Opening of the 2025/2026 Concert Season Filharmonia Narodowa

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Opening of the 2025/2026 Concert Season
Krzysztof Urbański, photo: Bartek Barczyk

tickets for this concert on sale from 8.09 (10 a.m.)

 

The 2025/2026 season will open with two canonical works representing extremely different worlds in the classical repertoire. Their juxtaposition is an intriguing artistic experiment that may attract listeners with different aesthetic preferences to the Warsaw Philharmonic.

A sonata for two pianos, or perhaps a symphony in the spirit of Beethoven? These were the questions that the young Johannes Brahms asked himself – and his friends – before completing the long and arduous journey to the end of his Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor. He consulted his friends over every page of the score, polishing the work with admirable precision. The concert will feature Jan Lisiecki, a renowned Canadian pianist of Polish extraction. At the age of 15, he signed a contract with the prestigious Deutsche Grammophon label, while taking the world’s most important concert halls by storm.

Brahms’s academicism – full of emotion, virtuosity and rich orchestral sounds – will be juxtaposed with a work by Carl Orff. Carmina burana is a piece that combines a monumental cast (worthy of a Mahler symphony) with a radical minimalism of composition technique. This economy of expression, in contrast to the dominant artistic trends of the 1930s, gave Orff’s work the status of an icon of musical primitivism. Carmina burana is a cantata based on a selection of poetry from a  thirteenth-century codex, dealing with such things as the vicissitudes of fate, love, pleasure and transience, expressed through ecstatic rhythms, beaten out by an expanded percussion section, and simple, memorable ostinato melodies, entrusted to soloists and a huge choir.
 

Bartłomiej Gembicki

The Warsaw Philharmonic Strategic Patron of the Year – PKO Bank Polski – warmly welcomes you to join us in this concert
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Jan Lisiecki

Canadian pianist Jan Lisiecki looks back on a career spanning a decade and a half on the world’s greatest stages. He works closely with the foremost conductors and orchestras of our time, performing over a hundred concerts a year.

The 2024/2025 season saw him returning to Boston Symphony Orchestra, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Münchner Philharmoniker, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and Seattle Symphony. He led the Academy of St Martin in the Fields on a tour of 19 concerts throughout Germany and Austria, with residencies at Hamburg’s Elbphilharmonie, in Munich and Cologne, performing the complete piano concertos by Ludwig van Beethoven. As a Toronto Symphony Orchestra’s ‘Artist in Residence’, he opened the ensemble’s season and returned to lead from the piano Beethoven’s complete concertos.

He brought his acclaimed Preludes solo recital programme, recently celebrated at Carnegie Hall’s Isaac Stern Auditorium, to Teatro alla Scala in Milan, Théâtre des Champs‑Élysées in Paris, Herbst Theatre in San Francisco, Bozar in Brussels and during the Klavier-Festival Ruhr. A duo programme of Mozart, Beethoven and Schumann together with Julia Fischer brought him to 15 venues across Europe and the United States, including New York’s Lincoln Center, Chicago Symphony Center, Boston’s Jordan Hall, Berliner Philharmonie, Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg and Prinzregententheater in Munich.

Recent return invitations include the New York Philharmonic, The Cleveland Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre de Paris, Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich and Staatskapelle Dresden. He made his debut with the Berliner Philharmoniker in spring 2024. Jan Lisiecki is a fixture at major summer festivals across Europe and North America, has performed at the Salzburger Festspiele and recently made his third appearance at the BBC Proms. His previous recital programme was celebrated in over 50 cities around the globe.

At the age of 15, Jan Lisiecki was offered an exclusive recording contract by Deutsche Grammophon. Since then, he has recorded nine albums which have been awarded with the JUNO Award, ECHO Klassik, Gramophone Critics’ Choice, Diapason d’Or and Edison Klassiek. At 18, the pianist received both the Leonard Bernstein Award and Gramophone’s Young Artist of the Year Award, becoming the youngest ever recipient of the latter. In 2012, he was named UNICEF Ambassador to Canada.
 

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