Aneta Kapla-Marszałek
Aneta Kapla-Marszałek graduated from the Faculty of Vocal and Acting at the Fryderyk Chopin University of Music in Warsaw (the class of Eugenia Rozlach). She has performed in various student productions, including Opowieść o “Zemście Nietoperza” (A Story of Die Fledermaus) based on an operetta by Johann Strauss (2005), Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte (2007), as well as at the Warsaw Chamber Opera in the role of Clarice in Baltassare Galuppi’s L’amante di tutte (2008).
In 2007, as part of the Socrates-Erasmus scholarship programme, she studied at the Conservatorio Statale di Musica “Francesco Venezze” in Rovigo (Italy) where she was taught by Elisabetta Andreani and Gabriella Munari. She honed her skills in vocal classes under the direction of Helena Łazarska, Jadwiga Rappé, Anna Radziejewska, Artur Stefanowicz, Ewa Iżykowska, Anna Maria Ferrante, Urszula Mitręga-Wagner, and Daniel Kotliński.
She has sung leading parts in many works by Stanisław Moniuszko, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Johann Sebastian Bach, George Frideric Handel (La Resurrezione), Alberto Ginastera (Cantata para América Mágica) and Arnold Schönberg (Pierrot lunaire).
She appeared at the Moniuszko Podlasie Festival and the Warsaw Autumn International Festival of Contemporary Music in 2012 (Canti notturni by Beat Furrer). She performed with the Podlasie Opera and Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction of Marcin Nałęcz-Niesiołowski.
As a soloist, she has featured on recordings of works by Miłosz Bembinow: Res Tua. Deliberations of Love and Hate (DUX) and Letters. From Dusk till Dawn (Cavalli Records), as well as of two 18th-century Christmas masses by Amando Ivančić with the La Tempesta ensemble.
She is currently an artist with the Warsaw Philharmonic Choir, with which she has performed solo parts in works by Ferenc Liszt, Krzysztof Penderecki, Maciej Małecki, Pablo Sorozábal, Joseph Haydn, Carl Nielsen, and Johannes Brahms under the baton of such conductors as Niklas Willén, Krzysztof Penderecki, Christopher Hogwood, Antoni Wit, Valery Gergiev, Florian Helgath, and Joseph R. Olefirowicz.
[2022]