Polish Music Journal
Vol. 2, Nos. 1-2. 1999.
ISSN 1521 - 6039
BOOK REVIEW
Małgorzata G±siorowska: Bacewicz
Reviewed by Alicja Usarek
Kraków: PWM Edition, 1999. 505 pp.
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G±siorowska offers her readers a broad coverage of divergent biographical materials, set into a tightly-knit continuum
extending across several large chapters. The book includes
musical examples, excerpts from numerous letters, parts of interviews, photographs, a substantial number of shorter essays by Bacewicz,
fragments of facsimiles, chronological index of works, as well as a bibliography. The concepts of artistic development are presented
in a technical and
narrative-descriptive fashion, in which the stylistic principles are integrated into the historical account. The text is well
researched and scholarly, yet thoroughly accessible.
In both initial chapters, a Prologue and the Beginning, G±siorowska introduces the basic cultural context
and historical background of
Poland as well as the characteristics of the urban elite that the Bacewicz family belonged to; this context casts a light on the
atmosphere in which
the young violinist grew up. The author surveys the artistic life in ŁódĽ, the home town of the Bacewicz family (the father came
from Lithuania, though); she also
presents the context for the earliest compositional achievements of the young composer. According to G±siorowska, Bacewicz's attitude
towards the musical tradition is characterized by the use of neo-classical (or, more specifically, neo-Baroque) formal gestures (throughout her
career) and by
her drawing from folk sources which feature chromatic material (especially in the 1940s and 1950s). In the period of
assimilation of a modernist musical language and the use of new,
20th-century sonorities (from mid 1950s), Bacewicz radically discarded all traces of a neo-romantic compromise. Liberated from
the burden of romanticism, the composer transformed the harmonic structures
of the traditional major/minor scale system into a freely formed new chromatic idiom; as a result, she brought the
traditional forms into a new musical territory and an original sound world.
The third chapter of the book summarizes Bacewicz's years of study at the Warsaw University and the Warsaw Conservatory, seen as the period of the
most intensive search for new harmonic language. In the fourth chapter the author explores the means by which the early twentieth-century
works of Bacewicz enter the domain of neoclassicism - by the early 1930s this aesthetic orientation fully permeated Bacewicz's music.
G±siorowska brings to the attention of her readers a strong influence of the neoclassical movement in Paris and spontaneous contacts with
an international
group of composers as essential factors in the development of Bacewicz's music in this period. The author then discusses an
unique array of "fixed" lyrical gestures and the objective, poetic distance which - taken together - establish Bacewicz's musical language
within the context
of traditional forms and genres. In this period, the composer's style may be characterized by a departure from post-Wagnerian
chromaticism towards the new spheres of diatonic interactions between
free dissonant counterpoint and harmonic structure. These features expand and enrich Bacewicz's basic concept
of motivic construction.
Each of the following chapters continues to center on Bacewicz's major compositions while taking into account historical circumstances
affecting their genesis. The discussion of
The Life and Death Time
in Chapter Five accounts for the outbreak of World War II and the subsequent, increasingly repressive political atmosphere that had grave
consequences for all Poles, and, obviously, for Polish musical life. G±siorowska attempts
to demonstrate how the progress of Nazi power in Eastern Europe, following Germany's unprovoked attack on Poland, results, paradoxically,
in an increasing psychological motivation for ever more pervasive manifestations of musical creativity in the artistic life of Poland.
Nonetheless,
the author states that Bacewicz's public activity during these dark times was limited to performances (both public and secret),
educational meetings
in the Underground, and artistic expressions of her strong personal commitment to national losses of an occupied country. Significant
pieces from this period,
in addition to the Sonata for Solo Violin and the Second String Quartet, were mostly works for piano.
G±siorowska entitles Chapters Six and Seven—New Life and Flourishing. While the preceding chapters centered on
individual works and specific principles of compositional technique, in these two chapters, G±siorowska creates a foundation
for further discussion of musical style and language by shifting the focus to major
compositions presented in detail. A major part of the composer's oeuvre is writings for the strings, exemplified in this chapter by her
Third String Quartet (1947). According to Adrian Thomas, this quartet is the first of "the cycle of five mature quartets whose dates (1947; 1951; 1955; 1960 and 1965) as
clearly as those of any of her compositions mark the turning points in her career. As a corpus of works it is unrivalled in
twentieth century Polish music and it is a credible claim that, after Bartók, these five quartets represent one of the century's
most significant contributions to the genre."
While Thomas's own study is limited to a part of Bacewicz's oeuvre (her chamber and orchestral music), G±siorowska covers the whole output of the Polish
composer. The author never
abandons the rich historical context which
endows the book with its merits of an in-depth historical study and a source of extensive documentation. The year 1948 is a
watershed for Bacewicz's musical
career and a turning point in G±siorowska's narrative: the newly introduced ideological constraints of socialist realism have a great
impact on the composer. In the following sections of the monograph, the author provides us with a set of tools to reveal the subtle changes in the sonic language of a composer, whose works manifest
a remarkable
continuity of style throughout her whole career. Certain pieces are presented in great detail, for instance the material about
the Third Violin Concerto includes the composer's own analysis and description of technical strategies used in this work.
There are four general stylistic
categories that interact in Bacewicz's oeuvre: neo-romantic, folkloric, neo-classical, and sonoristic. Their intersections are essential features
in the development of Bacewicz's compositional expression. In the period from 1940s to 1950s Polish composers, such as Andrzej Panufnik, Kazimierz
Serocki, and Grażyna Bacewicz, used an increasing amount of folk material. As a reaction to a "historical imperative" (i.e. the policy
of "socialist realism" imposed on all composers urged after 1949 to follow the motto of creating music that would be "national in form and
socialist in content") the inspiration with folklore
contributed to the unification of the Polish national style. Bacewicz played a great role in this development. She juxtaposed, and
later synthesized,
diatonic and non-diatonic folk modes with the language of contemporary music. Paradoxically, this difficult time of ideological
constraints, was also a time of
national and international recognition for Bacewicz's talent - the recognition manifested through a range of awards that she received.
In the last chapter, Apogeum, G±siorowska again focuses on individual works and their significance in Bacewicz's stylistic
development. A detailed
analysis is devoted to Music for Strings, Trumpet and Percussion, a 1958 work in three integrated movements that present
the composer's
style in its mature and easily recognizable form. This particular composition, as well as many other works, has been used as the
musical layer for
many ballets (listed in the monograph).
While discussing the evolution of Bacewicz's musical language, G±siorowska emphasizes the
nature of her most
important and lasting contribution, i.e. her concern for formal construction and musical architecture, coupled with
her ability to
establish a new relationship between timbral content and dynamic form. In pieces from Bacewicz's last period, from 1950 to 1969,
G±siorowska points out the
incorporation of extremely divergent timbral and rhythmic layers into unified structural components. Here, the author indicates
the influence
of Schoenberg's twelve-tone music and the emergent trends from the Darmstadt School, assimilated and developed by the Polish
school of sonorism.
While changing her style and moving away from tonality towards new sonorities and timbral effects, Bacewicz created an impressive
array of string
quartets and orchestral compositions.
The chapter headings in G±siorowska's book form a clear framework, outlining the main phases in the composer's life and oeuvre.
This broad base for detailed discussion allows one to note the existence of historical, theoretical, and stylistic links throughout the narrative.
It is worth mentioning that the selection of titles for the chapters suggests G±siorowska's use of a musical framework for her
discussion of Bacewicz' life
and compositional development. Here, the sections of the sonata form, i.e. the exposition-development-recapitulation, correspond to
the heading of chapters (Beginning, Development-New Life, and Apogeum). The title of the Prologue suggests its function as an
introduction (overture) to the musical form. The parallels with movement titles from Witold Lutosławski's Funeral Music (1958)
are even more striking: "Prologue" - "Metamorphoses" - "Apogeum" - "Epilogue." These titles relate the life-history back to the outline of a Greek tragedy,
with its arch-form of increasing intensity leading to a climax of the drama. The "Epilogue" is missing because Bacewicz's
creative life was interrupted by her sudden death (at the age of 60); she died too soon after reaching the apex of her artistic abilities.
The inclusion of many fragments from Bacewicz's memoirs make the book truly personal, as the pages of the book come to life with
her thoughts and ideas. In a draft answer to an unknown questionnaire, published posthumously in Ruch Muzyczny, Bacewicz provided
one of the most important insights that permeates G±siorowska's book:
[3]
[1] Books on Bacewicz include: an extensive, popular monograph by Stefan Kisielewski,
Grażyna Bacewicz i jej czasy (Cracow: PWM, 1963); a brief, general introduction to the composer by Judith Rosen, Grażyna
Bacewicz: Her Life and Works (Polish Music History Series, vol. 2. Los Angeles: Friends of Polish Music, 1984); a study of Bacewicz's songs
issued under a misleading title by Sharon Guertin Shafer, The Contribution of Grażyna Bacewicz (1909-1969) to Polish Music
(Lewiston/Queenston/Lampeter: Edwin Mellen Press, 1992); and a study of a part of Bacewicz's output by Adrian Thomas, Grażyna
Bacewicz: Chamber and Orchestral Music (Polish Music History Series, vol. 3; Los Angeles: Friends of Polish Music, 1985). Other books
include a collection of studies on the Bacewicz family, edited by Marta Szoka, Rodzeństwo Bacewiczów (Zeszyt Naukowy Akademii
Muzycznej w Łodzi, vol. 24, ed. Marta Szoka. ŁódĽ: Akademia Muzyczna w Łodzi, 1996). [Editor's note].[Back]
[2] Thomas, op. cit., p. 63-64. [Back]
[3].
Grażyna Bacewicz, "Draft Answers to an Unknown Questionnaire" (in Polish). Wanda Bacewicz, ed. Ruch Muzyczny no. 7 (1969): 4.
[Back]
© Copyright 1999 by Alicja Usarek.
The new, extensive "life-and-works" book on Grażyna Bacewicz (1909-1969) is the first truly comprehensive and thorough study of this eminent
violinist-composer.[1] The book brings into balance general perspectives and
approaches derived from cultural history, aesthetics,
performance practice, fine arts, and even dance history (the latter for the discussion of her 1969 ballet Desire).
Simultaneously, G±siorowska presents the life of Bacewicz in a rich context of
contemporary musical culture. The distinguishing feature of the book is its
attempt to demonstrate the historical, philosophical and compositional connections between Bacewicz's oeuvre and
the surrounding culture. This goal is accomplished quite successfully and with ample
internal (i.e. analytical) and external (i.e. primary sources and documents) evidence.
Each of the Polish composers goes his/her own way. I consider here not only the compositional technique or musical
language, but the end result as well. Nonetheless, there is something that bounds all the works by Polish composers - something superior.
It is their inner content, of course, the purely musical content. This is why it is correct to talk about the existence of a Polish School.
The goal of Polish composers is not to assemble their notes together in an original way, it is not enough to discover the new sound effects. We strive for
creating music - even a fragment of music - that would create a live experience for the listener, and not only the experience for us, as we compose.
The composer's concern for her audiences, her focus on the music being meaningful and comprehensible, is coupled with efforts of her biographer
to present the abundance of her musical works and life experiences in a clear and engaging fashion. The success
of G±siorowska's text lies not only in its content, but also in the form of presentation of each chapter, with its wide scope and internal
coherence. The book provides a valuable documentation of the life and music of Bacewicz; it should be regarded as an outstanding contribution to
the realm of Polish musicology. The previous publications in the field of Bacewicz studies pale in comparison
with this thoroughly researched and excellent volume.

NOTES
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Author's Biography
PMJ - Current Issue

Editor: Maria Anna Harley. Publisher: Polish Music Reference Center
Design: Maria Anna Harley & Marcin Depinski. Summer 1999.
Comments and inquiries by e-mail: polmusic@email.usc.edu