Karol
Szymanowski (1882-1937)
Karol Szymanowski was born at Tymoszówka in
the Kiev District of the Ukraine in 1882, the son of a Polish land-owner and of
a mother of Swedish extraction, born Baroness Anna Taube. The family and their
immediate circle had a deep interest in the arts, a fact reflected in the
subsequent careers of the five children of the marriage as musicians, poets or
painters. His sister Stanislava later became a singer and his brother Feliks a
pianist. Szymanowski's early education was at home, since a leg injury at the
age of four prevented him from attending school in the neighbouring town of
Elisavetgrad (the modern Kirovograd), where, nevertheless, he had music lessons
from a relative, Gustav Neuhaus, who had a school there. In 1901 he went to
Warsaw to continue his musical studies, taking lessons from the composer
Zygmunt Noskowski in counterpoint and composition and from Marek Zawirski in
harmony.
The
feelings of Polish nationalism that had inspired Chopin and his contemporaries
continued through the nineteenth century, exacerbated by the repressive
measures taken by Russia, in particular, in the face of open revolt. Warsaw in
1901, however, remained as provincial as it had been in the time of Chopin, who
had sought his musical fortune abroad in Paris in 1830. The century had seen
Polish performers of the greatest distinction, particularly the violinists
Lipinski and Wienawski. The opera composer Stanislaw Moniuszko, however, a
rival to Chopin in his own country, enjoyed only a local reputation, while his
successors, in Szymanowski's esteem, occupied a still lower place. Polish music
was to a great extent isolated and provincial, a reflection of the society in
which it existed. The new century, however, brought together a group of young
musicians of much wider outlook, a circle that included the pianist Artur
Rubinstein, the violinist Pawel Kochanski and the conductor Grzegorz Fitelberg.
The last named, the composer Ludomir Rózycki and the pianist and composer
Apolinary Szeluto, together with Szymanowski, established, under the patronage
of Prince Wladyslaw Lubomirski, the Young Poland in Music group, for the
publication and promotion of new Polish music. Fitelberg, by training a
violinist and composer, made his later career as a conductor, and directed the
first concert of the group in Warsaw in 1906, when Szymanowski's Concert
Overture was performed. He won later distinction as conductor at the Vienna
Staatsoper and in work for the Russian impresario Dyagilev, before returning to
direct the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra and, from 1947, the Polish Radio
Symphony Orchestra in Katowice. Kochanski's support was to prove invaluable,
particularly in the composition of the first of Szymanowski's two violin
concertos and in a number of works written for violin and piano. Rubinstein,
who, like Kochanski, made his later career in the United States of America,
proved an additional champion of Szymanowski, while Paderewski, a musician of
more conservative tendency, assisted in the wider dissemination of
Szymanowski's piano music, favouring especially the famous B flat minor Study,
a work that owes much of its popularity to his advocacy.
The
first Young Poland concert in Warsaw had included performances of Szymanowski's
Variations on a Polish Folk Theme and his Study in B flat minor, played by the
pianist Harry Neuhaus, and had been well enough received. Berlin, however,
proved much less interested, when Fitelberg conducted the Berlin Philharmonic
Orchestra in a similar programme in the same year. Szymanowski spent the
following two years principally in Berlin and Leipzig, absorbing still further
the influence of Wagner, of Reger and of Richard Strauss, composers of whom he
later took a cooler view. This period saw the composition of his Symphony No. 1
in F minor, completed in 1907 and given its first performance in Warsaw two
years later. The composer subsequently withdrew the symphony and went so far as
to destroy the 1907 piano trio, sensing what seemed to him the excessive
influence of the post-Wagnerian, a reflection of a predominant aspect of music
of the time in Germany. The following years brought periods at home in the
Ukraine and abroad. He wrote his Penthesilea, Opus 18, an orchestral work with
soprano solo derived from the Achilleis of the contemporary Polish painter and
dramatist Stanislaw Wyspianski, in Italy in 1908, and in 1910 completed a very
different Symphony No. 2 in B flat, Opus 19, a work in which the influence of
Scriabin is noticeable, as it is in the piano music of this period. The new
symphony, played under Fitelberg in Warsaw in 1911 , proved unacceptable to
both audience and critics, but won acclaim in Berlin, Leipzig and Vienna,
establishing the international importance of the composer. Szymanowski
determined, after this experience, to live, at least for a time, in Vienna,
where Fitelberg was now employed at the Staatsoper, and where he reached an
agreement with Universal to publish his work.
Vienna
proved less stimulating than Szymanowski had hoped, but the period changed to
some extent his musical outlook, particularly through his experience of the
music of Debussy and, still more, of Ravel, and of the Dyagilev company in
Stravinsky's Firebird and Petrushka. In March 1914 he left Vienna and travelled
south to Italy, Sicily and North Africa, returning through Rome, Paris and
London, where he met Stravinsky. The war years he spent in musical isolation at
home at Tymoszówka, turning his attention to a study of Greek civilisation and
literature, to the early history of Christianity and to the culture of Islam,
the last an extension of an interest aroused by translations of the poems of
Hafiz by Hans Bethge, poet of Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde, some of which he
had set to music in 1911, and exemplified in the remarkable Symphony No. 3,
completed in 1916, using poems by the 13th century Persian mystic and poet
Mevlana, Jalal al-Din ar-Rumi.
The
Russian revolution put an end to Szymanowski's period of war-time seclusion.
The family was compelled to move, for reasons of safety, to Elisavetgrad, and
the property at Tymoszówka was destroyed by the revolutionaries. In 1919 they
moved to Poland, after the proclamation of the new republic. Kochanski and
Rubinstein prudently chose to settle in the United States, but Szymanowski
determined to stay in his own country and to seek there a further source of
inspiration, particularly in the more primitive aspects of indigenous music.
His reputation grew at home and abroad, and in 1927 he rejected the offer of a
position as director of the conservatory in Cairo in favour of the financially
less rewarding position of director of the Warsaw Conservatory, which in 1930
became the Warsaw Academy of Music, an institution of which he remained rector
until his resignation in 1932.
The five years that Szymanowski spent at the
Conservatory and the Academy brought many frustrations, particularly in dealing
with musicians of a conservative turn of mind, and these difficulties finally
led to his resignation. The remaining years of his life were not easy, without
any regular source of income, and he therefore made more public appearances as
a performer, writing the piano part of his Symphony No. 4 in 1932 to suit his
own relatively modest piano technique, no longer adequate for the more taxing
compositions of his earlier career. In the same year he was greatly encouraged
by the performance in Prague of his opera King Roger, a work that deals
imaginatively with a struggle in medieval Sicily between Christianity and an
Eastern Dionysian religion, a further example of his absorption of the essence
of other cultures than his own, and of his reading of Euripides.
Szymanowski's
final years were clouded by illness and he sought an alleviation of the effects
of tuberculosis abroad in Davos, Grasse and Cannes, and finally in Lausanne,
where he died on 29th March 1937. His last orchestral work was the second
violin concerto, completed in 1933, followed by two Mazurkas for piano, written
in the following year. The ballet Harnasie, inspired by the primitive
folk-music of the people living in the Tatra mountains, was staged in Prague in
1935 and the following year, with much success, in Paris, with choreography by
Serge Lifar. It became a popular part of Polish ballet repertoire after its
first performance in Poznan in 1938, a year after the composer's death.
King
Roger
The
opera King Roger was first conceived by Szymanowski and his distant cousin
Jaroslav Iwaszkiewicz in June 1918 in Elizavetgrad. It was here that
Szymanowski wrote his homoerotic novel Efebos, which remained unpublished and
was lost in the disturbances of 1939. In August Szymanowski was in Odessa and
there received from Iwaszkiewicz, now in Warsaw, a sketch of the libretto for
the new opera. The latter, engrossed in the Warsaw activities of the Skamander
Group of poets, lost interest in the project, leading Szymanowski to rewrite
the second and third acts. The composition of the work took some seven years
and King Roger was finally performed for the first time in Warsaw in June 1926.
The
subject of the opera is the conflict between King Roger, Norman ruler of
Sicily, and the Shepherd, revealed finally as Dionysus himself, in a plot that
echoes the legend that was the source of the Bacchae of Euripides, where King
Pentheus opposes the power of Dionysus and is killed by the followers of the
god, who include his wife and his mother. In more modern terms the conflict
between Dionysus and Apollo, the wild and orgiastic as opposed to the serene in
Greek art, had been the subject of Friedrich Nietzsche's controversial Die
Geburt der Tragödie aus dem Geiste der Musik (The Birth of Tragedy from the
Spirit of Music). In this book he had maintained that Greek music and tragedy
were essentially Dionysian, with the serenity formerly considered the leading
feature of Greek art to be found in architecture, an expression of the
Apolline. The conflict later found noted literary expression in Thomas Mann's
Der Tod in Venedig, the source of Britten's opera Death in Venice, and in the
work of the psychologist Jung. The subject of King Roger and even more its
musical construction have a parallel in the contemporary work of Franz
Schreker, where similar conflicts are recognised, as in other writing and music
of the period.
CD
1
[1]
The first act is set in a great Byzantine church. In the middle background
stands the high altar, separated from the nave by a row of slender columns of
pink marble, their capitals richly ornamented. In the middle is an opening
leading to the altar, which is lit by numerous lamps, while the rest of the
church remains in darkness. The vaulted roof and arches are supported by great
stone columns taken from ancient temples. Over the altar is a massive
representation of Christ, his face pale and ascetic, with darkly shining eyes,
the right hand raised in menace. On either side stand rows of carved stone
angels, smaller in size. The walls of the church are gilded and darkened with
age, coldly shining in the light of the candles in the candelabras. There are
mosaics showing the lives of St. Peter and St. Paul. The church shows signs of
later intrusion. In the foreground are carved wooden beams, painted in lively
colours, with verses from the Koran in Kufic script. There are representations
of four resting lions on the walls and the chancel and arches are rich with
mosaics. Before the slow rise of the curtain, hymns can be heard. The rays of
the setting sun and the light of many candles illuminate at least part of the
church, with the gilding of the mosaics and the splendid vestments of the
priests shining like stars in the subdued light. There is a crowd of people,
kneeling, their heads bowed. In the middle of a group of nuns is the Deaconess.
The Archbishop, clad in gold vestments, stands unmoving before the altar.
Acolytes and altar-boys make their way between the columns that mark off the
sanctuary and silver thuribles swing, giving off clouds of incense.
The
choir sings to God, the Lord of Sabbaoth, in the ancient words of the Byzantine
liturgy (Hagios! Kyrios Theos Sabaoth!), their voices in contrast with the
boys' choir. The Archbishop leads the assembly in prayer, answered by the
choir, their voices hushed as the sound is heard of the King approaching, now
welcomed by the choir. To him the Archbishop addresses his petition, supported
by the Deaconess and the assembly: a strange shepherd is leading the people
astray, destroying their faith and enticing the women into sin.
King Roger turns to the Arab sage Edrisi,
who explains that the shepherd wanders far and wide through the land, teaching
and preaching a strange foreign faith in his own God. The Archbishop
intervenes, claiming that the shepherd preaches false doctrine in front of the
church itself. The Deaconess adds her own harsher judgement of this blasphemy
and the people call for his destruction. The Queen Roksana here intervenes
(Krolu, nie!): the King must not have the shepherd imprisoned and must do no
injustice: rather should he be called into the royal presence to explain his
doctrine. Edrisi praises the wisdom of the Queen (Królowej ustami), and after a
short deliberation the King agrees and orders the man to be brought before him,
to the increased agitation of those assembled. Edrisi describes the stranger to
the King: he has long hair, in red locks, wears a goat-skin like any shepherd,
but his eyes shine like stars and his smile hides mystery, which the Queen
confirms. King Roger seeks to know more of the God the man preaches, but this,
Edrisi says, he must hear from the shepherd. The assembled people become
restive as the Shepherd is brought near, murmuring that he should be stoned.
The
Shepherd appears, pausing at the threshold before boldly striding to the foot
of the throne, to the murmurs of the assembly, as the King now questions him.
He preaches a god who is young and beautiful, as he is himself. At the Queen's
plea, King Roger quietens the people, so that the Shepherd may speak: his God
is gentle, a good shepherd, and wanders over the hills and stones seeking a
lost lamb and guarding his flock. As he speaks, the people press closer around
him, while he continues, calling on all to turn to this new joy and love, the
delight in his smiling countenance. The Queen seeks to learn more, and King
Roger attempts to silence her, warning her against lies and deceit, but the
Shepherd interrupts, claiming to set free all those who are poor and
heavy-laden. The assembly express their discontent: the blasphemer must be
destroyed and the Queen close her ears to lies, not look on the man as a
Saviour. The Archbishop exhorts her to look on the image of Christ above the
altar, but the Shepherd continues unmoved: his God is the cool shade of the
woods, the gentle waves of the wide sea, thunder, lightning and storm. Roksana
is overwhelmed, but King Roger declares that the Shepherd must die, a popular
decision, welcomed by those present. although the Queen protests that the
Shepherd speaks the truth. At the highest point of popular clamour, King Roger
calls for silence, and sinks back on his throne, struggling in his own mind.
Eventually he declares his decision: the Shepherd may go free to his own land.
A wonderful smile lights up the Shepherd's face and he looks into the King's
eyes with mysterious understanding, before going slowly out. King Roger calls
him back: that evening he must present himself for judgement: coming to the
palace gate the watchword will be Shepherd (Pasterz) and the reply Roger. The
Shepherd warns the King not to forget that the invitation is his. His voice is
heard singing of his God, as he makes his way out and the act comes to an end.
[2]
The second act is set in the inner court of the King's palace, which bears all
the marks of the time of the Caliphate, to the oriental character of which
later European influences have been added. There is an oriental opulence in the
colours and arabesques, the yellow-blue majolica tiles on the walls and the
rich Syrian and Mosul carpets that fit well with the vaulting and architectural
power of the entrance gate. Here and there are Byzantine mosaics and in the
foreground a marble pool and fountain, surrounded by flowers and palms. A
two-storey gallery surrounds the courtyard, with slender pillars and richly
ornamented capitals. At the back is the great entrance-gate, with smaller doors
covered with hanging tapestries. The main door and the windows have ornamented
lattice grilles. On the right are steps to the upper gallery, to the left a
raised daïs and throne. Nearby is a great window, half covered by hangings,
through which the shadows of trees can be seen.
The
introductory music has a mood of anxiety and agitation, already suggesting the
influence of the Shepherd. It is night. Alabaster lamps shed a dull light over
the court. The King sits on the throne, dressed in splendid robes. By the
window stands Edrisi, looking occasionally through the window. Knights of the
royal guard stand unmoving by the door. The King waits anxiously, sensing his
own mood in the paleness of the stars. He calls to the watchman (Straze!),
bidding him bring the Shepherd in at once, and reminding the watch of the
password. Edrisi tries to calm the King, who has been apart from Roksana too
long, but he had seen her response to the words of the stranger. Edrisi seeks
the reason for his fear. King Roger, though, fears now the stars, the darkness,
like a child, trembling at the unknown: in the eyes of the Shepherd was a fire
that burnt his heart. Edrisi, the level voice of reason, reminds him of the
beauty of the night. Tambourines and zithers are heard, and then the rhapsodic
voice of Roksana, seeking to soften King Roger's heart, with mercy for the
young Shepherd: this night no falcon preys on dove, serpents sleep in the scent
of liles, and grace descends from heaven earthwards.
The
King pulls himself together, seeing a shadow. Edrisi tells him the Shepherd is
coming before his judge. The watchmen's signal is heard from afar, then the
voice of the Shepherd proclaiming the password: Roger! The King leaps up,
staring at the door. Edrisi is at his side, and both wait in silence. There is
a long pause: the knights shift uneasily. In the doorway stands the Shepherd,
with four companions, while behind him presses a band of soldiers, some with
torches. The Shepherd stands and casts a sharp glance over the whole court,
then approaches the King. His companions carry musical instruments and stop
some distance behind their master, waiting for him to call them to play their
music. The Shepherd is clad in a rich robe of bright yellow colour, his long
red-blond locks falling round his shoulders. His companions are similar in
appearance, if less richly dressed. He addresses the King: see, he came to him,
to greet him in the name of eternal love. The King seeks to know whence the
Shepherd came. From the far South, bright and clear, taking his way through the
world he has prayed for him in white Benares, brought greetings from the
lotus-flowers of Indra, and from his reflection in the waters of the Ganges. In
answer to another question, he explains that the source of his might must be
sought from the tree of the forest, the heat of noon, the rose
land
the sweet grape: God has sent him, called forth, like a flower. The King
trembles as he listens to this blasphemy, which calls for divine retribution.
The voice of Roksana is heard again in ecstatic rhapsody, while gradually young
men and women, and eunuchs, enter, forming a serni-circle in the background,
all with their eyes on the Shepherd, awaiting his command. He urges the King to
heed the voice of Roksana, like a nightingale, heavy with longing, but King
Roger is convinced that the Shepherd is a false prophet, cheating his
followers, blaspheming. The Shepherd, however, claims to know the dark secret
power of life, his followers around him like butterflies round the purple
chalice of the rose, drunk in the light of his eyes: he calls on his musicians
to play and his people to dance, which they do in a measure that becomes ever
wilder. In the course of the dance Roksana appears in the gallery above, and
makes her way down. When King Roger sees her, he angrily rises from his throne
and gestures to her to stop. The Shepherd, who has gazed fixedly at the King,
now turns his gaze on Roksana, who responds. The King sinks back on his throne,
his face buried in his hands. Roksana sings with ever greater strength and
power, joined by the Shepherd (W radosnym). King Roger tries to interrupt their
ecstasy, and as the dance comes to an end, he calls on the guard to seize the
Shepherd. Soldiers push the crowd aside and bind him with fetters, but he tears
himself loose and stands by the side of Roksana. Now in anger he turns to the
King, asking who it is that dares bind him. He breaks the iron chains and
throws them at the King's feet. Raising his hands, calling them to go with him
on flower-strewn paths to his country, to the cool shade of valleys, in answer
to the mysterious call they hear, in the stillness, in the sound of the sea.
The King is silent as Roksana follows the Shepherd, who walks slowly to the
door, others going after him. King Roger calls them back, but he too should
follow. The Shepherd, his followers, with Roksana, go, leaving the King alone,
his head in his hands. Edrisi looks out into the darkness, but they have soon
disappeared into the night. The King suddenly casts the crown, royal mantle and
sword from him, resolved himself to follow as a pilgrim.
CD
2
[1]
The third ac t takes place amid the ruins of an ancient theatre. To the right
rise long tiers of stone seats, the sky dark above. There are broken stones,
and weeds growing in cracks of the old masonry. The ground has a rich covering
of grass, like a carpet. In the background, to the left, are the remains of a
stage, with half-ruined columns, capitals, fragments of friezes. The steps,
that once led from the proscenium, are almost undamaged, and there is ruined
masonry in the background. In the middle of the orchestra are the ruins of an
altar. There is a trace of smoke, as from arecent offering. Through a gap in
the amphitheatre the blue sea can be seen. Moonlight falls on the ruins and the
gentle sound of the sea can be heard.
Edrisi
and the King enter, the latter in a dust-stained tunic, his hair dishevelled.
Tired out, he sinks down on a stone, his head in his hands, then, raising his
head, he exclaims on their surroundings, only dead stones, the boundless sea
and mysterious silver stars: is it only an echo that they follow? The King is a
pilgrim, a beggar seeking alms, hoping again to find Roksana, whose ecstatic
voice is now heard. A ship draws near the shore, and now the voice of the
Shepherd is heard from the distance. Mysterious unseen voices teil of the
King's change of heart, as the voice of Roksana proclaims, bidding him cast
aside his anxiety, as he has his sword. The moon suddenly emerges from behind
the clouds, casting a mysterious light over the ruins. The King looks about him
in silent amazement, wondering at the heavenly light, to Edrisi an enchantment.
Roksana is seen, clad in a grey mantle, greeted by King Roger, who sees her
beauty, as she draws nearer out of the surrounding darkness. She calls on him
to give her his hand, so that he may go with her. The King asks where the
Shepherd is, and now the sound of distant voices is heard again. Roksana tells
him that the Shepherd is in the light of the stars, in the storm, in the stone
tiers there, a golden spirit, the fire that dances on the altar, calling King
Roger to him. The voice of the Shepherd is heard, calling Roger. He and Roksana
feverishly start to throw flowers at the foot of the altar onto the fire
burning there, which flares suddenly brighter. At the same moment there appears
among the ruins the Shepherd as Dionysus. Behind him all is in darkness, but
ghostly figures can be discerned. The sound of flutes and singing is heard. The
Shepherd summons King Roger to enlightenment. The latter stares fixedly at him
raises his hands to heaven, as in prayer, while the Shepherd continues to urge
him to follow over the blue sea and the endless ocean, to eternal wandering and
the holy dance.
After
the appeal of the Shepherd, mysterious figures are seen in the dim light,
filling the amphitheatre, surrounding their master, who is soon hidden from
sight. At the height of the singing, Roksana casts aside her mantle, reveallng
herself in the dress of a maenad. She holds a thyrsus, that lay, covered in
flowers, before the altar, and mingles with the crowd. The King stands
spellbound. The crowd disappears, and the King and Edrisi are left alone. The
fire on the altar dies down, dawn breaks, with the amphitheatre still in
darkness. Edrisi rouses himself: the dream is over. The King moves to the
raised stage, now lit by the rays of the morning sun, which he greets in a hymn
of praise, to which he offers his heart. He has sacrificed to Dionysus, and now
praises Apollo, strong in a synthesis of these two contrasting elements.
[2]
Prince Potemkin
In
1925, after the completion of King Roger, Szymanowski wrote incidental music
for the fifth act of Prince Potemkin, a play by Tadeusz Micinski. This was not
the first collaboration with the poet. Micinski, associated with the Young
Poland movement, appealed particularly to the composer and his interest in the
esoteric and oriental may have influenced Szymanowski in King Roger. In 1904-5
he had set four poems by Micinski, another of whose poems provided the literary
inspiration for the Concert Overture, Opus 12. In 1909 he set poems from
Micinski's In the Darkness of Stars and his Violin Concerto of 1916 again draws
on Micinski, the fantasy of his May Night, while the text for his Third
Symphony made use of translations from the Persian by the same writer. The
music for Prince Potemkin, left in manuscript at Szymanowski's death, makes use
again of a version of a Tatra folk-tune, here transformed for an evocative
dramatic purpose in music that has a valid existence apart from the play for
which it was originally intended.
Andrzej
Hiolski
Andrzej
Hiolski ranks to the most outstanding Polish artists of our time. He studied
singing in Lwów and Bytom. In the period from 1945 to 1956 he has been the
soloist of the State Silesian Opera in Bytom, since 1957 he was appointed a
soloist of Teatr Wielki at Warsaw. Mr. Hiolski is a permanent guest of the
concert and opera stages in Europe, USA, Asia and Far East. To his most
important artistic achievements belongs the performance of Szymanowski's King
Roger at Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires. He took part at world famous music
festivals (Berliner Festwochen, Edinburgh Festival, Salzburger Festspiele,
Wiener Festwochen, Prague Spring, Warsaw Autumn, etc.). In 1971 Mr. Hiolski has
been awarded with Grand Prix du Disque for his recording of King Roger. In 1973
followed a second Grand Prix du Disque for the recording of Penderecki's Devils
from Loudon.
Wieslaw
Ochman
Wieslaw
Ochman studied singing simultaneously with the Miner's Academy at Cracow and
has been graduated as Engineer of ceramics. He made a choice for the artistic
career and soon achieved big successes at the world's prominent opera stages
(Metropolitan Opera, La Scala, Boljshoi Teatr, State Opera in Vienna, etc.). He
appeared frequently with Berlin or Viennese Philharmonic with conductors as
Karl Böhm, Herbert von Karajan, Eugen Jochum, Claudio Abbado, Rafael Kubelik,
Zubin Mehta, etc.
Barbara
Zagórzanka
Barbara
Zagórzanka has been the soloist of the Poznan Opera in the period from
1967-1978 and in 1979 she joined the Teatr Wielki in Warsaw. She toured Europe
countries and Japan (where she appeared as the first European singer in the
Kabuki theatre). Ms. Zagórzanka is considered to be the most outstanding
performer of King Roger's 'Roxana'.
Henryk
Grychnik
Henryk
Grychnik started his artistic career in Cracow, now he is the soloist of the
Silesian Opera at Bytom. In 1963 he has been awarded with 2nd Prize in the
International Vocal Competition in Geneve. In the period frorn 1968-1970 he has
been a permanent guest of the opera houses in Zurich and Berlin. In 1985 he was
one of the soloists at the performance of Penderecki's Polish Requiem at
Carnegie Hall in New York and in Boston.
Leonard
Andrzej Mróz
Leonard
Andrzej Mróz has been trained at the State College of Music in Warsaw. He is
laureate of the local and international vocal competitions (1st Prize in
Hilversurn in 1977, 2nd Prize in Geneve in 1971). Since 1972 he has been the
soloist of the Teatr Wielki in Warsaw. He performed at the famous opera houses
such as State Opera in Vienna, Hamburg Opera, Komische Oper Berlin,
Glyndenbourne Festival Opera, etc. In 1981 Mr. Mróz appeared in Philadelphia
and at the New York Metropolitan Opera.
Anna
Malewicz-Madey
Anna
Malewicz-Madey has been graduated at the State College of Music in Warsaw in
1959. She is a laureate of the International Vocal Competition in
s'Hertogenbosch in 1964. Since 1959 she is the soloist of the Teatr Wielki in
Warsaw.
Polish
State Philharmonic Chorus (Katowice)
The
Polish State Philharmonic Chorus (Katowice) has been established in 1974. They
toured many countries and took part at distinguished music festivals
(Vratislavia cantans, Warsaw Autumn, Festival in La Chaise-Dieu, etc.). The
artistic director and principal chorus director is Mr. Jan Wojtacha.
Polish
State Philharmonic Orchestra (Katowice)
The
Polish State Philharmonic Orchestra was formed in the Silesian city of Katowice
in 1945, one of the first orchestras to be established in the post-war period.
Since then it has assumed an important position, giving concerts in Katowice
and the principal cities of this heavily industrialised region of Poland. The
orchestra has visited England, Austria, West Germany, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia,
Czecho-Slovakia, France, Italy and the former Soviet Union and has taken part
in a number of major music festivals. Conductors who have appeared with the
orchestra include Kyril Kondrashin, Hermann Abendroth, Gennady Rozhdestvensky
and Carlo Zecchi, and soloists of the eminence of Sviatoslav Richter, Emil
Gilels, Artur Rubinstein, Maurizio Pollini, Henryk Szeryng and David Oistrakh.
Karol
Stryja
Karol
Stryja is among the most eminent Polish conductors, having studied conducting
in Katowice and served as a viola-player in the Polish Radio Symphony
Orchestra, before assuming the position of chief conductor of the Polish State
Philharmonic Orchestra. He has appeared as a conductor in North and South
America, as well as throughout Europe and has made a number of recordings of
Polish music both for the radio and for recording companies.
The
Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra of Katowice (PNRSO)
The
Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra of Katowice (PNRSO) was founded in
1935 in Warsaw through the initiative of well-known Polish conductor and
composer Grzegorz Fitelberg. Under his direction the ensemble worked till the
outbreak of the World War II. Soon after the war, in March 1945, the orchestra
was resurrected in Katowice by the eminent Polish conductor Witold Rowicki. In
1947 Grzegorz Fitelberg returned to Poland and became artistic director of the
PNRSO. He was followed by aseries of distinguished Polish conductors - Jan
Krenz, Bohdan Wodiezko, Kazimierz Kord, Tadeusz Strugala. Jerzy Maksymiuk.
Stanislaw Wislocki and, since 1983, Antoni Wit. The orchestra has appeared with
conductors and soloists of the greatest distinction and has recorded for
Polskie Nagrania and many international record labels. For Naxos, the PNRSO
will record the complete symphonies of Tchaikovsky and Mahler.
Antoni
Wit
Antoni
Wit was born in Cracow in 1944 and studied there. before becoming assistant to
Witold Rowicki with the National Philharmonic Orchestra in Warsaw in 1967. He
studied with Nadia Boulanger in Paris and with Penderecki and in 1971 was a prize-winner
in the Herbert von Karajan Competition. Study at Tanglewood with Skrowaczewski
and Seiji Ozawa was followed by appointment as Principal Conductor first of the
Pomeranian Philharmonic and then of the Cracow Radio Symphony Orchestra. In
1983 he took up the position of Artistic Director and Principal Conductor of
the Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra in Katowice. Antoni Wit has
undertaken many engagements abroad with major orchestras, ranging from the
Berlin Philharmonic and the BBC Welsh and Scottish Symphony Orchestras to the
Kusatsu Festival Orchestra in Japan.