St Matthew Passion, Opera House Budapest, 29 March
classical
- 29 Mar 2026 7:00 PM
- Opera House Budapest
Saint Matthew Passion is Bach's greatest work, one which constitutes an unsurpassable pinnacle not only of Protestant church music, but in the universal history of music.
Forgotten after Bach's death, the work was played in Berlin on 11 March 1829, a century after its original performance, with Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy conducting.
The composer and conductor adapted the work to Romantic tastes in music performance, shortened it by a third, and employed an enormous (158-person) chorus and an orchestra scaled to match it.
The resounding success resulted in a repeat performance on March 21, Bach's birthday, which became a significant social event: present were both the court and the crème de la crème of the contemporary German intelligentsia. This launched the Bach renaissance, and in a wider sense, the general practice of resurrecting earlier music.
The Hungarian State Opera presented the Mendelssohn arrangement for the first time in Hungary during Holy Week in 2013 and has continued to do so ever since, in a likewise ground breaking way, also promising a visual experience shaped by the vision of Oscar-nominated animation director Géza M. Tóth.
Forgotten after Bach's death, the work was played in Berlin on 11 March 1829, a century after its original performance, with Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy conducting.
The composer and conductor adapted the work to Romantic tastes in music performance, shortened it by a third, and employed an enormous (158-person) chorus and an orchestra scaled to match it.
The resounding success resulted in a repeat performance on March 21, Bach's birthday, which became a significant social event: present were both the court and the crème de la crème of the contemporary German intelligentsia. This launched the Bach renaissance, and in a wider sense, the general practice of resurrecting earlier music.
The Hungarian State Opera presented the Mendelssohn arrangement for the first time in Hungary during Holy Week in 2013 and has continued to do so ever since, in a likewise ground breaking way, also promising a visual experience shaped by the vision of Oscar-nominated animation director Géza M. Tóth.
Place: Opera House Budapest
Address: 1061 Budapest, Andrássy út 22.










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