Vienna Residence Orchestra: Mozart and Strauss Concert

Mozart and Strauss with real stage sparkle. I like the Mozart-and-Strauss programming and the way opera singers and ballet dancers turn familiar melodies into a full evening show. One possible drawback: seats can be tight and not-so-comfortable, so plan around that.

This performance runs about 1 hour 30 minutes, with a short 15-minute intermission, in the Old Stock Exchange Palace area on Vienna’s Ringstrasse. The ticket price includes admission, and you’ll go to the Palais alte Börse location (with possible location changes depending on availability).

Key things to know before you go

Vienna Residence Orchestra: Mozart and Strauss Concert - Key things to know before you go

  • Palais alte Börse setting: A brick-red Ringstrasse landmark near Votivkirche and the university.
  • More than just an orchestra: You’ll also see opera and ballet elements tied to the music.
  • A popular Vienna-style mix: Expect waltzes, opera arias, duets, and polkas from Mozart and the Strauss family.
  • A short, focused evening: About 90 minutes total, plus a 15-minute break to reset.
  • Hard-to-find can happen: The venue is described as easy to reach, but directions may need patience—go early.
  • Program can shift: The example repertoire is subject to change.

Palais alte Börse: a brick-red Ringstrasse palace for music night

If you want the Vienna feeling without a long museum detour, this concert gives it to you fast. The show happens in (or by) the Old Stock Exchange Palace (Palais alte Börse) at Wipplingerstrasse 34, a brick-red facade you’ll recognize when you’re walking the Ringstrasse. It’s in Vienna’s first district, close to Votivkirche and the university, so you’re not stuck on some far-flung edge of town.

What I like is that the venue itself supports the theme. The old building doesn’t feel like a generic hall placed in a random office block. Instead, you get a proper palatial atmosphere where an orchestra and staged vocals and dance make sense together. Several people also note the setting is beautiful, and it’s a compact enough experience that the whole room feels involved.

The practical catch: you’ll want to arrive with time to settle in. Even with public transport nearby, some reviews flag finding the address as a bit tricky, including map confusion. Go early for an easy check-in and a seat that suits you.

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The Mozart and Strauss program you’ll hear (and why the mix works)

Vienna Residence Orchestra: Mozart and Strauss Concert - The Mozart and Strauss program you’ll hear (and why the mix works)
The core promise is a Mozart and Strauss concert, and the structure is classic Viennese programming: recognizable melodies paired with vocal moments and dance pieces. You’re not just listening to a straight symphonic playlist. The show uses variety to keep the evening moving, which is a big deal if you’re coming from dinner or a full sightseeing day.

From the provided program example, you can expect pieces like:

  • Johann Strauss Rosen aus dem Süden (Roses from the South)
  • Mozart Nun vergiß‘ leises Flehen from The Marriage of Figaro
  • Strauss Frühlingsstimmen Walzer (Voices of Spring)
  • Donizetti Der Liebestrank with Nemorino’s aria
  • Mozart Sagt holde Frauen from The Marriage of Figaro
  • Strauss Grüß‘ Dich Gott (Vienna Blood)
  • Strauss Vergnügungszug (Pleasure Train)
  • Léhàr Lippen schweigen (Lips are Silent), duet from The Merry Widow
  • Strauss Tritsch-Tratsch and Im Krapfenwaldl
  • Mozart Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen (The Magic Flute)
  • Strauss The Blue Danube and Radetzky March

A good way to think about this mix: Mozart gives you elegance and theatrical clarity, while Strauss brings rhythm, waltz swing, and big audience-friendly motion. Add a few opera moments and you get a “Vienna hits” evening that still feels anchored in the composers’ own worlds.

One more note: the program is subject to change. That’s normal for live events, so don’t build your expectation around one exact aria. Build it around the overall feel—Mozart drama plus Strauss dance energy.

Opera singers and ballet dancers: what they add to the concert

Vienna Residence Orchestra: Mozart and Strauss Concert - Opera singers and ballet dancers: what they add to the concert
The show isn’t only an orchestra performance. It includes opera singers and ballet dancers alongside the Vienna Residence Orchestra. This matters because it changes what you listen for. Instead of focusing only on strings, you’ll also track phrasing in the arias and duets, and you’ll notice how the dancers shape the emotional tone of the waltzes and polkas.

This is also why people who mainly want a classical concert often still end up enjoying it even if they aren’t die-hard opera fans. You get short, stage-based moments that make the music feel like a story, not just notes on a program.

From the feedback included, the added performers can be a highlight—people mention singers as outstanding and the dancers as very good. If you’re considering VIP seating, front-row options are reported to be worth it for watching performance elements up close, not just listening.

The consideration: if you truly only want a pure orchestral concert with zero theatrical components, this one may feel too “show” for your taste. But if you like the idea of Vienna music turning into a complete evening performance, it’s a strong match.

Stop-by-stop flow: what to expect at Palais alte Börse

Vienna Residence Orchestra: Mozart and Strauss Concert - Stop-by-stop flow: what to expect at Palais alte Börse
This experience lists two stops, but both point you to the same core place: Palais alte Börse at Wipplingerstrasse 34. In practice, think of it like this:

  • You begin at the address area for check-in and entry at the building associated with the Old Stock Exchange Palace.
  • Then you settle into the concert space for the full 1 hour 30 minutes performance.

The venue description puts it on a major tourist walking route: Ringstrasse in the first district, near Votivkirche and the university. That’s helpful because you can plan it like a straightforward city stop. Even if the exact interior location varies, the area is a recognizable anchor.

Also, be aware of the one-line warning in the details: concert locations may differ depending on availability. It doesn’t tell you how often or how far the shift is, so I treat it as a reason to confirm your exact meeting point the day of the show.

Timing that keeps the evening comfortable

Vienna Residence Orchestra: Mozart and Strauss Concert - Timing that keeps the evening comfortable
The whole event is about 90 minutes, plus a planned 15-minute intermission. That’s a useful length if you want something culture-rich that won’t swallow your night. You can do dinner, take a stroll, and still stay on a reasonable schedule.

Intermission is also where you’ll handle drinks and any quick necessities. Drinks are available for purchase, and there are also notes that alcohol is available to purchase. If you’re sensitive to long breaks, this one is short, so you’re back in the music without a long wait.

One practical comfort point: seating reports range from fine to uncomfortable. Several notes call out hard chairs and close spacing. That doesn’t mean it’s unbearable, but it’s enough that I’d pack patience—or dress in a way you can sit comfortably for 90 minutes.

Price and value: is $66.08 worth it?

Vienna Residence Orchestra: Mozart and Strauss Concert - Price and value: is $66.08 worth it?
At $66.08 per person, this concert sits in the “serious but not outlandish” category for Vienna. The value comes from what your ticket includes: admission plus a live Vienna Residence Orchestra performance with opera singers and ballet dancers. You’re not paying separately for the extra staged elements, and that’s where the price starts to make sense.

You also get a tight program with well-known composers: Mozart and the Strauss family, plus additional classical works that appear in the example repertoire (like Vivaldi, Brahms, and Beethoven). That breadth matters because it increases the odds that something will click for you—even if you’re more into opera than waltzes, or the reverse.

If you’re comparing this to “just a concert” options, the difference is staging. If you like performances that combine listening with a visual story, this ticket can feel like better value. If you only want an orchestral evening, you may feel you’re paying for elements you don’t care about.

Optional add-ons (like DVD/CD purchases and purchasing drinks) are not required. You can do this as a simple ticket-to-seat plan.

Getting good seats: what to do with the venue size

Vienna Residence Orchestra: Mozart and Strauss Concert - Getting good seats: what to do with the venue size
Seat comfort and sightlines come up in the feedback. Some people loved the front-row experience, especially with VIP seating, saying it brings you closer to what’s happening on stage. Others mention the chairs are hard and seats are close together.

So here’s the practical move: arrive early and don’t treat seat selection like an afterthought. If your ticket category gives you any flexibility, pick based on what you care about most:

  • If you want to watch singers and dancers closely, prioritize the front.
  • If you dislike tight seating, choose a spot that feels less compressed and plan for a firm chair.

Also keep in mind the hall can feel compact. That’s part of the charm for many people, but it can amplify comfort issues if you’re sensitive to posture or spacing.

Who should book this Mozart and Strauss concert?

Vienna Residence Orchestra: Mozart and Strauss Concert - Who should book this Mozart and Strauss concert?
This is a great fit if you want a Vienna night that feels like Vienna: classic composers, a staged show format, and a landmark venue. I’d especially recommend it to:

  • Music fans who already know the names Mozart and Strauss and want them in a “live show” format
  • People who like opera and ballet elements but don’t want a full-length opera
  • Visitors who want an easy 90-minute cultural plan that doesn’t require planning a long evening route

You might skip it if:

  • You only want a strictly orchestral performance with no staged components
  • You’re very sensitive to hard chairs or tight seating and can’t adjust for 90 minutes

Small risks to plan for: schedule shifts, directions, and cancellations

Most of the notes are positive—people praise the quality of musicians and performers, and the atmosphere is repeatedly described as engaging. Still, a few practical issues show up, and you should factor them into your plan.

Some people report that the start time in an app or booking detail didn’t match what they arrived for, causing delays and extra waiting. Others report cancellations close to the start time. Those are not guaranteed outcomes, and the concert details say you’ll receive confirmation at booking, but the takeaway is simple: keep an eye on the exact start time and be ready for last-minute operational changes.

Directions can also be an issue. A handful of notes mention that maps pointed to the wrong nearby landmark and the building was hard to find. The fix is straightforward: go early and use the Wipplingerstrasse 34 / Palais alte Börse context, plus ask staff for help if needed.

Should you book Vienna Residence Orchestra: Mozart and Strauss Concert?

Yes—if you want a classic Vienna evening that combines Mozart, Strauss, opera singing, and ballet in one ticketed show, in a real Ringstrasse palace setting. The price-to-experience ratio looks solid because the ticket covers the live orchestra plus staged performers, and the duration is short enough to fit any itinerary.

But book smart. Choose your arrival time to avoid stress finding the venue, and be realistic about seating comfort. If you’re someone who needs very cushy chairs or perfect clarity about timing with zero chance of changes, you might want a backup option or be flexible that night.

In short: for most first-timers and music-lovers, this is an efficient, entertaining way to experience Vienna’s classical spirit without spending the whole day planning it.

FAQ

What is the duration of the Vienna Residence Orchestra Mozart and Strauss Concert?

It runs about 1 hour 30 minutes, with a 15-minute intermission.

Where does the concert take place?

The concert is at the Old Stock Exchange Palace (Palais alte Börse), Wipplingerstrasse 34, 1010 Vienna. The details also say concert locations may differ depending on availability.

Does the ticket price include admission?

Yes. Admission ticket is included, and the listing also says all fees and taxes are included.

What music and performers are included?

You’ll hear music associated with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and the Strauss family, accompanied by the Vienna Residence Orchestra. The experience also includes opera singers and ballet dancers. An example program includes works by Donizetti, Léhàr, and other classical composers.

Are drinks available during the concert?

Yes. Drinks are available for purchase, including alcoholic drinks.

Is there a break during the performance?

Yes. Intermission is 15 minutes.

When should I check in?

Check-in is 30 minutes prior to the booked start time.

How far in advance is this typically booked?

On average, it’s booked 29 days in advance.

What is the cancellation policy?

Free cancellation is available. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and cut-off times are based on the local time of the experience.

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