Mozart Violin Concertos with Rachel Podger
18 June 2025, 7.30pm – Wigmore Hall
Haydn | Symphony No. 66 in B flat major |
Mozart | Violin Concerto No.2 in D, K.211 |
Symphony in D major, K.196+121/207a | |
Violin Concerto No.5 in A, K.219 |
Rachel Podger (violin)
The Mozartists
Ian Page conductor
Tickets £18.00 — £50 (plus venue booking fees).
Wigmore Hall
36 Wigmore Street
London
W1U 2BP
https://www.wigmore-hall.org.uk/
“Typical generosity from Page and company; his programming always goes beyond the call of duty in bringing the obscure to light and offering true revelation.”
THE ARTS DESK
Continuing our revelatory MOZART 250 series, The Mozartists present a fascinating concert of music composed 250 years ago in 1775. The repertoire ranges from intriguing rarities from lesser-known composers to three concert arias by the 19-year-old Mozart and one of Haydn’s greatest middle-period symphonies.
Programme
Haydn | Symphony No. 66 in B flat major |
Mozart | Violin Concerto No.2 in D, K.211 |
Symphony in D major, K.196+121/207a | |
Violin Concerto No.5 in A, K.219 |
Artists
Tickets £18.00 — £50 (plus venue booking fees).
Wigmore Hall
36 Wigmore Street
London
W1U 2BP
https://www.wigmore-hall.org.uk/
“Typical generosity from Page and company; his programming always goes beyond the call of duty in bringing the obscure to light and offering true revelation.”
THE ARTS DESK
The Mozartists’ visionary MOZART 250 series has now reached 1775, and they are here joined for the first time by internationally acclaimed violinist Rachel Podger. She plays two concertos by the 19-year-old Mozart, and the programme also includes a typically effervescent symphony by Haydn.
Programme
Haydn | Symphony No. 66 in B flat major |
Mozart | Violin Concerto No.2 in D, K.211 |
Symphony in D major, K.196+121/207a | |
Violin Concerto No.5 in A, K.219 |
Artists
Practical InformationTickets £18.00 — £50 (plus venue booking fees).
Wigmore Hall
36 Wigmore Street
London
W1U 2BP
https://www.wigmore-hall.org.uk/
“Typical generosity from Page and company; his programming always goes beyond the call of duty in bringing the obscure to light and offering true revelation.”
THE ARTS DESK