We would like to inform our audience that according to the government decision effective from 11 November 2020, no public events can be held, so we are unable to hold concerts at the Liszt Academy with an audience. However, our audience will not be left without a concert experience, as most of our performances will be held and broadcast online in our Digital Concert Hall, and most of the concerts of the orchestras organizing concert series at the Liszt Academy will also be available online.

24 April 2021, 19.45-22.00
Grand Hall
Budapest Festival Orchestra
Streamed only
Mozart: Serenade in D major, K. 239 (ʻSerenata Notturnaʼ)
Cimarosa: Concerto for Two Flutes in G major (transcription for flute and oboe)
Grandjany: Symphonic Poem, Op. 6
Haydn: Symphony No. 49 in F minor, Hob. I:49 (ʻLa passioneʼ)
Anett Jóföldi (flute), Johannes Grosso (oboe), Zoltán Szőke (horn), Ágnes Polónyi (harp)
Budapest Festival Orchestra
Conductor: Gábor Takács-Nagy
The latest concert in the Haydn-Mozart Plus series by Gábor Takács-Nagy covers all the bases from light entertainment to shocking drama. Sandwiched between Mozart’s piece scored for an unconventional line-up and Haydn’s ‘passionate’ symphony there is room for Cimarosa and Grandjany who drew deeply from the art of the Viennese masters. From the former we have his witty work for two flutes in an arrangement by Heinz Holliger. The latter played an important role in the further expansion of the harp canon also augmented by Mozart. One rarely hears two double concertos at a single concert. The soloists have proven themselves on numerous occasions not only as members of the ensemble but at the 2019 Végh Sándor Competition when they won the classical category in exactly these duo formats. The closing Haydn symphony known for its passion was born in the spirit of the Sturm und Drang movement. With the exception of the calm third movement, the sombre music in the key of F minor is driven by passion
Presented by
Budapest Festival Orchestra
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19:45