Choral Music Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Choral Music Concert
Warsaw Philharmonic Choir, Bartosz Michałowski

tickets for this concert on sale from 28.07 (10 a.m.)

 

Pascal Dusapin is a composer born in 1955, a student of Iannis Xenakis and Franco Donatani. His works feature microtonality, which stems from folkloric inspirations, as well as minimalist, modal harmonies. Granum sinapis, from 1992, is an eight-movement work for a cappella choir, combining an unconventional approach to melody and harmony with a ritualistic, almost trance-like form, in which regularly repeated phrases and techniques reveal successive images of a mystical vision. The composer drew on the words of the medieval Dominican theologian Eckhart von Hochheim (Master Eckhart; c.1260–c.1328), who towards the end of his life was accused of heresy.

Giya Kancheli’s Amao omi, from 2005, is also meditative in nature, expressed in long, euphonically harmonised sounds, sung by a choir, and delicate cantilena melodies in the part of a saxophone quartet. The Senseless War – as the title of the work translates – uses the words of Vazha Pshaveli (Luka Razikashvili; 1861–1915), a Georgian poet representing the national liberation movement.

Arvo Pärt composed the Berliner Messe for mixed choir and organ in 1990 to a commission from the 90th Katholikentag in Berlin – an ecumenical and interfaith festival organised every two years by the Zentralkomitee der deutschen Katholiken in various German dioceses. The work was first performed on 24 May this year at St-Hedwigs-Kathedrale in Berlin. It features the use of the tintinnabuli technique: constantly repeated but minimally modified musical cells, leading to – once again, as with Dusapin and Kancheli – a mystical, purifying experience.
 

Jan Lech

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Jakub Pankowiak

Doctor of Musical Arts, graduate of the Academy of Music in Poznań (diploma with distinction) in the organ class of Sławomir Kamiński whose assistant he has been since graduating in 2008. He honed his skills at the Chopin University of Music in Warsaw under Magdalena Czajka, at the Musikhochschule Lübeck under Arvid Gast (as part of the Socrates and Erasmus programmes, 2009), as well as during national and international masterclasses led by outstanding artists.

Jakub Pankowiak is a laureate of many organ competitions in Poland and abroad, including the International Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis Competition in Vilnius (Third Prize and a special prize for the best performance of works by Johann Sebastian Bach, 2011), the National Organ Competition of Performance of Works by Dietrich Buxtehude in Krakow (First Prize, 2008), the International Organ Competition for Young Organists in Opava (an honorary mention, 2006), the Competition of Polish Organ Music in Legnica (First Prize, 2006), the Feliks Nowowiejski International Organ Competition in Poznań (Fourth Prize and prize for the youngest finalist, 2005), the Organ Music Competition as part of the International Rev. Stanisław Ormiński Religious Music Competition in Rumia (Second Prize, 2004), and was also a scholarship holder of the city of Poznań (2010). In 2017, he was honoured with a Decoration for Merit to Polish Culture from the Minister of Culture and National Heritage. In 2022, he was awarded a Bronze Medal for long–Time Service by the President of the Republic of Poland, Andrzej Duda.

He performs as a soloist and accompanist and has given nearly 400 concerts in such distinguished venues as the Gewandhaus in Leipzig, the Berliner Dom and the Warsaw Philharmonic. He has performed in Poland, Lithuania, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg and Israel.

Since 2017, Jakub Pankowiak has been regularly collaborating with the Warsaw Philharmonic Choir under the baton of Bartosz Michałowski. Since 2025, he has been an assistant professor at the Academy of Art in Szczecin.

 

[2025]

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