Strollers, prams, wheeled walkers, walking-stick umbrellas, bags sized A3 (42 cm x 30 cm) or above, sport bags, backpacks and luggage must be checked in at the cloakroom.
Jackets and handbags may be taken into the hall.
Beethoven / Tschaikowsky
A fleeting moment of awakening: the bow touches the strings, the first notes ring out, the curtain rises, the fanfare of destiny sounds... On the third Sunday of Advent, the Hamburg Symphony Orchestra invites you to a concert evening full of contrasts and emotions at the Laeiszhalle.
Mozart’s sparkling overture to »Le nozze di Figaro« opens the programme – a musical interplay of light and shadow, wit and drama. The second Mozart piece in the concert strikes a different note: his last piano concerto, No. 27 in B flat major, appears quiet and clear, with an almost supernatural transparency. It will be performed by Polish pianist Szymon Nehring, one of the outstanding pianists of his generation and a welcome guest with the symphony orchestra. The multiple prize winner of the renowned Arthur Rubinstein Competition brings the melodies to life with his refined sound culture and lyrical depth.
The second part of the evening belongs to the musical and emotional world of Peter I. Tchaikovsky. His Symphony No. 4 in F minor is a declaration of beauty despite inner turmoil – a dramatic work that oscillates between doubt and radiant certainty. It was written as a »symphony of fate« during a dark period in his life, marked by personal crises ranging from his unrequited love for a violinist to a sham marriage and a suicide attempt, for which the composer composed musical redemption as an echo. At the podium is Aurel Dawidiuk, born in 2000, one of the most exciting conductors of the younger generation, ‘a new star in the conducting firmament’ (Hamburger Abendblatt). With energy, precision and a sense of emotional depth, he leads the Hamburg Symphony Orchestra through a programme that acts as a mirror image of the soul: beauty that unfolds in movement, passion that takes shape – between elegance and eruptive force, between quiet intimacy and orchestral grandeur.
Symphoniker Hamburg
Szymon Nehring piano
conductor Aurel Dawidiuk
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Overture from »Le nozze di Figaro«, K. 492
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in B-flat major, KV 595
Piotr I. Tschaikowsky
Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 36
with Dr Johann Layer
18:00 / Laeiszhalle, Studio E
Symphoniker Hamburg / Large Subscription Package
Symphoniker Hamburg / Small Subscription Package
Promoter: Symphoniker Hamburg
This concert, conducted by Aurel Dawidiuk, is supported by the Concert Promotion Forum Conducting – an initiative of the German Music Council – with funding from the Society for the Administration of Neighbouring Rights (GVL).
Since 1908, the Laeiszhalle has been a meeting place for Hamburg's musical life. The neo-baroque Laeiszhalle Grand Hall accommodates over 2,000 guests. (Please note: The Laeiszhalle is a separate concert hall located three kilometres away from the Elbphilharmonie.)
Strollers, prams, wheeled walkers, walking-stick umbrellas, bags sized A3 (42 cm x 30 cm) or above, sport bags, backpacks and luggage must be checked in at the cloakroom.
Jackets and handbags may be taken into the hall.
Facilities for ladies are located behind the cloakrooms on all floors. Facilities for gentlemen can be found on the landing between the floors, also located behind the cloakrooms.
A fully accessible toilet for persons with mobility disabilities is located behind the cloakroom on the ground floor (Parkett links).
Laeiszhalle Hamburg
Johannes-Brahms-Platz
20355 Hamburg
The Laeiszhalle can be easily reached by bus, underground and bicycle.
The nearest stops include:
Underground line U2: Gänsemarkt / Messehallen
Underground line U1: Stephansplatz
Bus 3, X35, 112: Johannes-Brahms-Platz
Bus X3: U Gänsemarkt (Valentinskamp)
Bus 4, 5, 109: Stephansplatz
StadtRAD (public city bicycle) station: Sievekingplatz / Gorch-Fock-Wall
There are bicycle stands available in front of the Laeiszhalle.
Gänsemarkt multistorey car park: Dammtorwall / Welckerstrasse
Rate per hour or part thereof: €4.50
Night rate (18:00–06:00): maximum €11
24-hour rate: maximum €30
Please note: There are several construction sites in the immediate vicinity of the Laeiszhalle which may make it difficult to get to the concert. Please therefore plan enough time for your journey to the concert.
The Laeiszhalle is a separate concert hall located three kilometres away from the Elbphilharmonie.
We suggest visitors arrive at the Laeiszhalle main entrance not later than 30 minutes before the start of the concert or event. Late seating is not guaranteed and latecomers may not be admitted to the concert hall.
The entrance of the Recital Hall is located on Gorch-Fock-Wall.
Admission times Grand Hall and Recital Hall:
Events without pre-concert talk:
Foyer: 60 minutes before the start of the event
Hall: 30 minutes before the start of the event
Events with pre-concert talk:
Foyer: 90 minutes before the start of the event
Hall: 15 minutes before the start of the talk
If a pre-concert talk is offered for this event, it is noted above under PROGRAMME.
All halls and spaces are accessible for visitors with disabilities. More information at www.elbphilharmonie.de/en/accessibility.
Photography is permitted at the Laeiszhalle for private purposes only. Please respect the privacy of other visitors and help ensure an undisturbed concert experience for all guests and artists. Employees and artists may not be photographed.
Photography, audio or video recordings of concerts and events are strictly prohibited.
Event-related video recordings or photographs for editorial or commercial purposes must be authorised by the Press Office of the Elbphilharmonie and Laeiszhalle.
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