Symphonic Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Symphonic Concert
Krzysztof Urbański, Michał Sławecki, Edyta Krzemień (photo: Weronika Kuźma), Anna Federowicz (photo: Piotr Komoń)

Krzysztof Urbański will conduct two symphonies that occupy a well-deserved place in the contemporary canon of world musical masterpieces. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Symphony in G minor, K. 550 is the middle work of the last three symphonies written a few years before the composer’s death. Henryk Mikołaj Górecki’s Symphony No. 3 was composed in 1976, commissioned by the Südwestfunk in Baden-Baden. It is not known whether Mozart’s work was appreciated during the composer’s lifetime. Until recently, it was even believed that he may never have heard it performed. The Polish composer’s work was rejected by some avant-garde circles, surprised by the sudden simplification of Górecki’s musical language, although the composer himself insisted: ‘I have not swapped my revolutionary clothes for a Franciscan habit’. It was not until the 1992 recording by the London Sinfonietta that the work achieved worldwide success. Today, the Third Symphony is one of the most frequently performed works of twentieth-century Polish music in the world. Similarly, Mozart’s masterpiece enchanted later generations of composers, who eagerly referred to its cantilena melodies. Johannes Brahms himself proudly kept the autographs of the Symphony in G minor. The work of the Viennese classic has no programme, although hidden meanings have been sought in it many times. Górecki, on the other hand, based his work on shocking quotations concerning human tragedy and loss. Both symphonies can be recognised from the very opening. With Mozart, it is a characteristic, lively violin theme, while in the Górecki, it is a canon melody taken from the Kurpie region, appearing in the dark registers of the double basses.
 

Bartłomiej Gembicki

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Edyta Krzemień

Edyta Krzemień is a distinguished singer and actress, acclaimed for her work across the musical theatre stage. Her versatile repertoire spans film music, classical works, and musical theatre. She is a graduate of the Vocal and Acting Department at the Chopin University of Music in Warsaw. In recent seasons, she toured North America as the principal vocalist in Cirque du Soleil’s ECHO, appearing across the United States and Canada.

Her stage credits in Poland include numerous musical theatre roles, including Christine Daaé (Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera), Fantine (Claude-Michel Schönberg’s Les Misérables), Miss Honey (Tim Minchin’s Matilda), Johanna (Stephen Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd), Emma (Jekyll & Hyde, music by Frank Wildhorn), Sister Mary Robert (Sister Act, music by Alan Menken), and Molly (Ghost, music by Dave Stewart and Glen Ballard). She also collaborates with the Teatr Pieśni Kozła (Song of the Goat Theatre) in Wrocław.

She has lent her voice to Polish-language dubbing of characters such as Glinda in Stephen Schwartz’s Wicked and the eponymous Snow White in Walt Disney’s classic tale. She has also contributed choral parts to the Polish versions of Frozen II, Aladdin and Beauty and the Beast.

She enjoys an ongoing collaboration with composer Zbigniew Preisner, having recorded soundtracks for Lady of the Dynasty, Europa Centrale and Mother Didn’t Know, and performed his works at international festivals including Klarafestival in Brussels and the Haifa International Film Festival. She took part in concert stagings of Requiem for My Friend and the theatrical production 2016: Dokąd, presented as part of the European Capital of Culture Wrocław 2016 programme at the National Forum of Music. She appeared at the 29th European Film Awards Gala and recorded the platinum-selling album Nowe i stare kolędy: W poszukiwaniu dróg, featuring Preisner’s music. In 2019, she joined Lisa Gerrard and Teresa Salgueiro at TAURON Arena Kraków to mark the 40th anniversary of Preisner’s artistic career.

 

[2025]