Tickets are available from November 6, 2026.
Tickets can be purchased at the Liszt Ferenc Conference and Cultural Centre box office (Liszt Ferenc St. 1, Sopron; +36 99 517 517; jegyiroda@prokultura.hu), at the venue before the concert, and online at www.prokultura.jegy.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 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 ticket office of the Liszt Ferenc Conference and Cultural Center (Sopron, Liszt Ferenc u. 1.; +36 99 517 517, jegyiroda@prokultura.hu), as well as online at prokultura.jegy.hu.
Seat-specific subscription renewals are available until June 25, 2026, while new subscriptions can be purchased until December 6, 2026, or until the first concert.
We are announcing an early purchase prize draw for both existing and new subscribers. Purchase your subscription by May 25 for a chance to win! Among those who buy subscriptions by the deadline, we will raffle 4 × 2 complimentary tickets to our OrgonaPont concert in Szombathely.
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.
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON THE FOUR SEASONS
Are you familiar with Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons? Likely, you are! But have you ever experienced it in its entirety as a complete cycle? Did you know that someone—possibly Vivaldi himself—authored sonnets for each season, which the composer included in the score? This allows us to literally understand “what the poet meant.” But how are these four-part sonnets incorporated into the three-movement concertos? And what might a barking shepherd dog sound like in a Baroque orchestra? Additionally, why did Venetian Vivaldi associate summer not with sunshine but with anxiety over approaching storms? These and many other questions will be explored at the concert by the Anima Musicae Chamber Orchestra, where the cycle of violin concertos, The Four Seasons, will be performed, this time with a moderator.
The concert offers a rare opportunity to delve deeply into this popular work. Join us for a memorable musical experience!