Oratorio Music Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Oratorio Music Concert
Jan Willem de Vriend, photo: Marco Borggreve

In the midst of the inevitable disputes over the most important achievement in Johann Sebastian Bach’s oeuvre, the St Matthew Passion keeps cropping up. As English musician and scholar John Butt has noted, it is curious that a masterpiece whose emotional charge reaches the limit of human endurance was written in a secondary German centre as Leipzig was in the eighteenth century. Not all those attending the Good Friday Lutheran services during which the Passions were performed in the Saxon city necessarily appreciated the massive scale of Bach’s work, together with its subtle drama. Today’s reception of the Passion would probably infuriate both the Leipzig townspeople and the composer himself. It is difficult to count all its contemporary performances and recordings, let alone the attempts at scientific interpretations of the symbols hidden on various levels of the score. Numerous statements from present-day listeners echo the conviction of the timelessness of the arias, recitatives and choruses from the St Matthew Passion, which, as it turns out, appeal not only to believers, since Bach employed almost every available means of sound painting to tell a profoundly human story about the fragility of life, love, betrayal, violence and loss.

Karol Kozłowski
Evangelist
Lars Johansson Brissman
Jesus
Justyna Jedynak-Obłoza
Pilate’s Wife
Michalina Kraska
Maid
Zuzanna Kozłowska
Maid
Agata Szmuk
Witness
Kacper Szemraj
Witness
Krzysztof Chalimoniuk
Pilate
Miłosz Kondraciuk
Chief Priest
Maciej Falkiewicz
Judas
Krzysztof Matuszak
Peter
Piotr Stawarski
Chief Priest
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Danuta Chmurska

A conductor, artistic director of the Artos Choir, president of the Władysław Skoraczewski ARTOS Music Society. As a child she joined the youth choir led by Władysław Skoraczewski; she then continued her career at the Teatr Wielki – Polish National Opera in Warsaw becoming assistant to Romuald Miazga. Since 1981, Danuta Chmurska has been a music teacher and expert responsible for preparing children’s parts (both solo and chorus ones) for operas, oratorio and cantata concerts, ballet and theatre performances (Giacomo Puccini’s Turandot, Georges Bizet’s Carmen, Krzysztof Penderecki’s Paradise Lost, Modest Mussorgsky’s Boris Godunov, Karol Szymanowski’s King Roger, Pyotr Tchaikovsky’s The Queen of Spades and The Nutcracker, Joanna Bruzdowicz’s Gates to Paradise, Alban Berg’s Wozzeck, Katarzyna Głowicka’s Requiem for an Icon, Jan Stefani’s The Pretended Miracle, or Krakovians and Highlanders among others).

She has collaborated with many eminent conductors, including Jacek Kaspszyk, Tadeusz Wojciechowski, Tomasz Radziwonowicz and Gabriel Chmura, often gaining their recognition. According to Danuta Chmurska herself, her greatest choral achievements include preparing choirs for Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Requiem and Coronation Mass, Giovanni Battista Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater and also the children’s part in Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 8, and a piece by Martin Palmeri – Misa a Buenos Aires – Misatango, performed by the Artos Choir in New York’s Carnegie Hall at the composer’s invitation.

While running the choirs of the ARTOS Music Society, she also initiates and organises concerts and other artistic events. She teaches children, the youth and adults how to use their voice as well as interpretation and artistic expression in the spirit of the Society’s patron and Danuta Chmurska’s master – Władysław Skoraczewski.

 

[2023]