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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Magdalena Szczęsna

Magdalena Szczęsna began her musical education in 2014. She completed her bachelor’s degree in Paweł Gusnar’s class at the Chopin University of Music in Warsaw, and is currently pursuing her master’s degree at the same university. She has been fascinated by the saxophone repertoire for years. She has participated in numerous festivals, competitions and concerts in Poland and abroad. She has honed her skills under the guidance of outstanding teachers and saxophonists during national and international music workshops.

Magdalena Szczęsna collaborates with leading Polish ensembles and orchestras, such as the Chopin University Big Band, Warsaw Saxophone Ensemble, Sinfonia Varsovia, as well as the Polish Royal Opera and the Warsaw Philharmonic. She is a scholarship holder of the National Children’s Fund and of the Minister of Culture and National Heritage (three times in 2019, 2021 and 2022), and has won over 30 music competitions and festivals.

 

[2025]

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