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PreviousNovember 2024
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The concert series previously known as "Erntedank" at the Tyrol Festival in Erl on the first weekend of October will be reoriented in 2024. As a prelude and symbol of Jonas Kaufmann's artistic direction, the 3-day festival will celebrate the interplay between the region and the world. Curated by Andreas Schett – the mastermind behind the Musicbanda Franui, a staple of the Erl festival's program – the festival will explore the relationships between classical music and folk music. This includes not only alpine folk music but also various forms of popular music.

 

Each day of the festival will feature encounters between diverse musical worlds: electric violin meets boys' choir, soprano voice meets chamber music, dance band meets string quartet, Viennese song duo meets folk combo, diatonic accordion meets woodwind quintet, and so on. Additionally, Erl will be declared the northernmost outpost for the South Tyrolean tradition of Törggelen during the festival weekend.

Program and cast

AUSKLANG I - Festspielhaus

19:00

Andreas Martin Hofmair & Andreas Mildner

Diatonic Expeditions

Dandelion Quintet

 

20:30

Nikola Hillebrand

Simply Quartet

Musicbanda Franui

 

AUSKLANG II - Passionsspielhaus

18:00

Tobias Moretti

Musicbanda Franui

 

19:30

Die Strottern

The Erlkings

Simply Quartet

 

21:00

Tobias Moretti

Die Strottern

The Erlkings

Simply Quartet

Musicbanda Franui

 

AUSKLANG III - Festspielhaus

BartolomeyBittmann

Simply Quartet

Wiltener Sängerknaben

Festspielhaus Erl

Festspielhaus

 

Designed by Delugan Meissl Associated Architects, Vienna, the extraordinary structure boasts 862 seats (130 of which are flexible seats near the orchestra) and the world’s largest orchestra pit (160-sq meters). The total useable surface is 7,000-square meter. General contractor was STRABAG, project manager Ing. Georg Höger.

 

The new Festspielhaus respects and compliments the architecture of the old Passionsspielhaus and its natural surroundings in a unique way: in the summer, when the Tyrolean Festival Erl or the Passion Plays take place at the white Passionsspielhaus, the dark Festspielhaus will blend with the dark forest, allowing the Passionsspielhaus to be dominant. In the winter it is the other way round: while the white Passionsspielhaus will fade into the surroundings, the dark Festspielhaus will stand out against the white landscape.

 

The Festspielhaus offers the modern infrastructure that has been sorely missing at the Passionsspielhaus, including a foyer with cloakroom, modern stage machinery, several rehearsal rooms and plenty of space for administrative offices. The Festspielhaus provides the Tyrolean Festival Erl with the basic conditions it needs to ensure the Festival’s success will continue into the future.

 

Passionsspielhaus

The Passionsspielhaus in Erl, built between 1957 and 159 on plans by architect Robert Schuller, is an architectural and acoustic masterpiece. The structure blends with its surroundings and is a visual extension of the adjoining mountains.
Thanks to its striking shape the Passionspielhaus instantly became Erl’s greatest landmark. Austria’s largest orchestra theater accommodates up to 1500 visitors. The 25-meter wide stage is tiered and provides a spectacular backdrop for the 500 passion play actors as well as the orchestra of the Tyrolean Festival Erl, which performs onstage as there is no orchestra pit.

 

A café serving snacks and beverages was added in 1997 and an Art Room for 150 visitors was opened in 2003.  
When the Festspielhaus was renovated between October 2006 and April 2007 all sanitary facilities were upgraded; an “orchestra pit” with scissor lift and a substructure for the main stage were added; the auditorium got equipped with a deaf loop system and a new floor; the catwalk, the exterior design, the cellar beneath the donkey ramp, the refreshment stand, all electrical installations and the ventilation system were replaced; and the wardrobe and the stairway renovated.  

 

 

YOUR WAY TO ERL

 

BY CAR

Germany, Eastern Austria
A8 Munich-Salzburg, Autobahndreieck Inntal, A 93, Motorway exit Nussdorf/Brannenburg or Oberaudorf/Niederndorf

Italy, Switzerland, Western Austria
Inntalautobahn A 12, motorway exit Kufstein Nord or Oberaudorf/Niederndorf; from Italy: after Brenner Pass take A 13 and A 12 (approx. 1 h 20 min to Erl); from the Swiss border it’s a 3 hour drive to Erl; the entire journey is on motorways and expressways.

In Austria, the use of motorways and expressways is subject to payment of a toll.

Munich – Erl approx. 1 hour by car
Salzburg – Erl approx. 1 hour by car
Innsbruck – Erl approx. 45 hour by car

 

BY TRAIN

All long distance and regional trains stop in Kufstein. 

 

FLIGHTS

Airports

Innsbruck (90 km),
Salzburg (90 km),
München (110 km).

 

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