Mahler always hurts,' conductor Iván Fischer once said. At the Mahler Festival, he conducts both the Second Symphony and, today, the Fifth. A powerful work from a heyday in Mahler's life. Turbulent, full of life and passion. Mahler, having just met his great love Alma, seems to express his feelings in the beloved Adagietto.'Each part has its friends and its enemies', Mahler wrote of his Fifth Symphony. He was thrilled that this work raised such extremes of emotions. After three partly vocal symphonies, the Fifth is a purely instrumental. But therefore no less intense: sometimes jubilant, sometimes gloomy, always fiery. 'The work has come to represent the total of all the suffering that life brought to me.'
Artistic depiction of the event

Mahler Festival: Budapest Festival Orchestra and Iván Fischer - Mahler's Symphony No. 5

Tue, May 13, 2025, 20:15
Boedapest Festival Orkest, Iván Fischer (Conductor), Anna Lucia Richter (Mezzo-Soprano)
'The beauty of Mahler always hurts,' conductor Iván Fischer once said. At the Mahler Festival, he conducts both the Second Symphony and, today, the Fifth. A powerful work from a heyday in Mahler's life. Turbulent, full of life and passion. Mahler, having just met his great love Alma, seems to express his feelings in the beloved Adagietto.'Each part has its friends and its enemies', Mahler wrote of his Fifth Symphony. He was thrilled that this work raised such extremes of emotions. After three partly vocal symphonies, the Fifth is a purely instrumental. But therefore no less intense: sometimes jubilant, sometimes gloomy, always fiery. 'The work has come to represent the total of all the suffering that life brought to me.'