Symphonic Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Symphonic Concert
Jerzy Maksymiuk, fot. artist's archive

“It is pure music, contemplated beyond the limitations of reality, in the world of dreams, amidst the moving architecture that God builds out of the mists...” – so enthused the French composer and critic Pierre de Bréville following the premiere (1901) of Debussy’s symphonic triptych Nocturnes inspired by the subtle verse of the symbolist poet Henri de Régnier. Composed over a period of many years, the work has become a milestone in the history of music, setting new horizons in terms of expression, harmony, and the handling of orchestral sound.

The Swiss composer Frank Martin wrote his Concerto for Seven Wind Instruments, Percussion and String Orchestra for the Bern Musikgesellschaft in 1949 – the work perfectly exploits the timbral range and potential of this colourful set of instruments, enchanting the listener in particular with its interesting, polyphonising texture and the mysterious aura of the second movement, an aria-type Adagietto.

Jean Sibelius’ Symphony in E Minor opens a catalogue of seven works (the composer destroyed the eighth and last without finishing it) that he worked on over a quarter of a century, from 1898 until 1924. Commentators on this successful debut were delighted with Sibelius’ masterful management of contrasts in timbre and mood as well as with the interesting, original orchestration, which became a “hallmark” of the great Finnish symphonist.

You are invited to this concert by Fundacja PZU – Warsaw Philharmonic Partner
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Krzysztof Bednarczyk

Born in 1958 in Gostynin, Krzysztof Bednarczyk started to study music and play the trumpet at the age of 14. In 1981, he graduated with distinction the Fryderyk Chopin Academy of Music in Warsaw. In the second year of his studies, he joined the Polish Radio and Television Symphony Orchestra in Warsaw as a trumpeter, and over the following few years he had the opportunity to collaborate with the outstanding musician Stefan Rachoń – the former head of the orchestra.

Since 1984, he has been associated with the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra – since 1990 as its first trumpeter-soloist. During more than 30 years of his artistic career at the Warsaw Philharmonic, he appeared in over 1000 concerts in the orchestra’s main building, and went on several dozen tours abroad (Europe, many times the USA and Japan, as well as South America), during which he appeared at the world’s most important concert halls, including Carnegie Hall and Avery Fisher Hall in New York, the Royal Albert Hall, Barbican Centre, and Royal Festival Hall in London, Suntory Hall in Tokyo, as well as in Munich, Paris, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Vienna, and Berlin.

The artist has also appeared as a soloist with symphony orchestras in Poland, including several times with the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, with which, under the baton of Jacek Kaspszyk and Rafał Janiak, he took part in concerts for children, performing pieces by Alexander Arutiunian and Jean-Baptiste Arban, and also performed Shostakovich’s Concerto for Piano, Trumpet and String Orchestra under the baton of Mariusz Smolij and with Nikolai Demidenko as a pianist. He has also appeared with the organists Andrzej Chorosiński, Krzysztof Latała, and Wiktor Łyjak.

Krzysztof Bednarczyk is also very active as a chamber musician. Since 1991, he has performed together with the soloists of the orchestra as the Brass Quintet of the Warsaw Philharmonic. He has made many archival recordings as well as recordings of contemporary and film music.

 

[2022]

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