Spooky Classics with the Sydney Symphony
Hair-Raising Orchestral Favourites
Sydney Town Hall
Fri 13 Feb, 2026, 7.00pm
On Friday the 13th, Sydney Town Hall becomes a musical house of horrors – and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra invites you inside...
Duration
The concert is expected to run for 120 minutes and includes a 20 minute interval.
Seating
General admission seating is available for this concert. You can purchase a ticket on the Ground Floor or upstairs in the Gallery. A Ground Floor ticket also allows you to choose floor seating on rugs in front of the stage.
Bars
The bars will be open before and during the performance. There is no lockout for this performance, so feel free to enter and exit the hall to access the bars throughout the concert. Please keep noise to a minimum as you enter and exit.
Concert Guide
Behind every great piece is a great story. Have a read through the concert guide to get all the details.
This concert dives into the most iconic and hair-raising orchestral works ever written.
Feel the swirling dread of Mussorgsky’s Night on Bald Mountain and recoil from the stabbing strings of Psycho. The tension is palpable in Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet and John Williams’ Jaws, and it explodes in the ghoulish frenzy of Berlioz’s Dream of a Witches’ Sabbath.
The Sydney Town Hall Organ roars to terrifying life in Bach’s Toccata and Fugue – dark, dramatic and instantly recognisable. And Dukas’ Sorcerer’s Apprentice is musical mischief in motion, tiptoeing winds, glinting glockenspiel and sudden brass jolts.
Conducted by James Judd, praised by The Independent for his ‘inspired, passionate music-making’, this program delivers a spine-tingling set of short works with wicked twists.
Dare to join us, and let the music take over.
Program
MUSSORGSKY
Night on Bald Mountain
SAINT-SAËNS
Danse Macabre
HERRMANN
Psycho: Suite
DUKAS
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice
JS BACH
Toccata & Fugue
SIBELIUS
Valse Triste
PROKOFIEV
Romeo and Juliet: Montagues and Capulets
BERLIOZ
Symphonie Fantastique: Dream of a Witches’ Sabbath
Artists
Supported by
For more information, visit the City of Sydney website.