Symphonic Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Symphonic Concert
Polish Sinfonia Iuventus Orchestra, photo: Piotrek Banasik

Natalia Ponomarchuk is one of the leading Ukrainian conductors, a graduate of the Ukrainian National Academy of Music in Kyiv. Sinfonia Iuventus under her baton will open this evening’s concert with Myroslav Skoryk’s Hutsul Triptych – a three-part suite composed in 1965 from the music to the film Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors (Тіні забутих предків, 1964). This work draws on folk themes from the Hutsul region, illustrating the story of Mykhailo Kotsiubynsky – a writer of the turn of the twentieth century. It is intriguingly programmed with Ralph Vaughan Williams’s Sinfonia antarctica, inspired by the Antarctic expedition of Robert Falcon Scott, whom the composer met during work on his music to the film Scott of the Antarctic in 1948.

Those two illustrative symphonic works will be accompanied by one of the most popular cello concertos: Camille Saint-Saëns’ work from 1872. His First Cello Concerto in A minor, Op. 33 was dedicated to Auguste Tolbecque, who gave its first performance on 19 January 1873. During our concert, this highly demanding work will be performed by Rafał Kwiatkowski, who has worked with the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra on more than one occasion, including on a recording of Witold Lutosławski’s Cello Concerto in 2004 (DUX 2015).

Jan Lech

Co-organiser of the concert
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Rafał Kwiatkowski

Graduate of the Fryderyk Chopin Academy of Music in Warsaw (now: Fryderyk Chopin University of Music), from which he graduated with honours (Magna cum laude medal). Since 2005, he has been teaching at his alma mater, and in 2023 he was awarded the title of professor in musical arts.

He is the winner of many international music competitions – in New York (1999), Leipzig (1998), Ljubljana (1998), Viňa del Mar (Chile, 1996) and the Duo Competition (with pianist Grzegorz Gorczyca) in Kuhmo (Finland, 1998), as well as winner of the second prize in the International Paulo Cello Competition in Helsinki (2002), four Fryderyk statuettes, winner of the Polityka’s Passport and the award of the Polish Culture Foundation.

He has given concerts in Europe, the Americas, Africa and Asia. In Japan, he has performed, among others, at Suntory Hall in Tokyo (recital). Following his debut at the 92nd Street Y and Carnegie Hall in New York (1999), he has repeatedly toured the United States. He performs with excellent Polish and foreign orchestras in Los Angeles, Bogota, Santiago, Moscow, Helsinki, Budapest, Munich, Palermo, and Astana, among others. In 2001 in Berlin he performed Krzysztof Penderecki’s Viola Concerto (cello version) under the baton of the composer and participated in the Polish premiere of Concerto grosso. Since then, Krzysztof Penderecki has regularly invited the cellist to Polish and foreign performances of his works, as well as to their album recordings.

Rafał Kwiatkowski not only performs as a soloist, he also has a passion for performing chamber music in various instrumental casts. He has performed with many eminent artists, such as Christoph Eschenbach, Kevin Kenner, Maxim Vengerov and Krystian Zimerman, with whom, following a series of concerts featuring the music of Grażyna Bacewicz, he recorded the piano quintets of the Polish composer for the Deutsche Grammophon label in 2009. In 2017, the cellist began an ongoing collaboration with the string quartet Camerata. He has also made guest appearances with the Meccore String Quartet and the Szymanowski Quartet and has also performed with artists such as Anna Maria Jopek, Maria Pomianowska, Gil Goldstein, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Stanisław Sojka and Krzysztof Herdzin, with whom he took part in the recording of the album Polanna.

 

[2024]