hungarian center
for early music

Haydneum Concerts in Eszterháza – Violin and clarinet concertos with Capella Savaria

22 August, 2025 - 7:00 PM

Esterházy Palace, Fertőd

Zsolt Kalló – violin
Márton Egri – clarinet
Capella Savaria

Joseph HAYDN (1732–1809):
Symphony No. 6 in D major (’Le matin’), Hob. I:6
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756–1791):
Violin Concerto No. 2 in D major, K. 211

MOZART:
Clarinet Concerto in A major, K. 622

 

Category II tickets for the concert are also available in the Haydn Hall, in case the Apollo Hall is sold out.
Visibility in the Haydn Hall is limited!
You can also buy tickets for the concerts at the ticket offices of the Esterházy Castle in Fertőd and the Széchenyi Castle in Nagycenk with OTP, K&H or MBH SZÉP cards.
The concerts are recorded on video and audio, we reserve the right to change the programme and the cast.
Please dress appropriately for the occasion at our events.

Program helyszíne

When Haydn began working in Kismarton in the spring of 1761, he was entrusted with an ensemble with barely more than a dozen musicians. However, their small number did not mean that the composer was not required to build a good relationship with them as his livelihood ultimately depended on them. Haydn found a solution that was able to simultaneously prove his own skill as a composer, the preparedness of his performers, and the sharp eye of his employer (the latter naturally being shown through his decision to employ Haydn).

This is because Prince Pál Antal Esterházy almost immediately began ordering symphonies from him, in particular ones that represented the sequence of the times of day and thus the harmonic order of the world, a popular concept at the time (although it cannot be proven that the idea conceivably came from the Prince). Haydn composed highly concert-like pieces for this setup that sounds more like a chamber ensemble to the modern ear, with long solo passages that emphasised the individual skill of the artists, and increased their pay.

This dialogue-based approach of the composers was generally well-liked at the time, as evidenced by the popularity of concertos. Mozart’s Flute Concerto in D major, which he wrote as a teenager, and Clarinet Concerto in A major, composed for Anton Stadler in the eighties, represent one of the most breathtaking pair of concertos in music history and clearly show this light-hearted and enjoyable genre was becoming more and more significant and complex.

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