Students of all levels (Italians and foreigners) pay a special price of €5.00 all inclusive (the ticket can only be purchased at the ticket office, NOT online)
Normal discounts apply to:
Over 65s
> Season ticket holders for the Theatre Season of Teatro Verdi
> ACI – ViaVai
> A.Gi.Mus Firenze
> ARCI Firenze
> Associazione Culturale “Il Trillo”
> FAI – Fondo Ambiente Italiano
> Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi (upon presentation of the ticket for the current exhibition)
> Italian Design Istitute
> Opera Santa Croce (upon presentation of the ticket for the visit carried out)
> Touring Club Italiano
> UniCoop – Firenze
> Università dell’Età Libera
> Welfare Interclub
For safety reasons, for spectators with a certified disability equal to or greater than 70% a reserved area is set aside near one of the exits at the back of the stalls (4 seats available for disabled people with mobility impairments and 5 seats for disabled people who are able to walk). These spectators are entitled to a reduced ticket and a free ticket for their service companion.
The purchase can be made EXCLUSIVELY by contacting the Teatro Verdi ticket office via email (info@teatroverdionlilne.it), by telephone at 055.21.23.20 or even in person.
This concert can be included in one of the season ticket formulas provided (from € 48.00 to € 250.00):
– ALL-INCLUSIVE (14 concerts)
– OCTET (8 concerts)
– DO-IT-YOURSELF (from 5 to 12 concerts)
– DIY OPEN (3 to 6 concerts)
For more information click here
Tickets for this event can also be purchased with the Teacher’s Card – Culture Bonus and with 18 Apps, both at the theatre ticket office and through the Ticketone website.
Orchestra della Toscana
conductor
Silvia Careddu flute
***
Program:
Matteo Rubini / ORT Foundation Commission
Jacques Ibert /Flute Concert
Johannes Brahms / Simphony No. 2 op. 73
A new work commissioned by the Fondazione ORT opens the concert conducted by Diego Ceretta, who closes his third season as principal conductor. The author is Matteo Rubini, a composer born in Parma in 1976. His music is characterised by a modern rethinking of modality and consonance. At the centre of his research is the study of the symbolic and allegorical musical heritage and the equation between the ancient contrapuntal art and its application in contemporary languages.
This is followed by Jacques Ibert‘s Concerto for flute and orchestra, composed in 1934: a virtuosic and brilliant page of neoclassical taste, with a lyrical vein in the second movement and an ironic spirit in the finale. Soloist is Silvia Careddu, an internationally renowned flutist, formerly first part in the Berliner Philharmoniker, a refined interpreter with a limpid and decisive sound.
The Symphony No. 2 in D major op. 73 by Johannes Brahms, composed in the summer of 1877, closes: a serene, luminous work, but not without its shadows, often described as the most “pastoral” of his symphonies.