Tickets can be purchased at Kodály Centre (Pécs, Breuer Marcell sétány 4., +36 72 500 300), at office of Ticket Express, at the venue before the concert and online on www.jegymester.hu .
Concessions:
We offer 10% concession to students, pensioners.
Season ticket holders of Filharmonia Hungary can obtain tickets nationwide at 20% discount for our concerts for adult audience! Please note that only one discount ticket can be purchased per season ticket per concert.
Please note, that we reserve the right to alter the program, the time, the location, the performers, and accordingly the price of the ticket may also vary.
Season tickets are available at the Filharmonia Hungary ticket office (Pécs, Breuer Marcell Promenade 4., +36 72 500 300), online at www.jegymester.hu, and at the venue before the performance.
Seat-specific season ticket renewals are available until July 15, 2025, and new season tickets can be purchased until October 5, 2025, the date of the first concert.
We are organizing a pre-sale raffle for both returning and new season ticket holders. Anyone who purchases or renews their season ticket by July 15 and sends a photo of it to online@filharmonia.hu by July 30 will be entered into a draw to win one of 30 Filharmonia books.
Installment payment deadlines:
1st installment: upon purchase
2nd installment: by October 5, 2025
3rd installment: by November 18, 2025
We reserve the right to change the programmes, dates, venues, and performances, and ticket prices may change accordingly.
Fairies enchanted into musical notes; knights, medieval castles and hunters appear in the Festival Orchestra’s romantic program featuring two grandiose and ever-inspiring highlights of concert halls composed by two giants of German music. The concert will start with Mendelssohn’s violin concerto, written in his mature years, conducted by the Israeli Daniel Oren, music director of the Verona Opera Festival, with the excellent Guy Braunstein playing the solo part. The composition, including a virtuoso opening movement, a singing air, and a finale evoking the atmosphere of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, will be followed by one of the most popular pieces of Bruckner, his Symphony No. 4, which he revised several times. The composer accompanied the music with the description of scenes from a knight’s tale, but the movements, built up in a lucid and deliberate manner, guarantee an overwhelming experience that shuts out the outside world, even without knowing the program.
Mendelssohn: Violin concerto in E minor, Op. 64.
Bruckner: Symphony No. 4 Romantic' in E flat major