Tickets available at: Kodály Centre (Pécs, Breuer Marcell sétány 4., +36 72 500 300), Ticket Express offices, Pécs Diocese Info Points (during opening hours): Rózsakert Shop (Pécs, Janus Pannonius u. 10.), Pécs Cathedral (Pécs, Dóm tér 1.) Online: www.jegymester.hu
Ticket discounts:
We offer a 10% discount for students, pensioners and Tüke Kártya holders.
Filharmonia Hungary season ticket holders can purchase tickets with a 20% discount by showing their season tickets! Individual discounts cannot be combined!
We reserve the right to change the programmes, dates, venues, and performances, and ticket prices may change accordingly.
Category I: 30 900 HUF
Instalment I: 12 900 HUF
Instalment II: 9 000 HUF
Instalment III: 9 000 HUF
Category II: 24 400 HUF
Instalment I: 10 400 HUF
Instalment II: 7 000 HUF
Instalment III: 7 000 HUF
Category III: 17 400 HUF
Instalment I: 7 400 HUF
Instalment II: 5 000 HUF
Instalment III: 5 000 HUF
Instalment deadlines:
Instalment I: payable upon purchase of the season ticket
Instalment II: by 12 December 2026
Instalment III: by 15 January 2027
Seat renewal for existing subscribers is available until 22 June 2026.
New season tickets may be purchased until 20 September 2026, prior to the first concert.
Renew your seat-specific subscription by 22 June 2026, or purchase a new subscription by 20 September 2026, valid until the first concert.
Individual tickets will be available starting 20 August 2026.
Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kodály Centre (Breuer Marcell Promenade 4, Pécs; +36 72 500 300), at Ticket Express offices, as well as online at www.jegymester.hu.
We reserve the right to change the programmes, dates, venues, and performances, and ticket prices may change accordingly.
At the Heart of a Life’s Work
Concerto Budapest presents a program filled with works that held deep personal significance for their composers. Schubert’s sunlit Symphony No. 3 was written during one of the most prolific years of his life. Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto in E minor became so influential in the violin concerto repertoire that many are unaware he composed another concerto for violin at all. And it’s no wonder—this E minor concerto is a genuinely passionate work, infused with sincere emotion, dazzling virtuosity, and uplifting energy. The soloist for this performance is Grammy Award-winning violinist Augustin Hadelich, a celebrated guest in the world’s greatest concert halls. In conductor András Keller, himself a violinist, he finds a worthy musical partner. The concert closes with Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4, a work the composer himself was particularly proud of—one that marked a milestone in his creative career. This is the first of Tchaikovsky’s so-called "fate symphonies," in which he confronts his personal destiny. The emotional material for the symphony was drawn from his own life, particularly his brief and ill-fated marriage. Yet during this same period, he also found an important patron and correspondent, to whom he gave detailed insight into the background of the symphony. The work captures a profound duality between the inescapability of fate and the significance of struggling against it.