| Polish Music Newsletter |
|---|
March 2009, Vol. 15, No. 3. ISSN 1098-9188. Published monthly. Anniversaries |
Awards |
Calendar of Events | Discography |
PMC NEWS |
WANDA WILK OBITUARY
An Extraordinary Life Dedicated to Polish Music… With great sadness we note the passing of Wanda Wilk, a great patron of Polish music, magnificent philanthropist, and dedicated educator. She died in her Los Angeles home on February 18, 2009, after a long illness. A person of many talents and great organizational skills, Wanda Wilk will be remembered chiefly for her extraordinary vision in service to Polish music that led to the creation of the Polish Music Center at her alma mater, University of Southern California. Thanks to the endowment jointly made with her husband, Dr. Stefan P. Wilk (1917-2008), Polish Music Center has operated on the USC campus under the auspices of the Thornton School of Music since 1985. Appointed by the USC Dean of Music, Wanda Wilk served as Director of the Polish Music Center for the first ten years of its operations. After retiring in 1996, she continued as the Center’s Honorary Director, advising and supporting the two subsequent Polish Music Center directors and the staff. Wanda Wilk’s extensive contacts with many of the most prominent Polish musicians of the twentieth century led to numerous concerts she organized at USC and throughout Southern California. Thanks to her generous support and outreach, artists like Witold Lutosławski, Henryk Górecki, Stanisław Skrowaczewski, Krystian Zimerman, and Piotr Anderszewski, performed and lectured for local audiences. The Center continues to serve as an important Southern California library with its extensive holdings of Polish music scores, books, periodicals, sound recordings, and other reference materials. With the initial gift of five manuscripts of large-scale orchestral works from Lutosławski and three manuscripts from Skrowaczewski in 1985, the Polish Music Center’s Manuscript Collection grew to currently include well over 100 manuscripts by such composers as Grażyna Bacewicz, Tadeusz Baird, Joanna Bruzdowicz, Krzesimir Dębski, Zygmunt Krauze, Hanna Kulenty, Szymon Laks, Krzysztof Meyer, Roman Palester, Krzysztof Penderecki, Marta Ptaszyńska, Bogusław Schaeffer, Romuald Twardowski, and Lidia Zielińska, among others. Most recently, Wanda Wilk’s efforts led to the donation of manuscripts, correspondence and memorabilia of Zygmunt Stojowski and Henry Vars. In addition to devoting her boundless energy and considerable resources to expanding the Center to a world-class institution, Wanda Wilk, an active and gifted writer, also wielded her elegant pen in praise of Polish music. Thinking big was her preferred modus operandi, and a series of books on the history of Polish music was introduced with Wanda Wilk’s concise volume commemorating Karol Szymanowski’s centenary in 1982. Since then the book cycle launched and inspired by Wanda Wilk has grown to include ten volumes on such composers as Grażyna Bacewicz, Frederic Chopin, two more volumes on Karol Szymanowski, as well as monographs on Józef Koffler, Maria Szymanowska, and Zygmunt Stojowski. Although experts from all over the world were engaged as authors, Wanda Wilk presided as Editor-in-Chief, keeping the style and substance of the Polish Music History Series at the highest academic level. This she did for the first six volumes and, at the same time authored numerous articles about Polish women composers and other subjects pertaining to the history of Polish music for various Polish-American media. An early pioneer and believer in disseminating information over the World Wide Web, Wanda Wilk launched the Polish Music Center Website in 1994. Countless visitors who have used this popular site since its inception found comprehensive information on composers, history of concert and folk music, competitions, festivals, and other items of interest to anyone researching Polish musical culture. An online Newsletter—another web-based project that Wanda Wilk initiated that same year—has appeared on the Polish Music Center website on a monthly basis for the past fifteen years. In 1992, together with her husband, Stefan, Wanda Wilk established Ars Musica Poloniae, a charitable foundation that facilitates a variety of projects in Polish music from publishing and recording to scholarships for Polish students in Los Angeles. The most recent success of the Foundation was its successful partnership in providing grants for author Joseph A. Herter, and publishing his Zygmunt Stojowski—Life and Music, the latest volume of the Polish Music History series. The Wilks were also benefactors of the Kosciuszko Foundation, where they endowed the "Wanda Wilk Polish Music Fund" in 2001. The purpose of the fund is "to provide stipends to music scholars regardless of their ethnic background who are interested in doing research in Polish music with preference given to Polish art song and its promotion." For her extraordinary service to Polish music Wanda Wilk was awarded the highest state award of Poland, the Polonia Restituta medal in 1996. Her enthusiasm and far-reaching achievements have encouraged the awareness and appreciation of Polish music throughout the world, and will continue to be an inspiration for generations. Wanda Wilk’s ever-present smile and boundless goodwill towards mankind will chart the course for others to follow her footsteps. [MZ]
PMC SPRING CONCERT First Ladies of Polish Music Throughout the centuries, the history of Polish music has had a great number of prominent composers, who made significant contributions to the Western Music literature. Yet, for the longest time, among all the long list of names there was only one woman, Maria Szymanowska (1789-1831). A virtuoso pianist and a path-breaking composer, she was an important precursor to Chopin. Her fame extended from Warsaw, London and Paris to Berlin, Moscow and Saint Petersburg, where Szymanowska was a Court Pianist to the Empress of Russia. Szymanowska’s rich social life revolved around the literary world—Goethe was in love with her, Mickiewicz was part of her household (he married one of Szymanowska’s daughters), Gogol and Pushkin were her close friends and habitués of her salon soirees in the capital of Imperial Russia.
Bacewicz’s great international reputation included several international awards for composition and opened the door to a new generation of women composers. Following in the footsteps of their illustrious colleagues, the list of Polish women composers is now quite substantial. Among the many names especially prominent are: Krystyna Moszumańska-Nazar (1924-2008), Bernadetta Matuszczak (b. 1931), Marta Ptaszyńska (b. 1943), Elżbieta Sikora (b. 1944), Joanna Bruzdowicz (b. 1943) and Lidia Zielińska (b. 1953), among others. There is one more among the First Ladies of Polish music. Her name is Wanda Wilk and, as the founder and first Director of the PMC, she was instrumental in bringing Polish music to Southern California. As a part of her mission to popularize all Polish music, Mrs. Wilk particularly focused on women composers. Her projects included recordings by women musicians and of women composers (e.g. Nancy Fierro - “Rags and Riches”), articles (e.g. “An Outline History of Women Composers in Poland”), and book publishing (e.g. Judith Rosen Grażyna Bacewicz: Her Life and Works). Wanda Wilk died in February 2009, but her memory will live on through the continued outreach of the Polish Music Center. Our spring concert on March 28, 2009 will be dedicated to her memory. Fittingly, this concert will present compositions of Grażyna Bacewicz on the occasion of the one hundredth anniversary of her birth and the fortieth anniversary of her death. The admission is free and the music begins at 3 p.m.
[MZ]
PADEREWSKI FESTIVAL GRANT Avila Beach, CA—The Central Coast Wine Classic Foundation is pleased to announce the grantees for funds from the 2009 Twenty-Fifth Annual Central Coast Wine Classic, to be held from July 9th through 12th, 2009, in Avila Beach, Shell Beach, San Simeon, Arroyo Grande, San Luis Obispo and Paso Robles. From net proceeds from the Wine Classic, the Foundation funds specific projects for 501(c)3 non-profit corporations in San Luis Obispo County and Santa Barbara County whose missions are in the Healing, Performing or Studio Arts. Over the past five years the Foundation has conferred grants totaling $1,165,000 to over 50 such non-profits. Grants will be conferred in early October in San Luis Obispo. For 2009, the Board has chosen the following beneficiaries: Community Youth Performing Arts Center of Santa Barbara; Foodbank of Santa Barbara County; Foundation for the Performing Arts Center of San Luis Obispo; Friends of Prado Day Care Center in San Luis Obispo; Friendship Adult Day Care Center of Santa Barbara; Gatehelp, Inc./Gryphon Society in Atascadero; Public Radio KCBX San Luis Obispo & Santa Barbara Counties; Los Padres Forest Watch of Santa Barbara; Morro Bay High School Band; Paderewski Festival of Paso Robles; Santa Maria Philharmonic Society; Senior Volunteer Services of San Luis Obispo and Transitions Mental Health Association of San Luis Obispo. The Annual Fund-A-Need Auction Lot will fund Respite Care for the Central Coast Alzheimer‘s Association.
|
NEWS |
SVRČEK PLAYS DĘBSKI US PREMIERE Pulling from her intriguing repertoire of Polish composers, Ms. Svrček will play the US Premiere Organismi by Krzesimir Dębski (pictured at left at Zipper Hall, 8 Nov. 2007) and Witold Lutosławski’s Folk Melodies. Also included in this recital program is a collection of pieces written by her friends, Tom Flaherty (Nightstars) and Virko Baley (Nocturnal No. 2"Tears" and Pajarillo) as well as the West Coast premiere of Cyan, a new work written for her by Jeffrey Holmes.
JASKOT: U. S. PREMIERE AT OTHER MINDS The 14th edition of the Other Minds Festival (March 5-7, 2009) introduces an emerging voice from Poland, Dobromiła Jaskot, as one of nine of the most exciting and innovative composers from around the world, for concerts and artists' talks. The festival, produced by Director Charles Amirkhanian, continues an annual tradition of presenting the most creative voices from across the musical spectrum.
[Source: Polish Cultural Institute NY]
PENDERECKI’S SEXTET – NY PREMIERE New York, NY—The acclaimed new music collective Ensemble Π returns to The Cooper Union’s Great Hall on March 7th at 7:00 pm for its annual peace concert, entitled Can You Hear That?. This concert is part of an annual series launched by Ensemble Π in 2005 and features politically evocative and lyrically compelling works from around the world, written in response to war and oppression. The evening will include the New York premiere of Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki’s masterpiece, Sextet, as well as Berlin-based Austrian composer Peter Ablinger’s Lech Walesa. Also on the program are South African composer Philip Miller’s reflection on the Iraq War, Can You Hear That?, Norwegian-American soprano/composer Kristin Norderval’s moving setting of poems by Mahmoud Darwish and Timothy Donnelly, Elegy, and Benjamin Britten’s Canticle III. One of Poland’s foremost contemporary composers, Krzysztof Penderecki is internationally renowned for large-scale and often dark-hued works, such as the frightening Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima of 1960. The intensely dramatic Sextet (2000) is undoubtedly one of his most important chamber works to date. Scored for piano, violin, viola, cello, clarinet and horn, it was premiered in Vienna (Musikverein) in June 2002. Lech Walesa, for piano and tape, is part of Peter Ablinger’s ongoing series, Voices and Piano (1998-), in which the composer takes speeches of well-known figures and creates an exacting piano accompaniment that reinforces the fundamental pitch found in the particular speaker’s voice. Performers for the evening include Monique Buzzarté, trombone; Karl Kramer, horn; Idith Meshulam, piano; Scott Murphree, tenor; Kristin Norderval, voice; Caroline Stinson, cello; Pavel Vinnitisky, clarinet; Liuh-Wen Ting, viola; Airi Yoshioka, violin.
[Source: ensemble-pi.org, Polish Cultural Inst. NY]
GÓRECKI ALBUM IN ENGLISH The Adam Mickiewicz Institute has published an album about Henryk Mikołaj Górecki, which was prepared for Górecki’s 75th birthday celebrations in 2008. This beautifully edited and illustrated book, published entirely in English, is directed primarily at readers from abroad. It bridges an important gap in the Górecki bibliographies available worldwide. [Source: www.polmic.pl]
STRAHL PERFORMS STOJOWSKI
The Kielce Philharmonic Orchestra [Filharmonia Świętokrzyska im. O. Kolberga], Tomasz Strahl, cello and Jacek Rogala, conductor, will perform Stojowski's Cello concerto on March 13. Also on the program is W. Lutosławski – Grave. Metamorfozy, G. Bacewicz – III Symphony and A. Liadow – Kikimora op. 65. This will be the first time that either the Stojowski or the Bacewicz have been performed in Kielce
ROSENBLUM ON KOCZALSKI, MIKULI & CHOPIN A paper by Sandra Rosenblum, writer & 1999 Wilk Prize recipient, was presented at the second of the Stanford University music symposia entitled “Reactions to the Record.” This year’s theme was “Early Recordings, Musical Style, and the Future of Performance.” Held from January 14-18, the symposium explored the vivid styles of performance heard on the earliest recordings and player piano rolls. This unique gathering of performers, musicologists, composers, and enthusiasts celebrated with eight concerts, lectures, panel discussions, demonstrations of historic phonographs from the Stanford Archive of Recorded Sound, an improvisation contest, and world premieres of newly discovered audio and video documents of historic performers. Ms. Rosenblum’s paper is entitled: "He led me into the wondrous world of his master": Koczalski, Mikuli, Chopin. The abstract is as follows:
[Sources: music.stanford.edu and changes sent by author via email]
INSTITUTE WITHOUT MICKIEWICZ
WROCŁAW MUSIC FORUM [Source: www.polskieradio.pl]
MYKIETYN’S NEW PROJECT
The program will consist of works by Paweł Szymański, Steve Reich, Arnold Schoenberg, Anton Webern, and Paweł Mykietyn. The list of performers includes: DAFO String Quartet, Jezry Artysz – baritone, Andrzej Chyra – recitations, Krzysztof Jaguszewski (vibraphone), Viola Łabanow (harpsichord), and Maciej Piszek (piano). The concert will be conducted by Przemysław Fiugajski. [Source: muzyka.onet.pl]
SZYMANOWSKI MASTERCLASS: LIVE ONLINE Chicago violinist Vincent P. Skowronski will be on hand Friday, March 13, at 3 p.m. (EST) for a live chat to discuss the often-neglected Polish composer Karol Szymanowski. Skowronski will offer tips on playing Szymanowski’s Violin Concerto No. 1, the small-scale work Mythes and the Dance of the Mountaineers. Skowronski's thoughts about Szymanowski are also available in the Master Class found in the April issue of Strings magazine. [Source: www.allthingsstringscommunity.com]
SCOTTISH TIDES—POLISH SPRING
“Scottish Tides—Polish Spring” is a 3 month celebration of Scotland’s vibrant cultural connections with Poland, held at the Perth Theatre and Concert Hall. The roots of this event are four hundred years old and spread across a continent. From Scotland to Poland and back again, centuries of migration have sown the seeds for a shared cultural landscape. And now the fruits of this unique relationship are set to flourish in a whole season of exceptional events. This celebration will kick off the Polska Year in the UK, which officially begins in May 2009 and lasts through May 2010. Polish Spring adds a 21st Century twist to this artistic alliance by bringing together Poland’s top rock and comedy groups, alongside acclaimed Scots folk, digital art and outstanding classical acts in a celebration of the comings and goings of Scots and Poles through theatre, music, comedy and art. Musical highlights of the festival include: Warsaw Village Band (6 March, with Peatbog Faeries), pianist Aleksandar Madzar (9 March), Piotr Anderszewski with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra (18 March), and a concert of Górecki’s music performed by Filhamonia Pomorska and Hebrides Ensemble (5 April). A calendar of events is available at www.horsecross.co.uk/about/polish-spring, and a full, bi-lingual brochure is at issuu.com. [Sources: www.perthshireadvertiser.co.uk, www.polskieradio.pl]
CHOPIN INT’L CONGRESS: CALL FOR PAPERS
The Ministry is calling for paper/presentation submissions, in the form of the title of presentation and an abstract of approx. 1 typed page. Presentations may be in English, French or German. 1. Chopin’s personality, heritage and milieu
2. Interpretations of Chopin’s music
3. The influence of Chopin and his music
Proposals are invited for 30-minute papers and 15-minute research reports in the above categories. There is also limited scope for free papers of the same durations. Proposals may also be submitted for ‘special sessions,’ i.e. round tables, panel discussions or workshops up to 90 minutes in length. Finally, abstracts are invited for posters, to be featured in poster sessions held throughout the conference. The Fryderyk Chopin Institute will provide those presenting full papers, research reports, or ‘special sessions’ with hotel accommodation. Where relevant, a stipend will be paid to speakers for the right to print their papers in the conference proceedings. More information is available here: www.polmic.pl.
CHOPIN’S BIRTHDAY
[Source: www.culture.pl, www.chopin.nifc.pl]
7TH OCHLEWSKI COMPETITION ANNOUNCED For more information, complete regulations and submission address, please visit www.pwm.com.pl
KUZMA-SAPIEJEWSKA LIVES MUSIC Nina Kuzma-Sapiejewska, pianist and Chopin expert, lives, teaches and gives concerts in the salon of her apartment in Larchmont, NY. Although the New York Times article discussing Ms. Kuzma-Sapiejewska appears in the “Habitats” column of the “Real Estate” section, the discussion easily flows from living space to her love of, and opinions about, music. Read this charming article/interview by Dan Shaw, entitled “Call Her Style Concert-Cozy,” here: www.nytimes.com.
KAPUSTKA IN FRANCE Juilliard School graduate (1992) and Music Academy of the West alumnus (1991) Jozef Kapustka will be soloist in Liszt Piano Concerto No 1 in E flat Major with the Nevers Philharmonic Orchestra in Nevers, France on March 21. The concert will be conducted by Michelle Ambrozetti. Further details are available at: upcoming.yahoo.com. [Source: www.artistopia.com/jozef_kapustka]
LACHERT ONLINE Born in 1938, Piotr de Peslin Lachert is a composer, pianist, chamber musician, performer, director, producer, actor, writer, poet, music journalist and professor. He has lived and worked in five countries, creating an enormous artistic legacy in each place. The Lachert Foundation was established in 2007 in Brussels in order to document and promote Piotr Lachert's musical and literary work. The Foundation has now made several performances of Lachert’s music available online through YouTube:
|
AWARDS |
GÓRECKI HONORED BY THE POPE Polish composer Henryk Mikołaj Górecki (pictured at left in his study at home), a leader amongst today’s composers, has been awarded the St. Gregory the Great Medal from Pope Benedict XVI. According to the international news service of Polskie Radio:
Read the entire article here: www.polskieradio.pl/thenews/culture/?id=101551
GOLDEN FRYDERYK AWARDS Henryk Mikołaj Górecki, Krzysztof Penderecki, Zbigniew Namysłowski and Jerzy Połomski will receive Golden Fryderyks 2009 for lifetime artistic achievement. Henryk Mikołaj Górecki and Krzysztof Penderecki receive the awards in classical music category, Zbigniew Namysłowski in jazz caategory, and Jerzy Połomski in popular music category. Fryderyk Awards will be announced for the 15th time during the awards gala on April 20, 2009 in Warsaw. [Source: wiadomosci.polska.pl]
LUTOSŁAWSKI CELLO COMPETITION RESULTS The following prizes were given:
Special Awards:
[Source: polmic.com, polskieradio.pl]
BAIRD COMPETITION: ROUND I RESULTS
The 2nd round concert will take place on April 22 in the Poznań Music Academy. All works will be performed by an_ARCHE NewMusicEnsemble.
MUSICA SACRA COMPETITION RESULTS
Second prize went to Łukasz Urbaniak for Exaltabo te Domine, and the third prize was given to Adria Barbosa Torregrosa from Spain for O Magnum Mysterium. These works will also have their premieres at the Gaude Mater Festival. The competition is open to composers of all nationalities who are younger than 35 years of age. It is organized by the Musica Sacra Society and Gaude Mater Festival. The subject of the competition is a composition for a capella mixed choir, up to 16 voices, with Latin text and duration of 4 to 10 minutes. This year, 31 compositions were accepted for competition from Argentine, Belgium, France, Spain, Ireland, Poland, Russia, Slovakia, Hungary and Italy. The jury included: Marian Borkowski (chairman), Vaclovas Augustinas (Lithuania), Stephen Dayton (Great Britain), Paweł Łukaszewski (Poland), and Walter Marzilli (Italy).
GRAMMY FOR CHENG Gloria Cheng is a member of Piano Spheres, a highly-lauded performance series in Los Angeles dedicated to explorations of contemporary music for solo piano. Works by Polish composers are often included on the Piano Spheres programs, including premieres. Watch a Pre-Telecast video of her acceptance speech, available for 30 days at: www.grammy.com/grammy_awards/GRAMMY_Live.aspx. Her speech takes place at 1hr54min into the video feed.
PRYNDA NOMINATED FOR GAUDEAMUS [Source: culture.pl]
AWARD FOR KUŹNIAR IN BELGRADE Marcin Kuźniar, a young Polish guitarist, has received First Prize at the 10th International Festival of the Professional Guitar in Belgrade, Serbia. Kuźniar was in the category for players under 17 years old, along with 15 other world class players. He also triumphed in the under-14 category in this same competition 3 years ago. Kuźniar is a student in the Żeleński Music High School in Kraków, studying with Włodzimierz Lerner. He already has already had success in other international competitions, including the previous win in Belgrade and honors at the Citta di Barletta International Competition in Italy. [Source: rmfclassic.pl, gaf.co.yu, and www.polskieradio.pl]
ANDERSZEWSKI DOCUMENTARY HONORED
Piotr Anderszewski – voyageur intranquille, a documentary about the Polish-Hungarian pianist Piotr Anderszewski, has won an award in the category of art films at the International Festival of Audio-Visual Programmes in Biarritz, France. This production was a collaboration between France and Poland, including Director Bruno Monsaigeon and Cinematographer Adam Rozanski, production studios Ideale Audience (France) and Ozumi Films (Poland), and TV stations Arte France and Polish Television. According to the news service of Polish Radio:
Read the entire article here: www.polskieradio.pl/thenews/culture/?id=101434.
OPERA BOOK HONORED [Source: pwm.com.pl]
JAZZ BLIZZARD COMPETITION The LOTOS Jazz Festival-Bielska Zadymka Jazzowa, or the ‘Jazz Blizzard’ Festival, takes place every year at the foot of the Beskid Mountains in Bielsko-Biała. Nigel Kennedy and his fellow (Polish) jazz musicians inaugurated the Festival on February 18 and it ended on February 22. In addition to all of the festival music and glamour, there was also the annual competition for young jazz ensembles. The finalists this year included: Marek Kadziela Off-Quar-Tet, Vitalyi Ivanov Quartet and Witold Janiak Mainstreet Quartet. The winner was announced on February 20 during the final round concert, the prize went to the Witold Janiak Mainstreet Quartet. Bielska Zadymka Jazzowa started in 1999 as a widening of the concert activity of “Piwnica Zamkowa” – a club run by Sztuka Teatr Association. Soon it became one of the most important jazz festivals in Poland. The unique atmosphere, world jazz stars coming to Bielsko-Biała to give their only concerts in Poland or even in Europe are like magnets, attracting jazz fans from all over the country and from abroad. So far, during the 10 editions of Festival, 541 musicians from 27 countries have performed. [Sources: www.polskieradio.pl, wyborcza.pl]
EAGLE NOMINATIONS FOR FILM MUSIC On February 11th, the nominees for the 2009 Polish Film Awards, the “Eagles,” were announced via press conference. Nominated artists were chosen by the members of the Polish Film Academy [Polskie Nagrody Filmowe] through an anonymous voting system. In the category of Original Soundtrack, the nominees are:
Wojciech Kilar for the music to Krzysztof Zanussi’s Serce na dłoni [Heart in the palm of the hand] Paweł Szymański for the music to Grzegorz Pacek’s Środa, czwartek rano [Wednesday, Thursday morning] Paweł Mykietyn for the music to Małgorzata Szumowska’s 33 sceny z życia [33 Scenes from life]
The award ceremony for the “Eagles 2009” will take place in the National Theater in Warsaw on March 9, 2009 and will be broadcast by the Channel 2 of the Polish Television. [Source: pwm.com.pl]
2009 FRYDERYK AWARD NOMINATIONS The Polish Society of Audio and Video Producers has announced the nominations for the 15th Annual Fryderyk Awards for 2009: CLASSICAL MUSIC Album of the Year – Choral and Oratorio Music
Album of the year – Early and Baroque Music
Album of the Year – Chamber Music
Album of the year – Solo Music
Album of the year – Symphonic and Concerto Music
Album of the year – Contemporary Music
Album of the year – vocal recital, opera, operetta
Phonographic Debut of the Year
Composer of the year
Outstanding recording of Polish Music
JAZZ MUSIC Jazz Album of the year
Jazz Musician of the year
Jazz Phonographic Debut of the Year
For a detailed list of performers, composers and producers on each recording please visit the official website of the awards, where you can download the nominations list. [Source: zpav.pl]
|
FESTIVALS |
JAZZ NAD ODRĄ FESTIVAL
As always, the festival includes a competition for young and upcoming jazz musicians to prove their individuality. For more information please visit the official website of the festival. [Source: culture.pl]
|
PERFORMANCES |
MOŻDŻER IN JERUSALEM It offers an alluring mix of the romantic yearnings of Chopin and jazz explorations seasoned with ethnic percussion colors and textures - courtesy of Fresco - from this neck of the woods… Following that path so conscientiously, one might think that Mozdzer has become his country's quintessential jazz pianist. The 37-year-old is not sure. "How to achieve 'Polishness' in music, to that question I have no answer," he says frankly. Perhaps we will all be more enlightened in that department after next Friday's concert. [Source: www.polishinstitute.org.il]
LUTOSŁAWSKI IN MEMORIAM [Source: lutoslawski.org.pl]
BECZAŁA AT THE MET
KALER COMMEMORATES KARŁOWICZ Russian pianist Ilya Kaler joined the Warsaw National Philharmonic and Antoni Wit, conductor, in a concert commemorating the 100th death anniversary of Mieczysław Karłowicz on February 6 and 7. The all-Karłowicz program included the symphonic prologue for the Muzyka do białej gołąbki Op. 6[Music to the White Dove], the Symphony in E-minor "Revival" Op.7, and the Violin Concerto in A-major Op. 8. It was organized under the patronage of the Polish Minister of Culture and National Heritage, Bogdan Zdrojewski. Ms. Kaler and the National Philharmonic will also be recording a disc of works by Karłowicz. [Source: www.polskieradio.pl]
SWEDEN CELEBRATES E. EUROPE
[Source: www.ewakupiec.com]
SZYMANOWSKI IN TX
AUGUSCIK TOUR HONORS KURYLEWICZ & WARSKA
The news service of Polish Radio reports the following:
Read the entire article at www.polskieradio.pl.
KWIECIEŃ IN KRAKÓW Reviews in the Polish press can be seen here: www.opera.krakow.pl. [Sources: www.polskieradio.pl and www.opera.krakow.pl]
FOLK IN CLASSICAL MUSIC: REVIEWERS DISCUSS The use of folk themes in the setting of formal classical music is a compositional technique that has been particularly prevalent amongst contemporary Polish composers since Karol Szymanowski. While this practice is very popular, its use is also rather contentious, and has recently come under scrutiny in several reviews, and compositions. First, in his article “Powerful performances with an undercurrent of dissent,” reviewer Matthew Guerrieri of the Boston Globe discusses the Boston Philharmonic’s recent performances of Witold Lutosławski’s Concerto for Orchestra with Benjamin Zander, conductor, and Gabriela Montero, piano.
Next, Joshua Kosman considers American composer Lee Hyla’s Polish Folk Songs in his music review entitled “Contemporary Players vivacious” for the San Francisco Chronicle.
JAKUBCZAK IN LONDON Young Polish organist Rafał Jakubczak performed on Saturday, February 21 at Grosvenor Chapel in London. According to the Polish Radio news service, “The concert also feature[d] the Choir of the 21st Century under Howard Williams and the programme, which, except for Bach’s Jesu meine Freunde, consist[ed] solely of Polish organ and choral music by composers including Mikołaj Zielenski, Zygmunt Noskowski, Andrzej Panufnik and Krzysztof Penderecki.” Read the entire article here: www.polskieradio.pl.
|
DISCOGRAPHY |
ŁUKASZEWSKI ON HYPERION
Stephen Layton’s first disc of Lukaszewski’s choral works (with The Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge) was widely praised by listeners entranced by the composer’s unique yet accessible musical language. For this new release Layton and Polyphony, together with the Britten Sinfonia and a team of world-class soloists, have taken on a major work which is destined to become a modern classic in the vein of Tavener’s The Veil of the Temple or Pärt’s St John Passion. Via Crucis is a dramatization of the Stations of the Cross, a musical reading of this most solemn journey that evolves through its 55-minutes in an arc of culminatory ritual power. [Source: www.hyperion-records.co.uk]
EUGENIUSZ RUDNIK MONOGRAPHY
This 4-CD monographic album of Eugeniusz Rudnik’s works is the first ever large presentation of the music created in the legendary Experimental Studio of Polskie Radio. The creator, sound engineer and composer of this CD is one of the pioneers of Polish electronic music, known and respected in the world as a composer responsible for hundreds of compositions, collages, soundtracks and effects for radio broadcasts, television and theater. For half a century he has been a collaborator for the Experimental Studio as producer and composer, using traditional editing techniques, magnetic tape and scissors. Eugeniusz Rudnik has been honored with several international awards and is an authority in the field. This box-set contains 19 of Rudnik’s works, which were created between 1959 – 2002. These works represent different genres including those created by the composer himself, like radio ballet, radio documentary ballad, linguistic sound poetry, or “ars acustica.” [Source: polmic.com]
SZYMANOWSKI ON SONY
POLISH MUSIC ON NAXOS
NEW FROM DUX
MICKIEWICZ PRESENTS CHOPIN Chopin. The Early Years This Adam Mickiewicz Institute publication includes a DVD with a film about the composer early years before 1830, a CD, and a trilingual (Polish-English-French) booklet features the basic information on the life and oeuvre of Chopin. The viewers can see Chopin's life against the backdrop of an epoch, the culture of the Polish Kingdom as well as the sources of the artist's inspiration - recent musical discoveries as well as premieres, the world of manor houses and local musicians. The DVD features maps of the Polish Kingdom and Europe with itineraries of the composer's numerous trips. The CD gives an exceptional opportunity to listen to the Piano Concerto in F minor while looking at the score in which the piano part was written in hand by the composer himself. "Chopin. The Early Years" will also be released in Russian, Japanese and Chinese.
WARSAW GIRL
According to James Reaney of the London Free Press, “Olenka and the Autumn Lovers blends songs from Polish-born singer-songwriter Olenka Krakus with roots music from all over Eastern Europe. The Autumn Lovers bring cellos, glockenspiels, djembes, violins, accordions, ‘general merriment’ and more to the mix.” [Jan. 17, 2009] Olenka (Alexandra Krakus) started her life in an environment rich in tenderness and turmoil, conditions which left their indelible mark on her character and eventually her music. Her earliest memories of Poland, the Communist Poland of the early 80s, consist of experiences typical to most children – swings and sandboxes and teddy bear confidantes – but inflected by the melancholy instability of the time, a spirit revealed in the gypsy folksongs she inherited from her grandparents and parents. It is the images within these early songs to which she often returns in her own music: apparitions isolated in poverty, loneliness, heartache, disconnected from a society that is nevertheless converging on them. [from the band’s CD Baby webpage] |
OBITUARIES |
FRANCISZEK WOŹNIAK Franciszek Woźniak, a well known composer, pianist and teacher, died on Thursday, January 15th, aged 77. He was the laureate of many competitions for composers. He was also a long-time lecturer and vice-chancellor of the Music Academy in Bydgoszcz, president of the Polish Composers’ Union’s Poznań Branch, and member of the “Poznań Music Spring” Repertoire Committee. [Reported by the Polish Music Information Center]
KRYSTYNA KOBYLAŃSKA Krystyna Kobylańska, musicologist and specialist of Frederic Chopin’s music, passed away on January 30 in Milanówek at the age of 84. Ms. Kobylańska was born on August 6, 1925 in Brześć. She studied piano in Warsaw Conservatory and musicology at the Warsaw University. Between 1951-66 she worked for the F. Chopin Society in Warsaw. Her Chopin research led to several publications about this great composer, the most recognized Rękopisy utworów Chopina [Manuscripts of Chopin’s Works]. The funeral took place on February 4, 2009 at the Old Powązki Cemetery in Warsaw. [Reported by the Polish Music Information Center]
BOGDAN TROCHANOWSKI Bogdan Trochanowski, cellist and composer living in Caracas, died Tuesday, February 3rd at the age of 62, said Venezuelan journalist Justyna Zun Dalloul, Wednesday. Trochanowski was born in Warsaw and he studied in Warsaw and Krakow, southern Poland. He was a soloist of the National Philharmonic Concert Hall. In 1977, he went to the Venezuela, where he stayed there until his final days. He performed under his stage-name Dan Savicha. His concerts were recorded by both Polish Radio and Television, as well as many broadcast stations in Germany, France and Venezuela. Trochanowski received numerous prestigious international prizes, including a medal and metal plaque in Cumana in 1981. [ Reported by Polish Radio]
|
ANNIVERSARIES |
| BORN THIS MONTH:
|
![]()
Copyright 2009 by the Polish Music Center
Send your comments and inquiries to: polmusic@thornton.usc.edu
Newsletter Editor: Krysta Close
Assistant Editor: Daniel Kamiński
Contributions from: Marek Żebrowski,
Joseph A. Herter, Vincent P. Skowronski,
Jozef Kapustka, and Daniel J. Kij
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, March 5, 2009.
The Polish Music Center includes all content on a space available basis. We reserve the right to refuse any content submitted.