Symphonic Concert - CANCELLED Filharmonia Narodowa

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Symphonic Concert - CANCELLED
fot. Thomas Grøndahl

We regret to inform you that due to the illness of the artists participating in the symphony concerts on 3 and 4 December, these concerts have been canceled.

Tickets purchased for cancelled concerts are refundable - at the Warsaw Philharmonic box offices or via the bilety24.pl service, if you have made an online purchase. For more information, please contact bilety@filharmonia.pl

 

 

Bruckner’s gradual Locus iste, redolent of tranquillity and euphony, was heard for the first time in October 1869 during the consecration of the Votivkapelle – one of the first completed segments of the neo-Gothic New Cathedral in Linz. Although at that time, the composer had already entered the Viennese period of his career, he was more than happy to accept an invitation from the community that remembered and respected him.

According to many critics, it is in the Third Symphony that we see the emergence of the Bruckner we all know – the pioneer of a new idea of a monumental symphony, structured partly in line with the tradition of the genre, and yet at the same time treating it more extensively. Expanded thematic groups, developed as in an organ improvisation, strong contrasts, pathos, the monumentalism of groups of wind instruments – all these distinctive features were to return in subsequent symphonies, despite the fact that the reception of this one was at first disastrous. The premiere performance of the first version from 1873 was rejected after a few rehearsals, and the presentation of the 1877 version (several times revised) was an abject failure. There is also the third, main version, from 1890. The concert will reacquaint the audience with the original version of the piece.

In an interview with Mateusz Gliński (Music, 1926), Szymanowski described the origins of Stabat Mater as follows: “There were a great many reasons why I decided to write a religious piece – from my inner experiences right through to external life circumstances, which last winter forced me to put aside for a time all my other “lay works”, which I had already begun writing, and focus entirely on Stabat Mater”. These “external circumstances” included the tragic death of Szymanowski’s niece, which was a truly painful experience for him. However, the composer had already thought about writing a religious work based on folk motifs earlier. He turned to the text of the hymn Stabat Mater, inspired by, and delighted with, Józef Jankowski’s translation. In this way he composed one of his most perfect and deeply poignant works, which combines novel elements of the musical idiom with a very subtle archaization of, and allusions to, traditional music.

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Aleksandra Kubas-Kruk

Aleksandra Kubas-Kruk graduated with distinction from the Vocal Faculty at the Karol Lipiński Academy of Music in Wrocław in the class of Danuta Paziuk-Zipser. She perfected her skills at the Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst Wien. The singer has won prizes at the Toulouse International Singing Competition, the International Stanisław Moniuszko Vocal Competition in Warsaw, and the Karol Szymanowski International Vocal Competition in Łódź, among others.

In 2007, she made her debut as Gilda in Giuseppe Verdi’s Rigoletto at the Wrocław Opera. As a soloist of this theatre (2008–2017), she appeared in many leading roles, including Violetta in Verdi’s La Traviata, Susanna in Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro, Pamina in Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte and Hanna in Stanisław Moniuszko’s The Haunted Manor.

The artist has performed during the KLANGVOKAL Musikfestival Dortmund, at the opera houses of Sassari, Jesi, Pisa, Teatro di San Carlo in Naples, Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow, Concertgebouw in Amsterdam and Pyotr Tchaikovsky Concert Hall in Moscow. At the Opernhaus Zürich she performed as Fiakermilli in Richard Strauss’s Arabella, and in October 2023, she created the role of Vitella in the premiere performance of Mozart’s La clemenza di Tito in the new production of the Baltic Opera in Gdańsk. At the Berliner Philharmonie she sang the soprano part in Gioacchino Rossini’s Stabat Mater, and in November 2023, she performed a recital of Mieczysław Weinberg songs with the Mozarteum Orchester Salzburg during the WOD-Weinberg festival.

Aleksandra Kubas-Kruk has worked with conductors such as Jordi Bernacer, Patrick Fournillier, Vasily Petrenko, Péter Eötvös, Elio Boncompagni, Julius Axelrod, Christopher Moulds, Jacek Kaspszyk, Jesús López-Cobos, Andriy Yurkevych, Łukasz Borowicz, Tadeusz Strugała, Ewa Michnik, Pavel Klinichev, Marek Pijarowski, Michał Klauza, Sławomir Chrzanowski, Paweł Przytocki, Yaroslav Shemet.

The artist has many recordings to her credit, including: Weinberg (Un)Discovered Songs (DUX 2023) – a recording of recently discovered songs by Mieczysław Weinberg with pianist Monika Kruk, Impressions for soprano and viola (DUX 2022), Leonardo Vinci’s opera Gismondo, re di Polonia (Parnassus Arts Productions 2020), European award-winning recording of George Frideric Handel’s opera Arminio (C Major, Unitel 2018), Musica Sacromontana – Józef Zeidler - Missa in D major (DUX 2018), or an album of music by Michal Bergson (DUX 2020), as well as Moniuszko’s Spectres (CD Accord 2018, the 2019 Fryderyk Award).

Since 2012, Aleksandra Kubas-Kruk has been working as a singing teacher at the Karol Lipiński Academy of Music in Wrocław. In September 2019, she received her postdoctoral degree.

 

[2024]