Prague Classical Music Guide (2026) — Mozart, Dvořák, Smetana & Where to Hear Them Today

Classical Music · Prague

The composers who shaped Prague, the music that belongs to this city, and the venues worth your evening — written by someone who grew up with all of it

Updated 2026 🎻 Don Giovanni premiered here · 1787 🎼 Dvořák · Smetana · Martinů — all Prague composers 🏛️ Mirror Chapel · Rudolfinum · Estates Theatre

Prague is one of the great musical cities of Europe — not because of a single composer or a single venue, but because of an accumulation that spans three centuries. Mozart premiered Don Giovanni here in 1787 and said the Praguers understood him. Dvořák was born in Bohemia and wrote the music that defined Czech national identity. Smetana wrote Má vlast — My Homeland — as a cycle of tone poems about this landscape, composed after he went completely deaf. The music these men wrote is not background to Prague. It is part of the city’s structure, as much as the stone and the river.


Prague as a Musical City — Why It Matters

There is a Czech phrase: Co Čech, to muzikant — every Czech is a musician. It is said partly as a joke and partly as a genuine claim about national character. The Bohemian musical tradition is older than the Czech state — Bohemian musicians spread across Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries, filling the orchestras of Vienna, Dresden and London because the quality of musical education in Bohemia was exceptional by the standards of the time.

The result is a city with a concentration of musical institutions, venues and traditions that is disproportionate to its size. The Czech Philharmonic — one of the great orchestras of Europe — is based here. The Estates Theatre, where Mozart conducted the premiere of Don Giovanni, still operates as an opera house. The Rudolfinum concert hall on the river is one of the finest 19th-century concert venues on the continent. And in dozens of baroque churches and palace chapels, chamber concerts have been running nightly for thirty years, offering music in rooms whose acoustics were designed before amplification existed.

“My father took me to the Rudolfinum for the first time when I was nine. We sat in the back of the Dvořák Hall — the best seats were not something we could afford — and the Czech Philharmonic played Má vlast. I did not understand most of it. But I understood Vltava. The river theme is the most recognisable melody in Czech music — everyone here hears it as a child, the way English children hear Jerusalem. Sitting in that hall and hearing it played properly, by the orchestra that has played it for a hundred years, was something I carry with me still.” — Petr, HelloPrague.net

Bedřich Smetana — The River and the Nation

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Czech National Composer · Má vlast · Vltava
Bedřich Smetana
1824–1884 · Born Litomyšl · Died Prague · Buried Vyšehrad
Key Works Má vlast (My Homeland) — six tone poems including Vltava · The Bartered Bride (opera) · String Quartet No. 1 “From My Life”

Smetana is the composer most inseparably connected to Prague and to Czech national identity. Má vlast — a cycle of six orchestral tone poems completed between 1874 and 1879 — is a portrait of Bohemia in music: the Vyšehrad castle, the Vltava river from its source to Prague, the fields and forests of the Bohemian countryside, the legendary Blaník mountain where Czech knights sleep until the nation needs them. It is patriotic music in the most complete sense — not propaganda but genuine love made audible.

The detail that makes Smetana’s achievement extraordinary is that he composed most of Má vlast after going completely deaf — the same condition that afflicted Beethoven, and which Smetana described in his String Quartet No. 1, where a sustained high E in the first violin represents the ringing in his ears that preceded the silence. He heard the Vltava only in memory when he wrote it. That knowledge changes how you listen.

“In composing Vltava I wanted to depict the course of the river — from its source in two small springs, through forests and meadows, through the landscape where peasants are celebrating, past castles and ruins, through Prague and on to the Elbe.”
— Bedřich Smetana, programme note for Má vlast

Where to connect with Smetana in Prague today: The Smetana Museum on the Vltava embankment (near Old Town bridge tower) is small but well-curated — his manuscripts, letters and the hearing aids he used toward the end of his life. He is buried at Vyšehrad, the rocky hilltop fortress above the river, in the national Slavín cemetery alongside Dvořák and other figures of Czech cultural history. Standing at his grave with the river visible below is one of those Prague moments that costs nothing and means everything.

The Czech Philharmonic traditionally opens its season every spring with a complete performance of Má vlast at the Rudolfinum — the Prague Spring Music Festival opening concert. If your visit coincides with late May, this is the performance worth attending above all others.


Antonín Dvořák — The Bohemian Who Conquered the World

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New World Symphony · Cello Concerto · Czech Dances
Antonín Dvořák
1841–1904 · Born Nelahozeves · Lived and died Prague · Buried Vyšehrad
Key Works Symphony No. 9 “From the New World” · Cello Concerto in B minor · Slavonic Dances · String Quartet “American” · Rusalka (opera)

Dvořák is the Czech composer best known internationally — the New World Symphony is one of the most performed works in the orchestral repertoire worldwide, and the Cello Concerto in B minor is the benchmark against which every other cello concerto is measured. He was born in Nelahozeves, a village north of Prague where his father ran a butcher’s shop and an inn, and he spent most of his professional life in Prague, teaching at the conservatory and composing in an apartment in the Žižkov neighbourhood.

The New World Symphony was written during Dvořák’s time in New York — he directed the National Conservatory of Music there from 1892 to 1895 — but it is saturated with Bohemian folk music filtered through the American experience. The famous Largo movement, with its cor anglais melody later given words as “Goin’ Home,” sounds like both places simultaneously. Dvořák himself said it was American music, Czech music, and neither of those things.

Where to connect with Dvořák in Prague today: The Dvořák Museum on Ke Karlovu street in New Town occupies the Villa Amerika — a baroque summer palace with a garden, now housing his manuscripts, instruments and personal effects. It is one of the best small museums in Prague. He is buried at Vyšehrad alongside Smetana — the two composers who defined Czech classical music within fifty metres of each other, with the river below them both.

“I played the Dvořák Cello Concerto once in a school concert — badly, I should say — when I was sixteen. I have been listening to other people play it properly ever since. There is a recording by Jacqueline du Pré with the Czech Philharmonic from 1970 that I return to more than any other. It was recorded at the Rudolfinum. The room is in the sound. You can hear Prague in it.” — Petr, HelloPrague.net

Mozart’s Prague — The City That Understood Him

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Don Giovanni · Prague Symphony · Estates Theatre
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in Prague
Prague connections: 1787 · Don Giovanni premiere · Estates Theatre
Prague Connections Don Giovanni — world premiere, Estates Theatre, 29 October 1787 · Symphony No. 38 “Prague” · The Marriage of Figaro — Prague triumph 1787

Mozart visited Prague twice — in 1787 and again for the premiere of Don Giovanni. The Prague connection began when The Marriage of Figaro, which had been received with indifference in Vienna, became a sensation in Prague. The city could not stop performing it. Mozart wrote to his friend Gottfried von Jacquin: “Here they talk of nothing but Figaro. Nothing is played, blown, sung or whistled but Figaro.”

He came to Prague in January 1787, was celebrated as no other city had celebrated him, and wrote the Prague Symphony (No. 38) in gratitude. He returned in October to conduct the world premiere of Don Giovanni at the Estates Theatre — the opera house that still stands on Železná street in Old Town, still operating, still staging opera in the room where Mozart stood on the podium on the 29th of October 1787.

“My Prague people understand me.”
— Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, 1787 · attributed

The Estates Theatre is not a museum — it is a working opera house that stages productions year-round. Seeing an opera or a concert here is not a heritage experience; it is using the building as it was intended. The auditorium has been restored and is one of the most beautiful 18th-century theatre interiors in Europe — pale green and gold, tiered boxes, the stage where Mozart’s own singers stood. The experience of being in that room during a performance is different from being in any newer venue, because the room carries its history in its proportions and its light.

For Mozart specifically: The Klementinum Mirror Chapel concert — Tiqets — performs Mozart in a baroque chapel two minutes from the Estates Theatre. The combination of attending a Mirror Chapel concert in the evening and visiting the Estates Theatre (even just the foyer) during the day gives you the most complete Mozart-in-Prague experience available.

Martinů, Janáček & the Broader Czech Tradition

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Bohuslav Martinů · Leoš Janáček · The Czech Musical Lineage
Beyond the Three Great Names
19th–20th century · Czech and Moravian composers

Bohuslav Martinů (1890–1959) is the Czech composer least known outside specialist circles and most worth discovering. Born in a church tower in Polička — his father was the tower watchman — he studied in Prague, moved to Paris, fled Europe during the war and spent his later years in the United States and Switzerland, never returning to Czechoslovakia after the Communist takeover. His six symphonies, his Double Concerto and his opera Julietta are among the finest Czech music of the 20th century. The Martinů Institute in Prague maintains his archive.

Leoš Janáček (1854–1928) was Moravian rather than Bohemian — from Brno, not Prague — but his operas (Jenůfa, The Cunning Little Vixen, Kátya Kabanová) are performed regularly at the National Theatre in Prague and are the most performed Czech operas in the international repertoire. His late string quartets are among the most emotionally direct chamber works of the 20th century.

The lineage runs forward into the 20th century through composers like Pavel Haas, Viktor Ullmann and Hans Krása — all of whom were murdered at Terezín or Auschwitz during the Second World War, a fact that gives their music a specific weight. The music they wrote in the Terezín concentration camp before deportation — performed under impossible conditions, for fellow prisoners — is documented and occasionally performed in Prague. It is not easy listening. It is worth knowing about.


Concert Venues — Ranked Honestly

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Best Overall · Czech Philharmonic · Serious Music
Rudolfinum — Dvořák Hall
náměstí Jana Palacha, Staré Město · Czech Philharmonic home · Built 1884

The Rudolfinum is the home of the Czech Philharmonic — one of the great orchestras of Europe — and the Dvořák Hall is one of the finest 19th-century concert halls on the continent. If you want to hear serious classical music performed at the highest level in Prague, this is where it happens. The acoustics are exceptional. The programming ranges from Czech repertoire to international soloists. Tickets start at CZK 200–300 for some concerts and rise to CZK 2,000+ for major soloists.

Book through the Czech Philharmonic website directly or through Ticketmaster. The season runs September to June. If you attend one concert in Prague, make it here.

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Mozart’s Own Stage · Opera · 1787 · Working Theatre
Estates Theatre (Stavovské divadlo)
Železná 11, Staré Město · Don Giovanni premiere venue · National Theatre subsidiary

The Estates Theatre is a working opera house — a subsidiary of the National Theatre — staging opera and drama year-round in the room where Mozart conducted the premiere of Don Giovanni. The auditorium is one of the most beautiful 18th-century theatre interiors in Europe. Seeing a Mozart opera here specifically is the right context, but any performance in this room is worth attending for the room alone. Check the National Theatre programme for what is running during your visit.

Most Atmospheric Small Venue · Baroque · Old Town · Book Ahead
Klementinum Mirror Chapel
Klementinum, Staré Město · 18th century baroque chapel · Royal Czech Orchestra

The Mirror Chapel inside the Klementinum is the most atmospheric small concert venue in Prague — an 18th-century baroque hall with ceiling frescoes, gilded mirrors and acoustics designed before amplification existed. The Royal Czech Orchestra performs here regularly: Mozart, Dvořák, Vivaldi. An hour of music in this room is the most complete single classical music experience available in Prague for visitors with limited time. Sells out on weekend evenings — book ahead.

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Prague Castle · Beethoven & Mozart MSS · Private Palace
Lobkowicz Palace Concert Hall
Jiřská 3, Prague Castle · Original Beethoven & Mozart manuscripts on display

Lobkowicz Palace sits inside the Prague Castle complex and holds original manuscripts annotated by Beethoven and Mozart — you can see them in the collection before or after the concert. The midday concerts are performed in a private palace hall with that history on the walls. More intimate and less tourist-packaged than the church concerts, and the castle location is unmatched. Combine with a morning at the castle.

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Concert + Dinner · Full Evening · Best Combination
Mozart Concert & Dinner / Music Tour & Dinner
Viator · Various venues · Full evening packages · Concert + 3-course dinner

Two bookable packages that combine a classical concert with dinner — the most complete single-evening option for visitors who want both the music and a good meal without planning them separately. The Mozart Concert and Dinner focuses on the city’s most celebrated musical connection; the Prague Music Tour with Concert and 3-course Dinner offers a broader programme. Both remove the logistical question of where to eat after the concert.


How to Book Classical Music in Prague

  • Czech Philharmonic — book directly at ceskafilharmonie.cz or through Ticketmaster. Season September to June. The Dvořák Hall at the Rudolfinum seats 1,200; popular concerts sell out weeks ahead.
  • National Theatre (Národní divadlo) — opera, ballet and drama at the main house on the river. Book at narodni-divadlo.cz. The Estates Theatre is a subsidiary — check both for current programming.
  • Klementinum Mirror Chapel — book through Tiqets, well in advance for weekend evenings. The venue holds perhaps 150 people; it sells out.
  • Church concerts — Prague has dozens of baroque churches running nightly concerts during tourist season. Quality varies. St Nicholas Church in Malá Strana and St James Church in Old Town are among the best acoustically. These can generally be booked on the day.
  • Prague Spring Music Festival — late May to early June. The opening concert at the Rudolfinum is always Má vlast performed by the Czech Philharmonic. International soloists and orchestras throughout. Book months ahead for the major events.
Best single evening for a first-time visitor: Mirror Chapel concert (Tiqets, book ahead) followed by dinner in Old Town. One hour of Mozart or Dvořák in a baroque chapel, then the Old Town streets at night. The combination requires no further justification.

Prague Classical Music — Book Your Evening
Most Atmospheric Venue
Mirror Chapel · Klementinum
Book →
Concert + Dinner
Mozart Concert & Dinner
Book →
Music Tour + Dinner
Prague Music Tour & 3-Course Dinner
Book →
Castle · Original MSS
Lobkowicz Palace Concert
Book →
Czech Philharmonic · Opera
Ticketmaster Prague — All Venues
Browse →
Music-Themed Hotel
Aria Hotel Prague · Malá Strana
Book →

More Prague Guides


Frequently Asked Questions — Prague Classical Music

What is the best classical music venue in Prague?
For serious orchestral music at the highest level: the Rudolfinum, home of the Czech Philharmonic — one of the great concert halls of Europe. For atmosphere in a smaller setting: the Klementinum Mirror Chapel, an 18th-century baroque hall where the acoustics were designed before amplification existed. For historical significance: the Estates Theatre, where Mozart conducted the premiere of Don Giovanni in 1787 and which still operates as an opera house.
Did Mozart really live in Prague?
Mozart visited Prague twice — in January 1787 and again in October 1787 for the premiere of Don Giovanni. He did not live here permanently but his connection to the city was genuine and deep. The Marriage of Figaro had been a sensation in Prague when it was received with indifference in Vienna, and Mozart wrote warmly about the city’s musical culture. The Estates Theatre on Železná street, where Don Giovanni premiered, still stands and still operates as a working opera house.
Where are Smetana and Dvořák buried?
Both are buried at Vyšehrad — the rocky hilltop fortress above the Vltava south of the city centre — in the Slavín national cemetery, which holds the graves of significant figures in Czech cultural and intellectual history. Smetana and Dvořák are within fifty metres of each other. The cemetery is free to visit, and Vyšehrad itself — with its ramparts, the river below, and the castle visible upstream — is one of the most affecting places in Prague.
What is Má vlast and why does it matter?
Má vlast (My Homeland) is a cycle of six orchestral tone poems by Bedřich Smetana, composed between 1874 and 1879 — a musical portrait of Bohemia. The most famous movement is Vltava, which depicts the river from its source to Prague. It is the most performed Czech orchestral work in the world and functions as an unofficial second national anthem. Smetana composed most of it after going completely deaf. The Czech Philharmonic opens the Prague Spring Music Festival every May with a complete performance at the Rudolfinum.
How much do classical concert tickets cost in Prague?
Church and chapel concerts (Mirror Chapel, St Nicholas, St James): CZK 400–700 (€16–28) per person. Lobkowicz Palace midday concerts: CZK 500–800 (€20–32). Czech Philharmonic at the Rudolfinum: CZK 200–2,000 (€8–80) depending on seat and programme. National Theatre opera: CZK 300–2,500 (€12–100). Prague is significantly cheaper than Vienna, London or Paris for equivalent quality classical music.
What is the Klementinum Mirror Chapel?
The Mirror Chapel is an 18th-century baroque concert hall inside the Klementinum — the former Jesuit college complex in Old Town, one of the largest baroque building complexes in Central Europe. The chapel has ceiling frescoes, gilded mirrors and acoustics designed for unamplified music. It holds approximately 150 people and hosts regular chamber concerts by the Royal Czech Orchestra. It is the most consistently atmospheric small venue in Prague and sells out on weekend evenings.

Book Your Prague Concert Evening

The Mirror Chapel, Mozart with dinner, or the Lobkowicz Palace — the three easiest ways to hear Prague’s music in its proper context.

Mirror Chapel Concert → Mozart Concert & Dinner → All Prague Concerts →

This article contains affiliate links. If you book through them, HelloPrague earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. All recommendations are based on personal experience and honest assessment. Full disclosure here.

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