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classical music, opera, theatre
Szent István Philharmonic
23 January 2021 Saturday
6:30 pm - 8 pm
one interval
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Müpa Home LIVE

Conductor:

Mátyás Antal

Featuring:

piano Apolka Bonnyai

Mozart

Maurerische Trauermusik, K. 477

Mozart

Piano Concerto No. 12 in A major, K. 414

interval

Brahms

Symphony No. 3 in F major, Op. 90

We're broadcasting this performance live!

In spite of the fact that the current extraordinary situation prevents us all from meeting at Müpa Budapest in person, we would still like to make the coming days nicer and more uplifting. This is why we are going to transmit our live performance, without an audience, on our website and YouTube channel.

We look forward to welcoming you to the event, through your screen!

The performance will be broadcasted on our website and YouTube channel.


After starting out with Mozart's Maurerische Trauermusik, we will get to hear his Piano Concerto No. 12 in A major, featuring soloist Apolka Bonnyai, and then Brahms's Third Symphony, all performed under the baton of conductor Mátyás Antal.
Mozart's 'Masonic Funeral Music' is a short and slow piece with a solemn atmosphere. Its core is a Gregorian melody, which might seem like a strange idea, as it is well known that the freemasonry movement was at sharp odds with the Catholic church. Mozart, however, adapted elements originating from the Catholic ritual into his work in the most natural way possible. The composer was 26 years when he composed this A major piano concerto, and his days were filled with optimism and happiness, making the piece sparkle with sunshine. It is permeated with youthful charm and cheerfulness, mixed with lyrical tunefulness. Although Brahms wrote his Third Symphony in the home key of F major, minor key characters also emerge into the foreground, thus offering, after Mozart's concerto, a powerful contrast with its sense of drama. The opening theme of the first movement returns several times in the subsequent movements, prompting several analysts of the work to conclude that some kind of programme lies in the background of the symphony. One of the reasons why this is an interesting suggestion is because Brahms was essentially a believer in classicals forms, opposed to the motival composition technique characteristic of the programme music of Liszt, Berlioz and Wagner.

Presented by: Szent István Philharmonic

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Getting here

Müpa Budapest can be accessed by car from Soroksári út, Könyves Kálmán körút and Rákóczi Bridge.

Using public transport by the trams 1, 2, 24, by the busses 54 and 15 and by the HÉV - suburban railway H7.

Opening hours, events

1095 Budapest, Komor Marcell u. 1. | +36 1 555 3000 Opening hours | Map

Parking

Müpa Budapest provides complementary parking for visitors with paid tickets to any of our public performances on the day of the performance. Free parking in this case is available for a single entry and lasts until Müpa Budapest closes.

Questions about parking | info@mupa.hu

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