Chamber Music Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Agata Zubel, together with the musicians of the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Maciej Tomasiewicz, turns here to fascinating repertoire that is rarely performed. Three Dawn Rituals is a work by James MacMillan from the period before the Scottish composer came to prominence with his spiritual sacred works. This is a composition for chamber ensemble, with the use of prepared piano and Javanese scales. During the 1970s, György Kurtág was interested in Russian literature. He was most strongly inspired by the work of the poetess Rimma Dalos. In her short poems, he found a similar ability to condense content into a succinct form as in the output of his musical idol, Anton Webern. Scenes from a Novel is a cycle of fifteen miniature pieces – confessions of a woman unhappily in love. The Danish composer Anders Koppel has written music for films, ballets and musicals, as well as classical output. His 7 Scenes from Everyday Cow Life for chamber ensemble consists of short witty pieces somewhat reminiscent of cartoon music. Luciano Berio’s cycle of Folk Songs was written in 1964 with his then wife, the avant-garde prima donna Cathy Berberian, in mind. The Italian composer wrote it – so he declared – out of admiration for his wife’s vocal artistry. The cycle includes his own arrangements of songs from America (two), Armenia, France, Sicily, Sardinia (one each) and the Auvergne (two), enhanced with two youthful songs by the composer to traditional folk texts.

 

Dorota Szwarcman

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Maciej Tomasiewicz

Maciej Tomasiewicz is a graduate of the Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice where he studied composition and theory of music as well as symphony and opera conducting (later completing a PhD) in the class of Szymon Bywalec. He then went on to attend the conducting master classes of Michael Dittrich, Gabriel Chmura, Jacek Kaspszyk, and Larry J. Livingston.

He is associated with the Archetti Chamber Orchestra of the city of Jaworzno, originally as a violinist, and between 2014 and 2021 as a conductor. He was head of the Polish Youth Symphony Orchestra in Bytom and the Karol Szymanowski Youth Symphony Orchestra in Katowice, both of which enjoyed considerable success under his guidance. He was awarded twice with a Conductor Resident scholarship from the Music and Dance Institute (IMiT). The artist has assisted to such esteemed conductors as Gabriel Chmura, Matthew Halls, Michail Jurowski, Jacek Kaspszyk, Michał Klauza, Christoph König, Alexander Liebreich, Jerzy Maksymiuk, Ludovic Morlot, Tadeusz Kozłowski, and Antoni Wit.

He has acted as assistant conductor with Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra in Katowice, Jerzy Semkow Polish Sinfonia Iuventus Orchestra and the Grand Theatre of Łódź. He has conducted the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, the Beethoven Academy Orchestra, the Polish Sinfonia Iuventus Orchestra, the Podlasie Opera and Philharmonic Orchestra of Białystok, the Polish Radio Orchestra in Warsaw, the Kalisz, Silesian, Świętokrzyskie, Zielona Góra Philharmonics as well as the New Music Orchestra, among others.

Since the 2022/2023 season, he has been the deputy music director at the Silesian Opera in Bytom, with which he has been associated for years and where he has conducted, inter alia, the premiere performances of the ballets (Scheherezade/Medea), shows (Sól Ziemi Czarnej), and operas: Giacomo Puccini’s Tosca, Pyotr Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker, Gaetano Donizetti’s L'elisir d'amore, Stanisław Moniuszko’s The Haunted Manor and Johann Strauss’ (Son) operetta Der Zigeunerbaron.

In the years 2019–2022, he was an assistant conductor to Andrzej Boreyko, Music & Artistic Director of the Warsaw Philharmonic.

Maciej Tomaszewicz’s nearest engagements include premieres of two operas: Aleksander Nowak’s I, Şeküre (Opera Rara, Krakow) and Ludomir Różycki’s Medusa (Silesian Opera).

 

[2024]