| Polish Music Newsletter |
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June 2011, Vol. 17, No. 6. ISSN 1098-9188. Published monthly. Anniversaries |
Awards | Discography | Festivals | |
PMC NEWS |
MANUSCRIPTS ATTRACT SCHOLARS OF ALL AGES
An earlier outcome of Andrew’s interest in Lutosławski was his performance of movements 1,2 & 5 of the composer’s Dance Preludes during the Season Finale concert of the Glendale Youth Orchestra on May 22, 2011. After the performance, reviewer Ted Ayala wrote the following for the Crescenta Valley Weekly: “Moses held a firm grasp of the work and infused the music with a potent rhythmic vitality…. The work’s virtuosic demands were tossed off with nonchalant grace and wit by Moses. This is a musician of enormous talent and I hope that he continues on his musical path.” Andrew’s performance of this piece—in a setting for clarinet and piano, accompanied by Dr. Tania Fleischer in April 2011—can be viewed on YouTube, along with his encore performance of P. Harvey’s Variations on "I Got Rhythm" from the Season Finale concert in May. Andrew studies with Margaret Thornhill, conductor and founder of the Los Angeles Clarinet Choir.
RECENT DONATIONS Music by Maciejewski and Moss From our friend in Warsaw, conductor Joseph A. Herter, we received three fine items for our audio visual library:
A DVD of the filmed version of Roman Maciejewski’s Requiem—Missa pro defunctis, performed by the Warsaw National Philharmonic Orchestra and Choir with soloists Zdzisława Donat, Jadwiga Rappé, Jerzy Knetig, and Janusz Niziołek, conducted by Lars Benstorp. About 62 minutes of this monumental work are presented in the film directed by Stefan Szlachtycz. The footage used comes from a performance on September 2, 1990 at the Cathedral of St. Mary Magdalene in Wrocław, Poland, which was attended by the composer. The DVD of An oustsider—A Portrait of an Individual Composer, another documentary about Roman Maciejewski by Stefan Szlachtycz. It features interviews (including important figures in Polish culture as Witold Lutosławski, Czesław Miłosz, Paweł Rydel, Stefan Stuligrosz, Roger Wagner, Elizabeth Wars, among others) and fragments of the performance of Maciejewski’s Requiem in Wrocław (September1990) mentioned above. The composer himself provides an extensive interview about his life and career. Additional commentary provided by his brother, Wojciech, puts the family history in perspective. The hour-long film has English subtitles and would be of great interest to anyone studying the phenomenon of Roman Maciejewski and his musical legacy. The 2011 Report on Polish Music
Edited by Joanna Grotkowska and Andrzej Chłopecki, the Raport o stanie muzyki polskiej—Warszawa 2011 [Report on Polish Music—Warsaw 2011] is an extensive reference source on the current state of music in Poland. Dir. Kosowski’s extensive Introduction is followed by several chapters that discuss and examine musical styles, composers, performers, audiences, funding sources, musical education, and research facilities. This wide-ranging report deals not only with classical contemporary music, but also covers the alternative scene, jazz, pop, rock, and hip-hop, as well as folk music of many regions and nationalities. Dance, film music, festivals, and extensive statistics complete this much needed and very welcome publication. The Report is also available online in PDF format at platformakultury.pl. Thank you, as always, to our generous supporters and donors!
PADEREWSKI FESTIVAL YOUTH EXCHANGE IN POLAND From June 22 to July 4, 2011, three winners of the 2010 Paderewski Youth Piano Competition in Paso Robles – Jordan Adams (16) and Madeline Anderson (15) from Monterey, and Evan Lin (14) from San Luis Obispo – will travel to Poland on an all-expenses-paid 12-day trip. These young pianists from the Central Coast will perform in concerts, receive individual and group music instruction, and participate in cultural exchange alongside piano students from the Tarnów region of Poland and the Zhytomyr region of the Ukraine, three areas that share historical ties to the personal life of Ignacy Jan Paderewski. Funding for the Paderewski Festival Youth Exchange Program, now in its third year, is shared between the Paderewski Festival in Paso Robles and the City and Province of Tarnów, Poland. This year's exchange program builds upon the first visit of young San Luis Obispo County musicians to Poland in 2009, and the 2010 visit of young Polish musicians to Paso Robles.
The 2011 exchange students will study piano and chamber music with internationally renowned pianists Marek Żebrowski and Igor Lipinski, and cellist Lars Hoefs at Paderewski's former estate in Kąśna Dolna near Tarnów. In addition to music workshops, highlights of this summer's exchange will include performances during the unveiling of the new Paderewski Monument at the Musicology Institute of Jagiellonian University in Kraków on June 25, as well as at a culminating recital for all participants at Kąśna Dolna on July 2. Students will also sightsee in the former capital city of Kraków, and participate in excursions to the famous Wieliczka salt mine and the mountain resort of Krynica. The Central Coast students will be accompanied by a parent chaperone, as well as an official delegation comprised of John Hamon (Mayor Pro Tem, City of Paso Robles) and Paderewski Festival Board Members Marjorie Hamon, Steve Cass, Alice Cass, Krysta Close and Marek Żebrowski. The delegation will attend the unveiling of the Paderewski Monument at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, and participate in meetings with both the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage and the Ministry Foreign Affairs in Warsaw. Meetings with the Marshall of the Malopolska region in Kraków, and with local business owners and the District Supervisor in Tarnów are also planned. Travelling at their own expense, members of the delegation will explore further cultural and economic ties with the region, and fundraising opportunities for the Paderewski Festival in Paso Robles and related projects. The Paderewski Festival in Paso Robles is a non-profit organization that sponsors an annual series of concerts featuring internationally acclaimed artists, the Paderewski Youth Piano Competition and Exchange Program, and other Paderewski-themed events. This year's Paderewski Festival will be held from November 10-13, 2011 and will mark the 20th anniversary of the Festival in Paso Robles. Concerts of solo piano, jazz and chamber music, an exhibit of Paderewski memorabilia, celebrations of local young musicians and lectures by experts are planned. Participants will include: Leszek Możdżer, jazz pianist; Eduard Kunz, winner of the 2010 International Paderewski Piano Competition in Bydgoszcz; Dr. Kevin Starr, renowned historian, author and California State Librarian Emeritus, and the winners of the 2011 Paderewski Youth Piano Competition. Details and a schedule of events, as well as ticket reservations, will soon be available on the Festival's website, www.paderewskifest.com. Once again, this year's anniversary edition of the Festival will honor Paderewski's initiative to bring music to fellow Californians by making all concerts during the 2011 Paderewski Festival in Paso Robles free of charge. To accommodate the highest possible number of concertgoers, reservations are strongly recommended and can be made online at the Festival's website or by emailing tickets@paderewskifest.com. [Source: Press release] |
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NEWS |
POLISH PRESIDENCY OF THE EU: INAUGURATION
For many years, culture has been a vital element of Poland’s national promotion activities within in the European Union, and thus Polish cultural institutions have taken an active part in the preparations for the first Polish Presidency. Poland’s Ministry of Culture and National Heritage (MKiDN) has entrusted the National Audiovisual Institute (NInA) with the task of designing and implementing the Cultural Program of the 2011 Polish EU Presidency under the theme of “Art for Social Change.”
The final concert of the Inauguration Day will start at 10:00 p.m. and will center on the Main Stage on Plac Defilad in Warsaw. Entitled “WARSAW TALKING” and created by Krzysztof Materna and Kuba Wojewódzki, it will be the main event of the Inauguration. The program will take place on three stages connected by state-of-the-art multimedia links and will include the most popular classical and pop pieces performed by Polish and foreign artists, screenings of original film impressions and a spectacular fireworks show around the Palace of Culture.
In the second part, which is intended to remind audeinces of the milestones of Polish pop music, will cover performances by Perfekt, Myslovitz, Lech Janerka and Kapela ze Wsi Warszawa. The program will also include surprising interpretations by the following artists: vocal group Manhattan Transfer, singer Michael Bolton, saxophonist Kenny G. as well as singers Angie Stone and Dolores O’Riordan (The Cranberries), asking ‘How would popular songs, such as Dream of Warsaw, In My Garden or I Lied sound performed by singers from abroad?’.
Inauguration in Paris The Krakow Philharmonic will inaugurate the Polish Presidency of the EU Council in Paris with a concert on June 29 at Théâtre du Châtelet. The concert will present the best in contemporary Polish music inspired by Highlander traditions and folklore. Repertoire for the concert includes Karol Szymanowski's Harnasie, Op. 55 and Henryk Mikołaj Górecki's Concerto for Harpsichord and String Orchestra, Op. 40. The concert features conductor Paweł Przytocki and tenor Rafał Bartmiński.
Górecki in his home office, surrounded by folk art. Organized by the Karol Szymanowski Philharmonic in Kraków, the Polish Embassy in Paris and the Polish Institute in Paris, partners in this concert include Theatre du Chatelet and UNESCO and it is co-financed by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage of the Republic of Poland. “Karol Szymanowski” is a Flagship Project of the Cultural Program of the Polish Presidency. [Sources: culture.pl, culture.pl, Harnasie image: imprezy.onet.pl]
PREMIERES AT MIŁOSZ CENTENNIAL CONCERT The Warsaw Camerata Orchestra (formerly known as the Nowa Orkiestra Kameralna) will present a special concert commemorating the centenary of Czesław Miłosz (1911-2004), one of Poland’s most prominent twentieth century poets and laureate of the 1980 Nobel Prize for Literature. Entitled Muzyczne Pejzaże Czesława Miłosza [The Musical Landscapes of Czesław Miłosz], the concert will be held at the Polish Radio Lutosławski Studio in Warsaw on Sunday, June 26.
The program will feature world premieres of works based on the poetry of Czesław Miłosz. These compositions were commissioned by FNOK from composers Romuald Twardowski - Lituania, Joanna Bruzdowicz (Paderewski Lecturer 2003) – W Warszawie, Jarosław Siwiński - Annalena, Barbara Kaszuba - …znad Zatoki San Francisco, Marek Żebrowski (PMC Director) – Dwa Pejzaże: Obłoki, Bieg, and Ryszard Osada - teMuchi.(Composers are pictured above in preceeding order) The performers will include baritone Jarosław Bręk, narrator Grzegorz Damięcki, and the Warsaw Camerata Orchestra, conducted by Paweł Kos-Nowicki. A meeting with the composers at 5:30 p.m. will be followed by a concert at 7 p.m. More information on the orchestra’s website: www.warsawcamerata.pl
[Sources: Press release, warsawcamerata.pl
R. PANUFNIK PREMIERE
Text for this mass is in Latin and Estonian, with Estonian texts written by Doris Kareva and Jürgen Rooste. According to the Philharmonic’s website, “Panufnik work has been chosen because of its beauty and message of peace. Elutants is a dialogue between modern and medieval. Based Bernt Notke The Dance of Death, the characters have found themselves with modern equivalents, and now life is a circle dance.” [Sources: roxannapanufnik.com, filharmoonia.ee]
PREMIERES AT MUSICA ELECTRONICA NOVA The Musica Electronica Nova 2011 Festival was held from May 13-21 in various venues around Wrocław, Poland. Like an atom’s structure, the program for the Festival combined elementary particles placed on the orbits of interpretation, integration and interaction—sound, light, image, motion, space and time met together to create multi-layered works of art using extremely cutting edge computer techniques. Various aesthetics and musical trends—from classical electro-acoustic music to pop, intuitive or alternative music—came together, as fixed sounds mingled with live electronics and live multimedia art. Each hour of the 9-day festival intentionally evoked a specific image of electronic music in the 20th and 21st centuries.
This edition of the MEN Festival included several World Premieres of works by Polish composers. On Sunday May 15, the premieres of Rafał Augustyn's Acqua alta and Magdalena Długosz's SaxSpiro were performed by saxaphonist Daniel Kientzy and soniste Cornelia Petroiu at the Hall of the Ossolinski National Institute. On Monday May 16, Jakub Sarwas's 10' creation for soprano saxophone, percussion and live electronics was premiered during the Acousmonium 1/2 concert by the combined ensembles of Motus and Syntax. On Wednesday May 18, the Leopoldinum Chamber Orchestra performed Ryszard Osada's Trance-formation II for string orchestra and electronics with conductor and violin soloist Ernst Kovacic. On Thursday May 19, Wojciech Blecharz’s -onym for bass flute, bass clarinet, violin, cello, percussion and live electronics was premiered by Ensemble Court Circuit with conductor Jean Deroyer. On Friday May 20, during the “Taste of Sound” concert at Centre Pompidou, Stanisław Krupowicz's Koncert komputerowy [Computer concert] was performed by the Wroclaw Philharmonic Symphonic Orchestra with the IRCAM ensemble and Stanisław Krupowicz on computer, led by conductor Jacek Kaspszyk. In addition to these world premieres by Polish composers, there were also several by foreign composers as well as many Polish premieres. Among the other composers represented at the Festival were: François Bayle, Pierre Boulez, Marek Choloniewski, Denis Dufour, Luc Ferrari, Benjamin de la Fuente, Dobromila Jaskot, Stanislaw Krupowicz, Jerzy Kornowicz, Gyorgi Ligeti, Bruno Mantovani, Tristan Murail, Jean Claude Risset, Daniel Teruggi, Lidia Zielińska and many others. [Source: musicaelectronicanova.pl]
‘POLSKA MUSIC’ PROJECT
To learn more about this initiative, visit polskamusic.pl, where you can find read biographies of Polish composers, listen to their works and see selected parts of scores of their compositions. IAM’s partners in this effort are: Polish Music Publishers (PWM), Polish Composers’ Union (ZKP), Polish Music Information Centre (POLMIC), Boosey & Hawkes Publishers, Chester Novello Music Publishers and CD Accord. [Sources: polskamusic.pl, pwm.com.pl]
NEW BOOKS FOR PWM
[Source: PWM newsletter, Tranl: SG]
SURPRESSED MUSIC INDEX AT B&H Music by composers who were persecuted, murdered and driven into exile features prominently in the catalogue of Boosey & Hawkes / Bote & Bock music publishers. Created in 2008, the “Suppressed Music” index of the Boosey & Hawkes catalogue is an excellent resource for researchers or performers interested in the music of Polish composers who were persecuted by the Third Reich, such as:
Go to www.boosey.com for more information, or click here to download a PDF document (approx. 165 KB) featuring a comprehensive index of composers and their works. Also, for an interesting article about Szymon Laks’ music at the Terezín Festival of Forbidden Music in the Czech Republic (20-27 June 2010), visit www.boosey.com.
NEW PUBLISHER & WEBSITE FOR GÓRECKI On May 16, Mikołaj Górecki signed a publishing agreement with Euterpe Publishers in Kraków for 3 of his newer works: Overture for string quartet (2000), Sonata for Piano (2010) and Nocturne for orchestra (2011). Vocal works by Górecki will be published by the end of this year. Euterpe is now Górecki’s 2nd publisher, after Polish Music Editions [PWM]. One of the important points of Górecki’s new publishing agreement was the active promotion of the composer’s works. To this end, Euterpe has created a new website, using the newest technologies to engage audiences and musicians: mikolajgorecki.pl. [Source: polmic.pl, mikolajgorecki.pl]
NEW PREISNER WEBSITE
Preisner now also has an official social media presence on www.facebook.com. [Source: Press release]
POZNAŃ GRAND THEATRE / HOSSA FIRING CONFLICT The director of the Grand Theatre in Poznan has fired Iwona Hossa, one of the leading Polish sopranos, who was slated for the main roles in Mary Stuart, Ophelia and The Fairy Queen during 2011. According to the theatre, while on sick leave the artist appeared in concerts with Krzysztof Penderecki without informing or getting prior approval from the theatre. The Grand Theatre officials decided to terminate the contract with the singer, citing grave violations of her contract. Ms. Hossa claims she did no wrong and will file a lawsuit against the theatre. In April this year the artist has notified the theatre of her resignation from the performance in The Fairy Queen, because of her commitments with Krzysztof Penderecki in April and May. The director of the theatre refused her request for the sick leave, claiming it was unjustified. The soloist maintains that her contract has been terminated illegally, adding, “It has been 15 years since I started working for the Grand Theatre. I feel strongly attached to this place and I hope I will be able to continue working here. The director claims that I was disloyal towards the theatre, which is not true. I have shown many time my loyalty to this place, by among others, filling in frequently for my colleagues in cases of emergency absences.” Ms. Hossa also claims that the director has often shown prejudice towards her, by frequently striking her from roles in the middle of performance preparation.
[Source: rmfclassic.pl; Transl: SG/MZ]
POLONIA LIBRARY IN BALTIMORE The Polish National Alliance Council 21 in Baltimore, Maryland has announced the re-opening of its Henryk Sienkiewicz Polonia Library. Located on the 2nd floor of the Council’s home at 1626 Eastern Avenue in the historic Fell’s Point neighborhood of Baltimore, the library is open most Saturdays from 2:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M. A group of dedicated volunteers, including a professional librarian, is now working on establishing an online catalog and on furnishing and decorating the library. The collection of donated materials, both in Polish and English, is organized in broad categories of Fiction/Literature, Biographies, Language Instruction, Children’s Books, Customs/Songs/Folklore, Polish History, Polish-Jewish History, Polish-American History, Description & Travel, Sienkiewicz’s Works, Visual & Performing Arts, and Religious Books. Future plans include adding magazine and newspaper subscriptions, creating a pamphlet file, adding more children’s and other books as funds become available, and offering programs such as film screenings and book discussion groups. The library also hopes to eventually connect with the Maryland library community, the Polish Library in Washington, and local schools and colleges. All are welcome to visit the Henryk Sienkiewicz Polonia Library! Please call 410-925-9684 before your visit, to confirm that the library is open. [Source: Polish Global Village listserve]
STOJOWSKI CELEBRATION
This concert will be broadcast on Polish Radio Program 2 [Polskie Radio Dwójka] on Sunday, July 12, at 7:00 p.m. Eastern European time or 1:00 p.m. EST in the US. Dwójka is available online at www.polskieradio.pl/8,Dwojka. [Sources: Herter, polskieradio.pl]
SZPAKIEWICZ PLAYS FOR JAPAN
Polish cellist and USC Thornton alumni Marek Szpakiewicz will perform with fellow alum and PMC performer, pianist Jiayi Shi, at the upcoming “For Japan, We’re United” benefit. They will perform works by Gershwin, Piazzolla, Rachmaninov, and the Japanese piece Furusato [Homeland]. Hosted by KUSC’s Rich Capparela, the event will also feature a special message and footage recorded by KTLA’s Frank Buckley, a benefit auction and a reception.
[Source: press release]
KOSINSKI PLAYS PADEREWSKI GALA
[Source: press release]
GÓRECKI PERFORMANCES IN JUNE
Wednesday, June 1, 2011 | 7:30 PM Saturday, Jun 4, 2011 | 07:30 pm This performance is part of the “3 Colours Green” ballet program—previous performances of this program were held on May 20, 24 and 27. According to the Semperoper website:
[Source: boosey.com]
GATONSKA CONCERTS
Program: Le Merle Noire [The Blackbird] by Oliver Messiaen, On Connecticut Naturalism by Michael Gatonska, Vox Balanae [Voice of the Whale] by George Crumb On Connecticut Naturalism celebrates the beauty of Connecticut’s natural resources through a concert of contemporary masterworks performed on electric cello, amplified flute and prepared piano. Gatonska’s piece of the same title originates from notes taken while “in the field” hiking and bicycling through Connecticut.
E-cellist Jeff Krieger will perform Gatonska’s Music stretched into deep places like a thread in water…,a composition that explores enclosed architectural space with soundings and the morning rush hour. Also on the program: compositions by Sarah Hopkins, James Sellars, Jonathan Harvey, Domenico Gabrielli, Georg Phillip Telemann and Carlos Rodriguez.
Program: Julia Wolfe – Compassion (2001), Lainie Fefferman – Barnacles (2010,*NY premiere), Alvin Curran – Inner Cities (selections) (1992-2011), Michael Gatonska – A Shaking of the Pumpkin (2007); Frederic Rzewski – Winnsboro Cotton Mill Blues (1978)
Music by Michael Gatonska, Daniel Wohl, Rubin Kodheli and Hannah Lash. [Sources: Press release, xenarts.com]
LOWICZANIE AT SF DANCE FESTIVAL
On June 25th at 3pm, Lowiczanie Polish Folk Ensemble will perform in the 33rd Annual San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival. Their program features a variety of dances set to well-known and beloved folk melodies from Eastern Poland and the territories of current-day Belarus and Ukraine, influenced by the myriad of cultures that inhabit the area. This year's Festival presents a record 750 artists representing cultures from all around the world.For tickets and a full line-up of performance schedule, descriptions and details, visit www.sfethnicdancefestival.org.
[Source: Press release]
CHOPIN POEM
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AWARDS |
FRYDERYKI 2011
On May 9, 2011 in the Fabryka Trzciny Arts Center, Poland’s Phonographic Academy presented the annual Fryderyk Awards for achievement in recorded music. This award is the Polish equivalent of the American Grammys. The Fryderyki are awarded in the categories of pop, jazz and classical music. The 2011 winners of the Golden Fryderyk for lifetime achievement were Wojciech Mlynarski (Pop), Vladimir Nahorny (Jazz) and Jerzy Maksymiuk (Classical). Below are all of the winners in the Classical music category: ALBUM OF THE YEAR - Choral music & Oratorio: ALBUM OF THE YEAR – Early music & Baroque:
ALBUM OF THE YEAR – Orchestral and concert music: ALBUM OF THE YEAR – Solo recital:
ALBUM OF THE YEAR – Contemporary music: BEST DEBUT ALBUM: COMPOSER OF THE YEAR: BEST RECORDING OF POLISH MUSIC: All of the nominees and winners in all categories can be found at: zpav.pl. [Source: zpav.pl, pwm.com.pl; Photo: galafryderyk.pl]
2011 ZKP PRIZE WINNERS
The winners of the 2011 Polish Composers' Union Prize [Nagroda ZKP] have been announced. The 2011 laureates of the ZKP Award are:
The awards ceremony will take place during the 54th Warsaw Autumn Festival in September 2011. [Sources: pwm.com.pl, PAP via czytadelko.com.pl]
AUGUŚCIK WINS “OUTSTANDING POLE ABROAD”
One of the most intriguing contemporary vocalists on today’s international jazz scene who was born in Poland and lives permanently in the United States, Grażyna Auguścik has been the center of attention lately. Read about Grażyna Auguścik’s “Chopin 200: World Sound” concert in Chicago’s Millennium Park on July 25, 2010 in the New York Timesand the inclusion of this concert on Howard Reich’s “10 best jazz concerts” list for theChicago Tribune. The main purpose of the Contest is to create a positive image of Poles living around the world, to highlight the success they have achieved outside of their native country, and to demonstrate and reward their accomplishments. [Source: press release via gmarecords.com; Photo: Bartosz Kasza/PANGEA Alliance]
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FESTIVALS |
1st HMG FESTIVAL & ŚLĘCZEK PREMIERE
The Festival will feature the premiere of Unica mea est Salomea (2011) for mixed choir a cappella by young Polish composer Piotr Ślęczek, a composition honoring the 800th anniversary of the birth of the Blessed Salome. Other composers to be performed during the Festival include: Henryk Mikołaj Górecki Aleksander Lasoń, Žibuokle Martinaityte, Pēteris Vasks, Alfred Schnittke, Arnold Schönberg, Alban Berg, and Anton Webern. 3 June 2011, 7pm 4 June 2011, 5pm 4 June 2011, 8pm 5 June 2011, 6pm [Sources: pwm.com.pl, www.cracow.travel, hmgfestival.pl, piotrsleczek.com]
GAUDE MATER FESTIVAL
The second important mission of the Festival is the promotion of Polish music and Polish composers. Each year’s program includes premieres of pieces commissioned by the Festival, which has led to more than 200 premieres within 20 years. Each year a composer receives a request for a new liturgical mass, which is then performed during the Liturgical Inauguration of the Festival—this year’s Inaugural concert featured the Polish premiere of Paweł Łukaszewski’s Missa de Maria a Magdala (Missa bremgartensis), a piece that was in fact originally commissioned by the Kulturinsel Bremgarten in Switzerland (read more in the July 2010 Newsletter). It was performed on May 2, 2011 by the Częstochowa Philharmonic and the Musica Sacra Choir of the Warsaw-Praga Cathedral, with Swiss conductor Marco Castellini and soloists Anna Mikołajczyk-Niewiedział – soprano, Jarosław Bręk – baritone and Jan Bokszczanin – organ. Also, together with the Musica Sacra Institute in Warsaw, the Gaude Mater Festival organizes the Musica Sacra International Composers Competition, honoring the best sacred piece with Latin text for a mixed a cappella choir. Read about Musica Sacra 2011 in the March 2011 Newsletter. This year’s winner—Hic est discipulus ille by Daniel J. Knaggs (USA)—was premiered at the Gaude Mater Festival on May 3, 2011, during a concert held “In commemoration of Henryk Mikołaj Górecki” and performed by Polish Chamber Choir Schola Cantorum Gedanensis, Jan Łukaszewski - conductor.
The Festival concluded with Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 in E flat. This monumental performance brought together the combined orchestral forces of the Białystok Symphony and the Częstochowa Philharmonic, the combined voices of the Podlasie Opera and Philharmonic Choir, the Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński’s University Choir and the Pueri Claromontani Jasna Gora Choir of Men and Boys, and the following soloists: Wioletta Chodowicz – soprano I, Agnieszka Piass – soprano II, Marta Boberska – soprano III, Katarzyna Suska – alto I, Elżbieta Wróblewska – alto II, Dariusz Pietrzykowski – tenor, Zenon Kowalski – baritone and Grzegorz Szostak – bass, with conductor Jerzy Swoboda at the healm. For a full program of the Festival, visit www.gaudemater.pl. [Sources: pwm.com.pl , gaudemater.pl, Photo: Leszek Pilichowski]
CODES FESTIVAL
This year’s 3rd edition of the Festival (May 15 – 22) asks what is the link between the young modernist Jagoda Szmytka with the Spring’s ritual known as “konopielka,” or between such different cultural units of improvisation of Iva Bittova and Leszek Możdżer, the sound resources of the jazz pianist Joanna Duda and the musical experience of Ewa Grochowska – pupil of the outstanding traditional violinist Jan Gaca, and the spirit of traditional Lithuanian song reconstructor Rytis Ambrazevicius and the musical language of Antanas Kucińskas – a composer who uses sampling, looping and scratching … The answers to these questions lead to stories about human beings which are told at Codes. [Source: codes-festival.com] |
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PERFORMANCES |
GÓRECKI’S 3rd AT LA PHIL On May 26, 28 and 29, the Los Angeles Philharmonic performed the Symphony No. 3 “Symphony of Sorrowful Songs,” Op. 36 (1976) of the late Polish composer Your reviewer attended the final performance on Sunday, May 29 at 2 p.m., and conductor and L.A. Phil Music Director Gustavo Dudamel began the afternoon with a congenial discussion of the program before us. Dudamel’s respect for and enjoyment of Brahms was unabashedly evident as he effortlessly engaged the audience for over 10 minutes. Drawing an audible laugh when he referred to Brahms’ 3rd as “a big piece of cheese between the 2nd and the 4th,” he assured us that the cheese was not all fat. This sense of enjoyment and humor came through in the performance of the Brahms. Conducting without a score, Dudamel seemed completely at home and, as orchestra and maestro followed each other attentively, it was clear that the ensemble had become quite comfortable in this ‘unbound’ world of Brahms. The violas in particular took command of the music; the beauty of their tone soared while at the same time they provided a solid and luscious rhythmic foundation for their colleagues, especially the soloists among the woodwinds and brass. As they transitioned into the third movement, the orchestra seemed to coalesce into a seamlessly lyrical body of sound. Whereas in movements I and II it had felt that each section was playing superbly unto itself, by the poco allegretto, the melodic line was being passed from section to section fluidly and without hesitation, topped off by gorgeous solos from the French horn and oboe.
The late choice to move Górecki’s 3rd to the second half of the program, which was announced from the stage and by a program insert, was clearly made not only because of the work’s more subdued tone, but also for technical reasons: the lights on stage and in the house were significantly lower after intermission than at the outset of the concert. This lighting effect, in combination with the placement of soprano soloist Jessica Rivera at center stage above the conductor, gave the impression that, when she rose up from her chair into the spotlight during her solos, she was merging with or even creating a beacon of light. An apt visual image to create given the mournful yet transcendent nature of the work’s lyrics, which juxtapose a 15th century lamentation (movement I), the writings of a young female prisoner on a Gestapo prison cell wall in Zakopane (movement II), and the text of a folk song from the Opole region. It is important to note that Górecki’s 3rd Symphony was not originally on this program—it replaced the premiere of the Percussion Concerto of Peter Lieberson, whose ill health and subsequent passing prevented him from finishing the piece.This effect of this substitution was evident in the fact that the Górecki did not have the However, the ensemble soon settled into a tempo and mood more reflective of one of Dudamel’s other phrases summarizing the work: “a delicious pain.” Conducting without a baton—but this time with a score—there was an intimacy in Dudamel’s gentle gestures, which extended out through each finger and coaxed a warm, round tone out of the orchestra. Underneath that warmth was a smoldering energy that could be detected most clearly again in the bedrock of the viola section.
As we reached the transcendent climax of movement III—lento (cantabile, semplice)—singer and orchestra hit their zenith as well. John Henken described this piece in the program notes as “blossoming into affirmative radiance,” and Rivera’s voice likewise opened like a flower in the final movement, offering the audience a new and more shimmering color. Unfortunately, as Rivera’s final notes faded away, the orchestra seemed to return to the bored minimalism I detected in the opening, switching from transcendent to mechanical as if they had realized they were almost to the finish line. But this momentary transgression could not undo the loveliness of the whole, and I was reminded again of Dudamel’s earlier sentiment regarding the composers who had recently passed, both Górecki and Lieberson—“on this Memorial Day weekend, it’s good to remember.” The “Symphony of Sorrowful Songs” somehow sublimely encompasses the range of emotions that we humans are capable of during experiences of loss. It was only appropriate that the piece ended with the stage and house in complete darkness, allowing for a brief moment of silent reflection between music and applause—a fitting lighting effect to end an excellent program. * * * *
[Sources: Program notes, laphil.com, facebook.com]
OMN PERFORMS IN BEIJING The New Music Orchestra [Orkiestra Muzyki Nowej, or OMN] performed at the prestigious Beijing Modern Music Festival on May 23 under the leadership of the conductor Szymon Bywalec. Organized by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, the concert was held in the Concert Hall of the Central Conservatory of Music.
OMN performing at Warszawska Jesień in 2006 Orkiestra Muzyki Nowej was founded in 1996 from among the students of the Karol Szymanowski Music Academy in Katowice, on the initiative of the composer Aleksander Lasoń. Its principal goal is the promotion of new music and the classical works of the 20th century. The orchestra is now made up of graduates and members of staff of the Music Academy in Katowice. On the next day, May 24, the Beijing Modern Music Festival hosted a concert of the quintet Lasoń Ensemble - Mikolov City Chamber Players, made up of the OMN members. The program consisted of works by Polish composers Karol Szymanowski, Grażyna Bacewicz and Aleksander Lasoń. [Sources: azja.iam.pl, bmmf.org.cn, omn.art.pl]
ELETTROVOCE SINGS LUTOSŁAWSKI
“Stains on the Sun. El Derwid” [Plamy na słońcu. El-Derwid] is the title of a concert of cabaret songs by Witold Lutosławski, who at the time of their composition was using the pseudonym Derwid. On May 29 2011 the Elettrovoce Duo—Agata Zubel (vocal) and Cezary Duchnowski (piano, computer)—performed those works at the Ludwik Solski Academy for the Dramatic Arts in Krakow. They were accompanied by cellist Andrzej Bauer. The program consisted of the following songs by Witold Lutoslawski: Cyrk jedzie [The circus is coming] – text by Tadeausz Urgacz, Jeden przystanek dalej [One more stop] – text by Adam Hosper, Z lat dziecinnych [From childhood] – text by Jerzy Miller, Warszawski dorozkarz [Warsaw cabbie] – text by Jerzy Miller, Nie oczekuje dziś nikogo [I am not waiting for anyone today] – text by Zbigniew Kaszkur and Zbigniew Zapert, Daleka podróz [A long journey] – text byTadeusz Urgacz and Miroslaw Lebkowski, Plamy na slońcu [Stains on the sun] – text by Jerzy Miller, and Znajdziesz mnie wszedzie [You can find me anywhere] – text by Zbigniew Kaszkur and Zbigniew Zapert. ElettroVoce Duo arose out of the collaboration of two composers: Agata Zubel and Cezary Duchnowski. Both are characterized by a unique approach to music—fascination with timbre, an expansion of performance resources, eternal seeking. For Zubel, who is also active as an avantgarde vocalist, there is a desire to discover a new means of vocal expression; for Duchnowski, it is a search for new contexts for traditional instruments. [Source: pwm.com.pl, zubel.composer.pl; Transl: SG]
SINFONIA VARSOVIA ABROAD
Conductor George Tchitchinadze led the ensemble and soloists included pianists Anne Queffélec, Michel Dalberto, Ikuyo Nakamichi, and Kazune Shimizu, violinsts Olivier Charlier and Tedi Papavrami, and cellist Tatiana Vassilieva. The Warsaw edition of the Festival will be held September 29 – October 2, 2011. Then, on Monday 16 May, Sinfonia Varsovia travelled to Il Sanat, Istanbul for a concert with conductor Maxim Vengerov. The program featured: K. Szymanowski – “Roxana's Song" from the opera King Roger and P. I. Tchaikovsky – Violin Concerto, Op. 35, D Major, and Symphony No. 6 "Pathétique", Op. 74, B minor. The soloist forthe concert was French violin virtuoso Renaud Capuçon. [Source: muzyka.onet.pl, polskamusic.pl]
POLISH MEETS LATIN
[Source: Press release]
LIRA PERFORMS DOBRZYŃSKI
The Lira Ensemble is an artist-resident at Loyola University and has its headquarters in the Lake Shore Campus. Lucyna Migala, co-founder, is the artistic director and general manager of the group. Zikri is conductor of the Lira Ensemble, Iwona Puc choreographer and director of the Lira Dancers and Malgorzata Borysiewicz is conductor of the Lira Children's Chorus. [Source: pwm.com.pl]
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NEW FROM DUX
GRZEGORZ FITELBERG CONDUCTS ON CD Unfortunately, only a limited number of archival sound recordings of the musical output of Grzegorz Fitelberg—whether as composer or conductor—have been recorded thus far. Moreover, an accurate and complete discography is nearly impossible to determine since most of his music has been disguised under the credits of others.
A review by an unknown music critic as published in The Monthly Letter, signed EMG, December 1948 summarizes the sound recording with an underhanded compliment and double edged critique as follows:
Another CD, entitled L'art de Grzegorz Fitelberg Vol. 1, was released by the French label Dante LYS on December 17, 1996 but is now out of print and unavailable. It featured the following compositions: Karol Szymanowski - Concerto Pour Violin No. 1 (Eugeniz Uminska, Violin) and Symphony No. 2, and Rimsky-Korsakov - Tsar Saltan Suite (Recorded 1945-47). For this recording, Fitelberg conducted the Philharmonia Orchestra and the National Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra (NOSPR). This initial CD featuring Fitellberg’s conducting tragically never saw a Volume II, much to the disappointment and frustration of those who were optimistic that his legacy of music would finally be properly preserved. An English label Beulah released a CD entitled “Russian Classics of the 78 Era” (Beulah 1PD38) featuring the same recording of Grzegorz Fitelberg conducting the LPO of the Rimsky-Korsakov composition Tsar Sultan. Other Rimsky-Korsakov works performed by other conductors and orchestras include his Capriccio de espagnol and his colleague and contemporary Mussogorsky’s Khovanschina Prelude (arr. By Rimsky Korsakov). One can also listen to works by Tchaikovsky, Lladov and Balakirov on this CD. One hopes that one day one of the labels such as Beulah, Dutton or Pierian (specializing in archival sound recordings from old LP 33 and 1/3, 45, or 78s) will release a CD devoted to the previously mentioned activities of Fitelberg conducting Borodin’s Polovitsian Dances and Rimsky-Korsakov’s Tsar Sultan on the same CD. The recordings of the National Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra performing with Fitelberg as conductor include a vast wealth of archival sound recordings of works by other German, Polish and Russian composers.
TVP Polonia also produced a CD of Grzegorz Fitelberg conducting Polish composers Noskowski, Monuiszko, Karlowicz and Szmanowski from archival sound recordings of Fitelberg and NOSPR. This would later be re-released by Polskie Radio. S.A., in commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of Grzegorz Fitelberg’s death as well as the 8th Grzegorz Fitelberg International Competition for Conductors in 2003. This CD was the recipient of the 1st place price of the Fryderyk Award in the classical music category and is dedicated to the maestro as conductor. * * * *
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Copyright 2011 by the Polish Music Center
Send your comments and inquiries to: polmusic@thornton.usc.edu
Newsletter Editor: Krysta Close
Layout Assistance: Charles Bragg
Translation Assistance: Szymon Grab, Marek Żebrowski
Contributions from:
Marek Żebrowski,
Gary Fitel berg, Chris Onzol, Wojciech Blecharz,
Keiko Mori, Michael Gatonska, Michael Hudson-Medina & Joseph A. Herter
Sources of information: Polish Cultural Institute (NY & UK), Adam Mickiewicz Institute,
PWM,
Nowy Dziennik,
Polish Music Information Centre - Warsaw, Polish American Journal,
Poland.pl,
PAP,
ZKP, infochopin.pl, Ruch Muzyczny, Gazeta Wyborcza
Formatting by Krysta Close, June 10, 2011.
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