Andris Nelsons conducts Beethoven Symphonies 6 & 7

A four-concert series conducted by Andris Nelsons. Experience your favorite, or enjoy the full journey. Seats located in 2nd balcony left.

Symphonies 1, 2, & 3​: Saturday, Jan 11, 8:00pm​​​​​​

Our exploration of Beethoven starts with his beginnings as an acolyte of Joseph Haydn and W.A. Mozart in his Symphony No. 1 in 1800. Beethoven revolutionized the symphony – and the language of music – through the startlingly innovative Second and Third (Eroica) symphonies which incorporated the heroic journey into symphonic form.

Symphonies 4 & 5: Thursday, Jan 16, 7:30pm

Beethoven composed his Fourth and Fifth symphonies almost concurrently, but they’re very different in their expressive impact. The Fourth is one of Beethoven’s warmest, most congenial works, sharing that mood with the Violin Concerto completed just after the symphony. The Fifth Symphony, by contrast, creates wonderful intensity through the famous four-note “fate” motif—perhaps the most famous musical fragment of all time—and resolves that tension in a triumphant finale.

Symphonies 6 & 7: Saturday, Jan 18, 8:00pm

Beethoven conceived his Pastoral Symphony, No. 6, as an illustration of a lovely day spent in the countryside, where we encounter babbling brooks, birds of various sorts, friendly country dwellers, and a brief, tumultuous storm. His Seventh Symphony has long been one of his most popular works—especially its solemn Allegretto, which had such an effect at its premiere that it was immediately encored.

Symphonies 8 & 9: Saturday, Jan 25, 8:00pm

For all his reputation as a prickly artistic genius whose music crackles with heaven-storming power, Beethoven shared with his teacher Haydn a delightful musical wit, nowhere so clearly demonstrated as in his Eighth Symphony. The cycle concludes with his hugely ambitious and all-embracing Ninth, a revolution in and of itself; it was the first symphony to include chorus, transforming Friedrich Schiller’s “Ode to Joy” into a hymn for humanity.

Saturday, 8:00pm
52.00 (regularly: $63.00)
Symphony Hall, 301 Massachusetts Ave, Boston, MA 02115

Purchasing details

Seating 2nd balcony left
Ticketing Dated event e-ticket
Purchase by December 20, 2024

Dated event e-ticket

E-tickets will be distributed to you within 30 days prior to your event. E-tickets are not instant delivery. Your MITAC receipt does not serve as an e-ticket.

2nd balcony left ($52.00)