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Staatskapelle Dresden and Daniele Gatti

Staatskapelle Dresden
Music
7. 9. 2026 at 20:00 | Cankarjev dom
Staatskapelle Dresden and Daniele Gatti
Tickets are on presale until April 23, 2026

About the event

Mahler’s Sixth Symphony

The Staatskapelle Dresden, one of the world’s oldest orchestras, embodies centuries of European symphonic tradition. Today it is led by Italian conductor Daniele Gatti, known for his structural clarity and dramatic insight. The programme features Mahler’s Symphony No. 6, a work from the composer’s middle period in which he abandons the human voice in favour of a dense, uncompromising orchestral language, culminating in the famous hammer blows of the finale.

Calendar

Monday
7. 9. 2026 at 20:00
Cankarjev dom
On presale until April 23, 2026
 
On presale until April 23, 2026

Sponsorship

Sponsor

Interesting facts

STAATSKAPELLE DRESDEN

  1. In 2007 the Staatskapelle Dresden became the only orchestra to date to receive the European Cultural Foundation Prize for the Preservation of the World’s Musical Heritage.

DANIELE GATTI

  1. In 2013 the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra invited him to conduct its main festival tour, which took in Lucerne, Berlin, Grafenegg, Edinburgh and other cities, and he was also invited to take part in the Mahler Festival. 
  2. He is one of the few Italian conductors to have been invited to the Bayreuth Festival, which he opened in 2008 with a new production of Parsifal.
  3. The first work he “heard” was Beethoven’s Symphony No. 6 in F major, also known as the Pastoral Symphony. His mother played the work over and over again while she was pregnant with him.

Performers

Staatskapelle Dresden
Daniele Gatti
conductor

Programme

1. Gustav Mahler
Symphony No. 6 in A minor

More information

Almost the whole of European musical heritage is reflected in the work of the Staatskapelle Dresden. Founded in 1548, it is one of the oldest orchestras in the world. Heinrich Schütz was associated with the orchestra early in its existence, while in the 19th century Carl Maria von Weber and Richard Wagner each served as Hofkapellmeister. In the 20th century Richard Strauss became closely associated with the orchestra, which premiered several of his works. Italian conductor Daniele Gatti has been chief conductor since 2024, having first guest-conducted the orchestra in 2000. Gatti is also music director of the Orchestra Mozart, the newly appointed music director of the Teatro del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino and artistic advisor of the Mahler Chamber Orchestra.

Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 6 belongs to the composer’s second symphonic period, in which he abandoned the use of the human voice and devoted himself entirely to orchestral expression. In these works Mahler no longer offers such clear extramusical allusions or programmes but instead builds an exceptionally cohesive symphonic structure marked by dense contrapuntal rhetoric and pronounced polyphony. The Sixth Symphony was written during a period of personal contentment for the composer, yet it nevertheless unfolds as one of his darkest and most relentless creations. The symphony’s dramatic arc leads from the forceful, march-like first movement through grotesque and ironic transformations to a slow movement of restrained lyricism, while the concluding finale, with its famous hammer blows, outlines a vision of fateful collapse.

Accessibility for visitors with reduced mobility

Festival Ljubljana is committed to ensuring a welcoming and accessible experience at cultural events for persons with reduced mobility. 

Selected venues offer designated wheelchair-accessible spaces as well as seating for accompanying persons. Wheelchair users can inquire about availability and reserve accessible seating by calling +386 (0)1 241 60 28 or emailing blagajna@ljubljanafestival.si.

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Free rides on LPP city buses
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Ticket holders for events within the 74th Ljubljana Festival are entitled to free rides on LPP city buses within two hours before the start and two hours after the end of each event.

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