13 - 17 January 2016Book now
Phone: +43 (1) 514 44 2250
http://www.wiener-staatsoper.at
The Vienna Opera House, one of the busiest and most famous opera houses in the world has everything - the breathtaking grandeur, an immensely talented opera company that regularly performs the world’s best operatic repertoire, and the Vienna Philharmonic – the world-famous orchestra. This famous stage offers a different program every day, with over 50 operas and ballet works on around 300 days per season.Phone: +43 (1) 51444 3670
Tourists seeking the ultimate musical and theatrical experience can find it at the Volksoper. The Volksoper offers an incredible array of stagecraft: operas, classical musicals, contemporary dance and concerts as well as operettas.Phone: +43 (1) 588 30 661
Theater an der Wien specializes in the very finest of Baroque and contemporary operas. As a seasonal theater, there is a premiere almost every month as well as concerts and dance. And it is not just any theatre, but the one that Emanuel Schikaneder, the all-round genius, actor, impresario with a flair for organization but above all librettist of The Magic Flute, had built in 1801 in Vienna in keeping with the spirit of Mozart.Phone: +43 (1) 505 81 90
There are many music societies but only one Musikverein. Music lovers throughout the world know it as the center of Viennese musical culture, as the focus of the international concert circuit and as the Eldorado of classical music. The Musikverein - a resonant name, a scintillating idea. Strictly speaking, it has a twofold meaning: the concert hall on Vienna's Karlsplatz and the society to which this building belongs, the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde (Society of Music Lovers) in Vienna. Two different things which belong inseparably together.Phone: +43 (1) 242 002
The Wiener Konzerthaus represents a living, evolving tradition, coloured by the spirits of its artists and the enthusiasm of its audiences. Anyone entering the building can immediately feel the vitality that has characterized it during the 90 years of its existence. The Konzerthaus does not view itself as a historic temple but rather as a platform for a type of art which, at every rehearsal and at every concert, seeks to be re-invented.