Trusted Shops badge
Amatis Trio Foto: (c) Foppe Schut style= Amatis Trio Foto: (c) Foppe Schut

Amatis Trio: Schubert, Korngold and Haydn

Amsterdam, Concertgebouw — Small Hall

Best seats  1 h 35 min Give as a gift card

Select tickets

Total Price
$ 49

About the Event

Experience the enchanting harmonies of chamber music by Franz Schubert, Joseph Haydn, and Erich Wolfgang Korngold in the iconic and globally celebrated Concertgebouw of Amsterdam. The Amatis Trio from Salzburg lives by the belief, 'When the music we make touches our listeners, then we know we’re on the right path.’ This trio has curated a selection of pieces from Schubert, Korngold, and Haydn for a memorable performance.

Program

  • Joseph Haydn – Pianotrio in C major
  • Erich Wolfgang Korngold – Piano Trio in D major op. 1
  • Joseph Haydn – Piano Trio in C major, Hob. XV 21
  • Franz Schubert – Piano Trio in B‐flat major, D 898, op. 99
Program is subject to change

Artists

Piano Trio: Amatis Trio

Concertgebouw

The Concertgebouw in Amsterdam was built as a result of a public campaign aimed at financing a new Philharmonic hall. A grand Neoclassical concert hall topped with a symbolic Apollo´s lyre, it opened in 1888. In the late 20th century the Concertgebouw was renovated in order to improve the acoustics and add more space for visitors. The magnificent organ, after almost a century of service, was also restored and modernised. The Concertgebouw hosts around 600 concerts every year, ranging from big symphonic performances to jazz and pop concerts. Conveniently located at the beautiful Museumplein (Museum Square) with the Rijksmuseum and Van Gogh museum right next to it, everyone will find something to their taste in one of the finest concert halls in the world!

Franz Schubert

During his rather short life, Franz Schubert, one of the fathers of romanticism in music, had always been an unappreciated genius who had never received public acclaim. Only his family and friends were delighted by his music, and most of his works were discovered and published only many years after his death. Franz Schubert was born on the 31th of March 1797 in the suburbs of Vienna. His father and eldest brother were amateur musicians and they taught him to play piano and violin. At the age of 11 Schubert was a singer in a choir at the Lichtenthal parish and later auditioned for Antonio Salieri and admitted to the emperor’s choir. During that period young Franz started composing his own works. However, after his voice broke he had to leave the choir and in 1814 he started working as a teacher in the same parish school as his father. He never stopped composing and 4 years later he decided to quit teaching and devote his life completely to music. He fell out with his father because of that and struggled to make ends meet. In 1818 Schubert went to Vienna, where he met Vogl. Together they gave private concerts in small aristocratic circles, mainly playing Lieder, which Schubert wrote around 600. Franz Schubert gave only one big public concert in his whole life in March 1828, which was very warmly received by the audience. However, his health was deteriorating and in November the same year he died of thyroid fever at the age of 31.

Address

Concertgebouw, Concertgebouwplein, 10, Amsterdam, Netherlands — Google Maps

Gift card