Tickets and season passes are available at the Szeged office of Filharmónia Hungary (6720 Szeged, Klauzál Square 7), at Ticket Express offices, and online at www.jegymester.hu.
Ticket discounts:
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 can be applied to one ticket per concert per subscription.
Individual discounts cannot be combined!
We reserve the right to change the programmes, dates, venues, and performances, and ticket prices may change accordingly.
Renew your seat-specific subscription by June 18, 2026, or purchase a new subscription by November 10, 2026, valid until the first concert.
Subscriptions can be purchased at the Filharmonia Hungary office in Szeged (Klauzál Sq. 7, Szeged; +36 62 425 260; szeged@filharmonia.hu), at Ticket Express box offices, as well as online at www.jegymester.hu.
Among those who purchase their season tickets by June 22, we will raffle off 8×2 tickets to one of the July or August concerts of the Dómkerti Music Nights.
Subscribers of Filharmonia Hungary’s Tisza and Organ series are entitled to a 20% discount on tickets for concerts organized by Filharmonia Hungary in any city across the country. 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.
Gábor Takács-Nagy is said to be a late descendant of the Viennese classics. For a long time, his artistic focus has been on the great Viennese masters. In 2002, he turned more intensively to conducting, and within just a few years, he became the leader of the Verbier Festival Chamber Orchestra in Switzerland; that was no coincidence: as an instrumentalist and chamber musician, he is a conductor capable of shaping an ensemble of musicians from all over the world into a professionalyly cohesive orchestra. The evening program would undoubtedly have pleased Beethoven himself, as he loved to express the arrival of a radiant future through music. While the Coriolan Overture is distinctly sombre and heroic, the Piano Concerto in G major is marked by a striking duality, and by the time we reach the 7th Symphony, exuberant joy becomes the dominant tone - though even this joy is underscored by strength and the memory of battles fought. The soloist of the piano concerto will be the renowned artist Dezső Ránki.
Experience through Beethoven’s music that life is beautiful and that struggles are meaningful!