Symphonic Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

Go to content
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
Close

Grzegorz Wołczański

Graduated from the Fryderyk Chopin University of Music in Warsaw, where he studied clarinet with Mirosław Pokrzywiński (2015), Grzegorz Wołczański honed his skills in master classes taught by such artists as Michel Lethiec, Florent Héau, Julian Bliss, Ernesto Molinari, David Minetti, Stephen Williamson, Aleksander Romański, and Andrzej Godek.

Grzegorz Wołczański has garnered numerous accolades during his career, including first prizes in a number of Polish and international competitions. He has also held scholarships from the Minister of Culture and National Heritage (on four occasions) and the Young Poland Programme (the National Centre for Culture), as well as the John Paul II Scholarship of the City of Warsaw (the Centre for the Thought of John Paul II).

He has performed as a soloist as well as a chamber and orchestral musician in France, Switzerland, Greece, Russia, Hungary, Ukraine, China and in Poland. He has collaborated with numerous ensembles, including the Warsaw Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra, Sinfonia Varsovia, the Polish Radio Orchestra in Warsaw, Sinfonia Iuventus, and the Polish Air Force Representative Orchestra.

Since 2017, he has been a member and soloist of the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, with whom he has played both in Poland’s most famous concert halls as well as abroad on tours around Japan, China, South Korea, Great Britain and other countries.

As a soloist, he has been accompanied by the Warsaw Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra, the Artur Malawski Podkarpacie Philharmonic Orchestra in Rzeszów, the Chopin University Symphony Orchestra and Chopin University Wind Ensemble, the Polish Air Force Representative Orchestra in Poznań, the Neues Orchester Basel and the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, with whom he has collaborated twice as a soloist in performances of Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto in A Major during the 2018/2019 concert season.

 

[2022]

The website uses COOKIES to increase usability. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies in accordance with the current browser settings.