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Kodály
Bartók
Dvořák

Isarphilharmonie

All dates

  • , Isarphilharmonie
  • , Isarphilharmonie
  • Conductor

    Petr Popelka

    Within just a few seasons, Petr Popelka has established himself as one of the most inspiring young conductors. He will become Chief Conductor and Artistic Director of the Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra, starting his tenure in September 2022, and has…

    more

  • Piano

    Kirill Gerstein

    Pianist Kirill Gerstein’s heritage combines the traditions of Russian, American and Central European music-making with an insatiable curiosity. These qualities and the relationships that he has developed with orchestras, conductors, instrumentalists,…

    more

  • Zoltán Kodály

    Zoltán Kodály was born on December 16, 1882 as son of a railroad official in Kecskemét, Hungary and spent his youth in various Hungarian villages, where he became familiar with Hungarian folk music. His father played the violin, his mother played the…

    more

    »Dances of Galánta«

    »Dances of Galánta«

    Die Dances of Galánta sind mit das populärste Orchesterwerk Kodálys überhaupt. Als er 1933 für das 80-jährige Jubiläum der Budapester Philharmonischen Gesellschaft das Orchesterstück komponierte, verwendete er Klangeindrücke der Zigeunerkapelle von…

    more

  • Béla Bartók

    The source from which Hungarian composer Béla Bartók drew his musical language was south-eastern European folklore, which he collected and studied along with Zoltán Kodály. On the basis of this folklore, Bartók developed a Hungarian idiom of modern…

    more

    Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 3

    Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 3

    After the great success of the "Concerto for Orchestra", Béla Bartók received the stack of commissions he had vainly hoped for in the earlier years of his American exile. In another sense, these commissions arrived "too late" because Bartók´s…

    more

  • Intermission

  • Antonín Dvořák

    Born on September 19th 1841 in today´s Czech Republic, Antonín Dvořák was regarded by his contemporaries as a kind of composing "nature boy" - inspired, unacademic and drawing directly from the sources of Czech and Slavic folklore, he ranks along…

    more

    Symphony No. 6 in D major, Op. 60

    Symphony No. 6 in D major, Op. 60

    The Symphony No. 6 is the first symphony by Antonín Dvořák, which was not composed for a desk drawer, but rather for the discerning audience of the Vienna Philharmonic. Preceded by the marketing idea of his publisher Simrock, who – spurred on by the…

    more

  • Conductor

    Petr Popelka

    Within just a few seasons, Petr Popelka has established himself as one of the most inspiring young conductors. He will become Chief Conductor and Artistic Director of the Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra, starting his tenure in September 2022, and has…

    more

  • Piano

    Kirill Gerstein

    Pianist Kirill Gerstein’s heritage combines the traditions of Russian, American and Central European music-making with an insatiable curiosity. These qualities and the relationships that he has developed with orchestras, conductors, instrumentalists,…

    more

  • Zoltán Kodály

    Zoltán Kodály was born on December 16, 1882 as son of a railroad official in Kecskemét, Hungary and spent his youth in various Hungarian villages, where he became familiar with Hungarian folk music. His father played the violin, his mother played the…

    more

    »Dances of Galánta«

    Die Dances of Galánta sind mit das populärste Orchesterwerk Kodálys überhaupt. Als er 1933 für das 80-jährige Jubiläum der Budapester Philharmonischen Gesellschaft das Orchesterstück komponierte, verwendete er Klangeindrücke der Zigeunerkapelle von…

    more

  • Béla Bartók

    The source from which Hungarian composer Béla Bartók drew his musical language was south-eastern European folklore, which he collected and studied along with Zoltán Kodály. On the basis of this folklore, Bartók developed a Hungarian idiom of modern…

    more

    Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 3

    After the great success of the "Concerto for Orchestra", Béla Bartók received the stack of commissions he had vainly hoped for in the earlier years of his American exile. In another sense, these commissions arrived "too late" because Bartók´s…

    more

  • Intermission

  • Antonín Dvořák

    Born on September 19th 1841 in today´s Czech Republic, Antonín Dvořák was regarded by his contemporaries as a kind of composing "nature boy" - inspired, unacademic and drawing directly from the sources of Czech and Slavic folklore, he ranks along…

    more

    Symphony No. 6 in D major, Op. 60

    The Symphony No. 6 is the first symphony by Antonín Dvořák, which was not composed for a desk drawer, but rather for the discerning audience of the Vienna Philharmonic. Preceded by the marketing idea of his publisher Simrock, who – spurred on by the…

    more



Duration of concert: about 2 hours

credit Khalil Baalbaki

Directions

The Isarphilharmonie is located on the terrain of the »Gasteig HP8«. Please use public transportation if possible, as there is limited parking available.

Isarphilharmonie
Hans-Preißinger-Straße 8, 81379 München

  • Arrival by subway:
    U3: Station Brudermühlstraße, walking distance 350m or bus 54/X30
    U1: Station Candidplatz, bus 54/X30 or shuttle to Schäftlarnstraße/Gasteig HP8

  • Arrival by bus:
    Bus 54: Station Schäftlarnstraße/Gasteig HP8
    Bus X30: Station Schäftlarnstraße/Gasteig HP8

  • Arrival by car:
    Blumengroßmarkt, Lagerhausstraße 5: Shuttle to Schäftlarnstraße/Gasteig HP8

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