Symphonic Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Symphonic Concert
Christian Schmitt, photo: Uwe Arens

The phonosphere of Paris during the modernist era constantly riveted the attention of composers living there. They certainly included Jacques Ibert. His colourful orchestral suite Paris, from 1930, is a cycle of musical images of the French capital, among which the composer sought to capture the commotion of the Metro, the atmosphere of the suburbs, elements of orientalism and bourgeois amusements.

It seemed that the musical patronage of the aristocracy was in decline when, a few years later, another Parisian, Francis Poulenc, received an unusual commission for a concerto. The solo part was to be played by the patroness funding the work, Winnaretta Singer, Princesse de Polignac, a talented pianist, organist and painter. During the private first performance, however, in the princess’s salon, it was Maurice Duruflé who sat at the organ, while Nadia Boulanger conducted.

Service at a court was still a typical model for the functioning of musicians in the times of Joseph Haydn. His Symphony in C major, Hob. 1:60, brimful of humour, was based on the incidental music to the play Le Distrait [The absent-minded man] by Jean- François Regnard, staged at the Esterházys’ residence in 1774.

Inspiration from the operatic output of a composer friend of Haydn’s – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – is made explicit in the title of an elaborate waltz by Joseph Lanner, in which one easily finds several well-known Mozartean themes.

Bartłomiej Gembicki

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Christian Schmitt

Since his debut with the Berliner Philharmoniker under the baton of Sir Simon Rattle and at the Salzburg Festival with Magdalena Kožená, Christian Schmitt has been one of the most sought-after organists internationally. In 2024, the first collaboration with the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Warsaw Philharmonic and a re-invitation to the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles are on the agenda.

In the 2022/2023 season, he made his debuts at Carnegie Hall in New York under Dennis Russell Davies, with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra under Christoph Eschenbach. Recent highlights include his debut at Walt Disney Concert Hall presented by the Los Angeles Philharmonic, performances with the Staatskapelle Berlin conducted by Daniel Barenboim, the Japanese premiere of Toshio Hosokawa’s piece Embrace – Light and Shadow with the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra at Suntory Hall, and the release of his most recent recording of Paul Hindemith’s Kammermusik No. 7 with conductor Christoph Eschenbach. Christian Schmitt has played the organs of the Elbphilharmonie Hamburg, the Konzerthaus Berlin, the Berliner Philharmonie, the Vienna Musikverein, the Gewandhaus Leipzig and the Maison symphonique de Montréal, and has collaborated with conductors and soloists such as Juliane Banse, Matthias Goerne, Philippe Herreweghe, Manfred Honeck, Jakub Hrůša, Marek Janowski, Cornelius Meister and Michael Volle.

Christian Schmitt’s discography currently includes around 40 recordings. For Deutsche Grammophon he recorded two CDs for the project “Bach 333 – Die neue Gesamtausgabe”. Equally noteworthy is the album Prayer with Magdalena Kožená, released by Deutsche Grammophon in 2014. In 2013, the organist was awarded an ECHO Klassik for his recording of Charles-Marie Widor’s Organ Symphonies, Op. 42.3 and 69. Since the winter semester 2021, the artist has been organ professor at Codarts Rotterdam, as a successor to Ben van Oosten. Christian Schmitt studied organ with Daniel Roth (Paris), Leo Krämer (Saarbrücken) and James David Christie (Boston).

He is an expert consultant for organ renovations and new construction of organs in Berlin, Nuremberg, Zurich, Lucerne and Brno. His latest project is a digitally sampled version of the organ of the Philharmonie Essen for concerts with and in orchestra. Christian Schmitt has been a member of numerous international music competition juries and is involved in the music education project “Rhapsody in School”.

 

[2024]