With its splendid acoustical qualities, the Béla Bartók National Concert Hall at Müpa, Budapest attracts the world’s finest international soloists and orchestras. After the pandemic hiatus of the last two years, touring has happily resumed and the 2022-23 season at Hungary’s cultural hub is brimming with rich variety in its programming. There are stellar names, to be sure, but there is also rare repertoire to attract those who are musically curious rather than just blinded by stars in their eyes.
It’s good to see home talent promoted, with both the Artist and Composer of the Season celebrating Hungarians. Incredible trumpet virtuoso Gábor Boldoczki plays Penderecki’s Concertino with the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, and joins the Wroclaw Baroque Orchestra for Vivaldi and Torelli concertos. Then in May he performs the world premiere of Fazıl Say’s Concerto for two trumpets, where he is joined by the legendary Sergei Nakariakov, who seems to have been around forever but is somehow still only 45 years old.
Boldoczki’s first concert of the Müpa season pairs him with the venue’s featured composer, Judit Varga, where he performs the world premiere of her concerto grosso titled Bending Space and Time. Other Varga works performed include the Hungarian premiere in May of Happy Birthday, Major Ludwig – yes, Beethoven – and the world premiere of Stars buried deep in April.
But what of those star soloists? Yuja Wang always draws an expectant crowd and will be sure to delight when she opens Müpa’s season playing Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto no. 1 with Andris Nelsons and the Leipzig Gewandhaus, with their principal trumpeter Gábor Richter in the concerto’s cheeky other solo role. Viktoria Mullova plays Shostakovich’s First Violin Concerto with the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande and Martin Grubinger performs the Hungarian premiere of Daniel Bjarnason’s Percussion Concerto with the Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg.
Starry orchestras don’t come any more prestigious than the Vienna Philharmonic, who play Mahler’s Seventh Symphony under conductor Andris Nelsons. Iván Fischer – well known to Müpa audiences, of course – appears with Amsterdam’s renowned Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra to perform a programme of Bartók and Beethoven. The Filarmonica della Scala journeys from Milan to play very unoperatic fare, Mahler’s Ninth Symphony, with its Music Director, Riccardo Chailly. In March, the Mahler Chamber Orchestra and Daniele Gatti bring an unusual programme of Stravinsky, Brahms and Hindemith.