Tickets are available from 15 October 2026.
Tickets can be purchased at the Kölcsey Center box office (Hunyadi St. 1–3, Debrecen; +36 52 518 400), at the venue before the concert, and online at www.jegymester.hu.
We offer a 10% discount for students and pensioners.
Filharmonia Hungary season ticket holders can purchase tickets with a 20% discount by showing their season tickets! The discount applies to one ticket per subscription, per concert.
The individual discounts cannot be combined.
We reserve the right to change the programmes, dates, venues, and performances, and ticket prices may change accordingly.
Subscriptions can be purchased at the Kölcsey Center box office (Hunyadi St. 1–3, Debrecen; +36 52 518 400), as well as online at www.jegymester.hu.
Seat-renewal period for existing subscribers is open until 15 May 2026. New subscriptions can be purchased until 15 November 2026, or until the first concert.
Single tickets will be available from 15 October 2026.
Filharmonia Hungary season ticket holders can purchase tickets with a 20% discount by showing their season tickets! The discount applies to one ticket per subscription, per concert.
We reserve the right to change the programmes, dates, venues, and performances, and ticket prices may change accordingly.
HISTORICAL SEASONS
Antonio Vivaldi’s violin concerto cycle The Four Seasons is perhaps the composer’s most famous work today, even 300 years after its creation. It is known even to those who never listen to classical music. It is played by violinists who perform nothing else by Vivaldi—and perhaps cannot quite play the violin as well as they should… We know countless versions of it: pop, rock, jazz, metal, vocal, and all kinds of imaginative arrangements. There are recordings at every possible tempo, with extreme playing techniques and invented “period-style” gestures. Generations of violinists have reimagined, reshaped, or even parodied the sonnets embedded in the score. For this very reason, approaching such an “overplayed” work—one that has been performed so many times, in so many ways—is no small undertaking. But is anyone still interested in what Vivaldi himself had in mind? The Orfeo Orchestra certainly is. In this concert, the piece—and the Baroque era’s relationship to the seasons—will be presented by an ensemble whose members have dedicated their lives to performing centuries-old music as authentically as possible, as it might have sounded at the time of its creation. Before The Four Seasons, the audience will also hear lesser-known Baroque gems: the emotionally rich concertos of Arcangelo Corelli and a virtuosic trumpet concerto by Johann Melchior Molter.
The concert is presented in cooperation with Sysart Kft. Orfeo Music Foundation.