Venice: Around Vivaldi Concert Ticket

Baroque music in Venice hits different. Around Vivaldi takes you to Santa Maria della Pietà, the church tied to Vivaldi’s long working life, for a focused 1.5-hour program that blends his best-known styles with other major baroque names.

I love the way this concert is built like a guided tour through Vivaldi’s world, from Estro Armonico and Stravaganza to opera arias and sacred music. I also love the venue itself: the church acoustics are the main event here. One drawback to consider: the rules are strict, so you’ll want to leave your phone, flash photos, and any food or drinks behind.

Key Points You’ll Care About

  • Vivaldi’s home base: This is staged in Santa Maria della Pietà, linked to Vivaldi’s work there for about 40 years.
  • A program that mixes Vivaldi with other baroque masters: Expect composers ranging from Albinoni and Marcello to Bach, Handel, Marais, and Mozart.
  • Church acoustics are the star: People especially like how the sound carries in the space.
  • Short and sweet (1.5 hours): You can fit this into a Venice day without losing your whole evening.
  • Good seating matters: The format and seating are specifically called out as a plus, so arrive on time.
  • Rules are no-nonsense: No cellphones, no flash photography, and no food or drinks.

Santa Maria della Pietà Is the Real Headliner

The biggest reason to book Around Vivaldi isn’t just the music title. It’s the setting: Chiesa della Pietà – Santa Maria della Visitazione, at Riva degli Schiavoni in Venice’s historic core, between St. Mark’s Square, the Doge’s Palace area, and the Arsenale side of town.

This is the kind of place where sound feels intentional. You’re not in a modern hall where music floats on electronics and lighting. You’re in a church tied to the baroque era, and that matters. Vivaldi didn’t just pass through Venice’s musical life—he worked there for decades, writing and conducting there. So when the first notes start, it feels less like a concert happening to you and more like you’re hearing the music in the same kind of architectural space it was made to live in.

Also, this venue sits in a part of Venice that’s visually strong even before the concert begins. Walking in, you’re surrounded by the classic streets and water-adjacent atmosphere that makes Venice feel like Venice. Then you sit down and the whole world narrows to music.

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The Around Vivaldi Program: Vivaldi Plus the Baroque All-Stars

Around Vivaldi is centered on Antonio Vivaldi, but it’s not a one-composer show. The structure gives you multiple entry points into the 18th-century sound world—so even if you know only a few Vivaldi hits, you can follow the thread.

Here’s what the program is built around:

  • Vivaldi works like Estro Armonico and Stravaganza
  • Opera arias
  • Sacred music
  • Then composers who orbit the same era and style, including Albinoni, Marcello, Tartini, and Boccherini
  • Plus international baroque composers such as Bach, Marais, Handel, and Mozart (and others)

That mix is the real value for most people. It’s not just about hearing famous names—it’s about hearing how baroque music connects: different composers using similar tools (rhythm, contrast, ornamentation) to create tension and release in different ways.

If your personal Vivaldi wish-list is very specific, I’ll set expectations gently. This concert is described as presenting Vivaldi masterpieces across several categories, not as a single-work tribute. So instead of chasing one famous title, you’re getting a broader picture of his style and influence—and the surrounding baroque ecosystem that shaped what audiences were hearing in Vivaldi’s time.

Where You’ll Find the Church (and Why the Location Helps)

The meeting point is Chiesa della Pietà – Santa Maria della Visitazione. From there, you’re in easy walking range of major Venice landmarks—especially if you’re already doing St. Mark’s Square in the same day.

I like this location for two reasons:

  1. It makes the concert fit naturally into a sightseeing loop. You can do the monumental sights first, then slow down for music.
  2. It’s close enough to the Arsenale side that you don’t feel stuck in one tiny zone of Venice for the entire trip.

Practical tip: because Venice is pedestrian-only and streets can shift quickly depending on where you turn, I recommend planning to arrive early enough to get your bearings without rushing. The concert rules are strict, and being late just adds stress.

What 1.5 Hours Feels Like (and the Rules You Must Follow)

Venice: Around Vivaldi Concert Ticket - What 1.5 Hours Feels Like (and the Rules You Must Follow)
The concert lasts 1.5 hours, so think of it as a focused evening anchor rather than a long performance evening. That’s a good fit if you want baroque music without turning your whole day into a concert schedule.

The venue rules matter here, because they affect your comfort level. You cannot:

  • smoke
  • eat or drink (including food and drinks)
  • use flash photography
  • use cellphones
  • do audio recording

So plan like a grown-up (I mean that kindly): keep your phone put away for the duration, leave snacks for later, and don’t bring the urge to document with flash. Venice is already photogenic. This is one of those experiences where the best photos are the ones you take before you sit down.

The no-phone rule also changes the mood. You’ll hear more clearly, and you’ll feel less like you’re sharing a space with a phone camera crowd.

And one more small-but-real note: seating is specifically mentioned as a highlight. That usually means you’ll want to treat this like a proper performance—arrive with enough time to settle in, not stumble in at the last second.

Price and Value: Is $40 a Smart Buy?

At $40 per person, Around Vivaldi is priced for a very specific kind of value: you’re paying for a known baroque name, in a historically meaningful church, with a performance format that’s short and well-contained.

Here’s how I judge value for this kind of ticket:

  • You’re not paying for a long evening of logistics. It’s 1.5 hours.
  • You’re getting a multi-composer baroque program, so the show isn’t limited to one famous work.
  • You’re in a venue people single out for acoustics, which is basically the whole point of classical listening.
  • And the meeting location puts you where you likely want to be anyway—around St. Mark’s and the historic center.

The satisfaction score is also strong: the experience shows a 4.7 rating across 112 bookings. That’s not a guarantee of anything, but it does suggest you’re unlikely to waste your time.

Could it be overpriced for someone who wants a casual, flexible cultural evening? Sure. But if you like baroque music, or you want a high-signal classical experience in Venice without planning a full night around it, this is a solid bet.

Who Should Book This Vivaldi Concert—and Who Might Skip It

Venice: Around Vivaldi Concert Ticket - Who Should Book This Vivaldi Concert—and Who Might Skip It
This concert is a great match if you:

  • want baroque music in a historically tied setting
  • like Vivaldi but also want a broader taste of the era
  • prefer a short, high-quality program to a long cultural marathon
  • appreciate good acoustics and clean listening conditions (no phones, no flash)

I’d think twice if you:

  • want to snack during the show (food and drinks aren’t allowed)
  • need your phone for reference or accessibility (cellphones aren’t allowed)
  • hate strict venue rules in general

As for pacing, the show is short, so it works well for couples, solo travelers, and anyone squeezing Venice into a tight schedule. It also pairs well with a day that includes St. Mark’s and the Doge’s Palace area—then you end with something quieter and more musical.

Getting the Most Out of Your Ticket

A few small moves can make the difference between an okay concert and a truly satisfying one.

1) Arrive early and settle. Since seating is appreciated and rules are strict, you’ll enjoy it more when you’re not rushing.

2) Go in with curiosity, not only expectations. The program spans Vivaldi across different forms—instrumental masterpieces, arias, and sacred music—then connects outward to other baroque composers.

3) Treat it as listening time. No flash, no audio recording, and no cellphones. That’s not just policy. It’s part of how the experience stays focused.

4) Plan your day so you’re not rushing across Venice. The church area is central, but streets can still slow you down. Build in a little buffer.

One more practical note: the experience is provided by More Than Web s.r.l. If you’re the kind of person who likes to know who’s running things, that’s the operator listed for this concert.

Should You Book Around Vivaldi in Venice?

Venice: Around Vivaldi Concert Ticket - Should You Book Around Vivaldi in Venice?
Yes, if you want a high-quality Vivaldi concert in Venice that respects the music and the space. The pairing of Vivaldi-centered programming with the Santa Maria della Pietà venue is exactly the kind of choice that makes your trip feel more specific—and less generic.

Book it if:

  • $40 for a 1.5-hour classical concert feels reasonable to you
  • you care about acoustics and real listening conditions
  • you want more than one famous Vivaldi title and prefer a fuller baroque picture

Skip it if:

  • you strongly prefer performances where you can snack, text, or record
  • you only want one single Vivaldi piece and don’t care about the broader program

If you do book, go early, set your phone aside, and give yourself permission to let the sound take over for an hour and a half.

FAQ

Venice: Around Vivaldi Concert Ticket - FAQ

Where is the concert held?

The concert is at Chiesa della Pietà – Santa Maria della Visitazione (Santa Maria della Pietà), in the area of Riva degli Schiavoni.

What is the meeting point?

Please go to Chiesa della Pietà – Santa Maria della Visitazione.

How long is the Around Vivaldi concert?

The duration is 1.5 hours.

How much does it cost?

The price is $40 per person.

What music is included?

The concert presents Vivaldi masterpieces and includes other baroque composers. It specifically mentions works and categories such as Estro Armonico, Stravaganza, opera arias, and sacred music, with composers including Albinoni, Marcello, Tartini, Boccherini, and also Bach, Marais, Handel, Mozart, and others.

Are cellphones or audio recording allowed?

No. Cellphones and audio recording are not allowed during the concert.

What are the rules about photos, food, and drinks?

Flash photography is not allowed. Food and drinks are not allowed, and smoking is not allowed.

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