Teatro alla Scala Orchestra Tickets | 2024-2025 Tour & Event Dates | GoComGo.com

Teatro alla Scala Orchestra Tickets

Orchestra
Filter
Types
Theatres

Events174 results

Filter By
Classical Concert
17 Sep 2024, Tue
View Tickets from 147 US$

Less than 11 of 2030 tickets left!

17 people looking at this moment

Ballet
25 Sep 2024, Wed
Composer: Frédéric Chopin
Last-Minute Tickets Only from 263 US$

In high demand!

Latest booking: 5 hours ago

Opera
26 Sep 2024, Thu
Composer: Antonio Cesti
View Tickets from 332 US$

In high demand!

Opera
28 Sep 2024, Sat
Only a Few Tickets Left from 294 US$

Less than 20 of 2030 tickets left!

Opera
Save3%
30 Sep 2024, Mon
Only a Few Tickets Left from 285 US$

In high demand – less than 12 of 2030 tickets left!

Ballet
Save3%
1 Oct 2024, Tue
Only a Few Tickets Left from 184 US$

Less than 19 of 2030 tickets left!

Opera
Save3%
2 Oct 2024, Wed
Only a Few Tickets Left from 285 US$

In high demand – less than 10 of 2030 tickets left!

Ballet
Save3%
3 Oct 2024, Thu
Cast: Teatro alla Scala Orchestra , Simon Hewett , .... + 2
Only a Few Tickets Left from 255 US$

In high demand – less than 20 of 2030 tickets left!

Ballet
Save3%
4 Oct 2024, Fri
Last-Minute Tickets Only from 255 US$

Less than 19 of 2030 tickets left!

Opera
Save3%
5 Oct 2024, Sat
Only a Few Tickets Left from 285 US$

Less than 11 of 2030 tickets left!

Ballet
Save3%
8 Oct 2024, Tue
Cast: Teatro alla Scala Orchestra , Simon Hewett , .... + 2
Only a Few Tickets Left from 255 US$

In high demand – less than 20 of 2030 tickets left!

Ballet
Save3%
11 Oct 2024, Fri
Cast: Teatro alla Scala Orchestra , Simon Hewett , .... + 2
Opera
Save3%
12 Oct 2024, Sat
Composer: Richard Strauss

About

19th century Italian music was dominated by a "melodrama pain" as Gian Francesco Malipiero wittily called it. The lack of a chamber and symphonic tradition in Italy delayed the appearance of symphony orchestra and opera conductors.

19th century Italian music was dominated by a "melodrama pain" as Gian Francesco Malipiero wittily called it. The lack of a chamber and symphonic tradition in Italy delayed the appearance of symphony orchestra and opera conductors.

In melodrama, the first violin orchestra leader has existed for a long time, with eminent examples like Alessandro Rolla and his pupil Eugenio. It is only in 1854, with Alberto Mazzuccato, that the first real conductor stands up on a podium with a baton.

Mazzuccato started the glorious dynasty of the Teatro alla Scala conductors, with members like Franco Faccio (champion, against Verdi's will, of a symphonic life of the orchestra), Leopoldo Mugnone, Edoardo Mascheroni and, finally, Arturo Toscanini.

Franco Faccio had the honour to conduct the première of Othello in 1887, Edoardo Mascheroni that of Falstaff in 1893, while Toscanini, after a long battle, transformed the Teatro alla Scala from private theatre to Autonomous Board (1921/22 season).

The orchestra international prestige has been continuously enhanced, thanks to the constant presence of great conductors like Toscanini and Victor de Sabata, Wilhelm Furtwängler and Herbert von Karajan, Guido Cantelli and Leonard Bernstein, Gianandrea Gavazzeni, Carlo Maria Giulini, Carlos Kleiber and Claudio Abbado, Riccardo Muti, Daniel Barenboim and Riccardo Chailly – the international repute of the Orchestra has only grown.

Made out of 135 musicians, the Teatro alla Scala Orchestra, considered one of the world’s best orchestra for opera productions, has reached a prestigious international position also for its symphony activity.

The main characteristic of the Orchestra is its capacity to obtain a uniform and distinguished sound, typical of the Teatro alla Scala style, handed down from generation to generation.

The versatile and soft sound and the fast setting up of the opera timbre balancing are characteristic of the Teatro alla Scala Orchestra.

You are here
Top of page