Tag: Witold Lutoslawski

  • Bernard Jacobson Philadelphia Music World Mourns

    Bernard Jacobson Philadelphia Music World Mourns

    An eminent musicologist and critic has died. Bernard Jacobson was a familiar presence in Philadelphia. During the Muti years, when he was probably my age or younger, he was a program annotator for the Philadelphia Orchestra. He also founded a chamber music series and initiated pre-concert talks. Furthermore, he very much had Muti’s ear as an advisor, so that it’s difficult to say how much he may have influenced what trickled down to audiences at the Academy of Music. On one occasion, he appeared as narrator with members of the orchestra, delivering his own translation of Stravinsky’s “L’Histoire du soldat.”

    Later in life, he regularly attended concerts of the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, to whom he generously donated program notes. He showed a marked preference for the French form of Mozart’s middle name, Amadé.

    His accomplishments extended far beyond the City of Brotherly Love. You can read more about him here:

    http://www.musicweb-international.com/contrib/Bernard_Jacobson.htm

    I just put in an order for his book on “Polish Renaissance” composers Andrzej Panufnik, Witold Lutoslawski, Krzysztof Penderecki, and Henryk Górecki.

    Jacobson was 85 years-old.


    Jacobson recites Schoenberg’s “Ode to Napoleon” in 1968

    (1/2) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YcthBF0X9RU

    (2/2) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KsGXdBP_c30

  • Witold Lutoslawski A 20th Century Giant

    Witold Lutoslawski A 20th Century Giant

    He was regarded by some as the greatest Polish composer since Chopin. He certainly made his mark on music of the 20th century.

    Witold Lutoslawski’s early works were influenced by Polish folk music, but as he matured, he began to experiment with twelve-tone and aleatoric techniques. (Aleatoric, broadly speaking, describes a kind of music in which certain aspects of a performance are left to chance.) However, he never wholly abandoned the traditional melodic and harmonic signposts that allowed his music to remain comprehensible to a broader audience.

    Several of Lutoslawski’s major works were played in Philadelphia during my peak concertgoing years, back in the ‘80s and ‘90s. I remember seeing Lynn Harrell play the Cello Concerto there. However, I was shut out of the old Academy of Music when the composer himself came to conduct a complete program of his own music. Disappointing, to be sure, but also heartening that so many listeners cared enough to attend a concert of contemporary music by a living composer.

    A most enjoyable introduction to Lutoslawski is his “Variations on a Theme by Paganini” (1941). This is a surviving relic of the war years, during which public gatherings in Warsaw were banned by the Nazis. The composer was able to get around it by forming a piano duo with Andrjez Panufnik that played in the local cafes. Here, Princeton’s own Christina and Michelle Naughton perform:

    Of the orchestral works, this one is easy enough to follow – the Symphonic Variations (1939):

    Then give a listen to the Concerto for Orchestra (1950-54). Just don’t go into it expecting anything like Béla Bartók’s late masterpiece!

    Also folk-inflected is “Dance Preludes” for clarinet and piano (1954):

    More challenging is the Cello Concerto (1970), with the introduction of chance elements:

    Another one of his more frequently performed works – the Symphony No. 3 (1973-83):

    And a documentary that begins with a man-on-the-street segment, “Do you know, who is Witold Lutoslawski?”

    Happy birthday, W.L.!


    PHOTO: The composer at the keyboard in 1952-53

  • Andrzej Panufnik Rediscovering a Polish Master

    Andrzej Panufnik Rediscovering a Polish Master

    Andrzej Panufnik is the sleeping giant of Polish music. He’s one of those figures, like Bohuslav Martinu, who always seems poised on the verge of greatness, and yet never quite achieves the full degree of recognition he deserves.

    To begin with, his particular brand of modernism was eclipsed by the avant-garde experiments of his friend and compatriot, Witold Lutoslawski. Panufnik’s relationship with Lutoslawski dated back to the war years. During the Nazi occupation, the two formed a piano duo that played in Warsaw cafés – at the time the only way to share live music in public, since there was a ban on organized gatherings.

    In the meantime, Panufnik quietly produced subversive works celebrating Polish heroism and the resistance. Following the war, he was instrumental in the re-establishment of the Warsaw Philharmonic. However, increasing friction with Poland’s communist regime led to the composer’s defection, under hair-raising circumstances, in 1954. He was granted asylum in England, where he received a knighthood in 1991, the year of his death.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll pay tribute to Panufnik with two of his ten symphonies, both of them markedly “Polish” in character.

    His “Sinfonia Rustica” (1948, revised in 1955), as the title implies, is a work very much of the people, making use of fragmented Polish themes, meant to reflect the rustic, semi-abstract, paper-cut art of the peasantry. Not only the symphony’s framework, but also the layout of the orchestra, is meant to reflect the symmetry found in Polish folk art. Nevertheless, despite the work’s direct character, it was denounced in 1949 as “alien to the great socialist era.”

    Whenever I listen to Panufnik’s “Sinfonia Sacra” (1963), I always think of Henryk Sienkiewicz’s 1884 epic, “With Fire and Sword,” set in the 17th century Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth during the Khmelnytsky Uprising. With its evocation of winged hussars in courageous battle against the Cossacks, Sienkiewicz’s monumental page-turner whipped readers living in a partitioned Poland into a patriotic fervor.

    Conceived as a tribute to Poland’s millennium of Christianity and statehood, the symphony reflects the composer’s religious and patriotic sentiments. Panufnik based the work on the first known hymn in the Polish language, “Bogurodzica.” Throughout the Middle Ages, this served as something of a national anthem, sung not only in the church, but also on the battlefields by Polish knights.

    Watch your toes – the giant stirs! Join me for two symphonies by Andrzej Panufnik, on “Andrzej the Giant,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Andrzej Panufnik Polish Giant of Music

    Andrzej Panufnik Polish Giant of Music

    Andrzej Panufnik is the sleeping giant of Polish music. He’s one of those figures, like Bohuslav Martinu, who always seems perched on the verge of greatness, and yet never quite achieves the full degree of recognition he deserves.

    To begin with, his particular brand of modernism was eclipsed by the avant-garde experiments of his compatriot and friend, Witold Lutoslawski. Panufnik’s relationship with Lutoslawski dated back to the war years. During the Nazi occupation, the two formed a piano duo which played in Warsaw cafes – at the time the only way to share live music in public, since there was a ban on organized gatherings.

    In the meantime, Panufnik quietly produced subversive works celebrating Polish heroism and the resistance. Following the war, he was instrumental in the re-establishment of the Warsaw Philharmonic. However, increasing friction with Poland’s communist regime led to the composer’s defection, under hair-raising circumstances, in 1954. He was granted asylum in England, where he received a knighthood in 1991, the year of his death.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll pay tribute to Panufnik with two of his ten symphonies, both of them markedly Polish in character.

    His “Sinfonia Rustica” (1948, revised in 1955), as the title implies, is a work very much of the people, making use of fragmented Polish themes, meant to reflect the rustic, semi-abstract, paper-cut art of the peasantry. Not only the symphony’s framework, but also the layout of the orchestra, is meant to reflect the symmetry found in Polish folk art. Nevertheless, despite the work’s direct character, it was denounced in 1949 as “alien to the great socialist era.”

    Whenever I listen to Panufnik’s “Sinfonia Sacra” (1963), I always think of Henryk Sienkiewicz’s 1884 epic, “With Fire and Sword,” set in the 17th century Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth during the Khmelnytsky Uprising. With its evocation of winged hussars in courageous battle against the Cossacks, Sienkiewicz’s monumental page-turner whipped readers living in a partitioned Poland into a patriotic fervor.

    Conceived as a tribute to Poland’s millennium of Christianity and statehood, the symphony reflects the composer’s religious and patriotic sentiments. Panufnik based the work on the first known hymn in the Polish language, “Bogurodzica.” Throughout the Middle Ages, this served as something of a national anthem, sung not only in the church, but also on the battlefields by Polish knights.

    Join me for these two symphonies by Andrzej Panufnik – “Andrzej the Giant” – this Sunday night at 10 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network or at wwfm.org.


    PHOTO: Panufnik, adjusting to English life

  • Panufnik Centenary Warsaw Variations

    Panufnik Centenary Warsaw Variations

    Today is the centenary of the birth of Polish master Andrzej Panufnik, about whom I wrote a few days ago to promote last Sunday night’s “The Lost Chord,” which was devoted to two of his symphonies. (The show will be repeated Friday at 3 a.m. ET and then posted as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.)

    Here’s a fascinating audio documentary about Panufnik and his friend Witold Lutoslawski. You’ll remember that Lutoslawski and Panufnik formed a piano duo which performed in Warsaw cafes, since it was the only means through which to share music during the Nazi occupation, when there was a ban on organized gatherings.

    http://www.fallingtree.co.uk/listen/warsaw_variations

    “Warsaw Variations” aired several times on BBC radio and was awarded a Prix Europa for Best Radio Music Documentary. Lutoslawski’s “Variations on a Theme of Paganini,” which had its origins in the piano duo’s repertoire, features throughout.

    “I think they both had a sort of mission that people needed music, and they needed music more than any other time ever, almost, in order to keep their courage up.”

    – Camilla Jessel Panufnik, the composer’s widow

    PHOTO: Lutoslawski (left) and Panufnik (right), with violinist Eugenia Umińska. Umińska joined the Polish resistance, took part in the Polish Uprising, and survived capture to become a professor and later rector at the Academy of Music in Kraków. The photo was taken in 1942.

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