Symphonic Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Symphonic Concert
Łukasz Borowicz, photo: Ksawery Zamoyski

As he stated years ago, Emanuel Ax prefers concerts to competitions. Although he took part in numerous piano competitions in his youth, he decided to consistently refuse to serve on competition juries, as he was terrified of having to eliminate participants. He comes from a Jewish family with Polish roots. He was born in Lviv, and attended his first music school on Miodowa Street in Warsaw, before continuing his studies at the famous Juilliard School in New York. He has received multiple Grammy awards, including alongside Isaac Stern and Yo-Yo Ma. He returns to Warsaw with Ludwig van Beethoven’s last, monumental and groundbreaking Piano Concerto. This work earned the nickname ‘Emperor’ in unclear circumstances, but – in the words of Donald Francis Tovey – to the composer’s ‘profound if posthumous disgust’. The Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major was written in 1809, at a difficult time of conflict between Austria and France, and occupied a special place in Beethoven’s oeuvre; commentators have discerned in the work not only a truly imperial character, but also an apotheosis of musical military symbolism.

Almost a century later, Franz Schreker’s Schwanensang for mixed choir and orchestra to words by the librettist and poet Dora Leen, who died in Auschwitz, was premiered in Vienna. And in 1911 Grzegorz Fitelberg presented Warsaw audiences with ‘a work, the like of which had never been written by any Pole’, as its author Karol Szymanowski modestly said of his Symphony No. 2 – the pinnacle achievement of his youth.

The Warsaw Philharmonic Partner – Carolina Toyota Wola – warmly welcomes you to join us in this concert
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Bartosz Michałowski

Bartosz Michałowski graduated with distinction in choral conducting from Poznań Music Academy. In 1998–2005, he was assistant to Stefan Stuligrosz and conductor of the ‘Poznań Nightingales’ Boys’ and Men’s Choir, with which he performed extensively in Germany, France, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, Austria, Russia and Japan.

He won first prize in the 9th Polish National Choral Conductors Competition in Poznań. In 2015, he won the Orphée d‘Or of the Académie du Disque Lyrique, and was nominated for one of the Polish record industry’s Fryderyk awards. In 2020, he received a Fryderyk for a recording of Szymanowski’s opera Hagith (with the Warsaw Philharmonic Choir). He also received two nominations for the International Classial Music Awards 2022. Michałowski is the founder and artistic director of Poznań Chamber Choir, one of the leading Polish ensembles of its kind, and of the ‘Opus 966’ Polish Composition Competition. He also devised the ‘Pisz muzykę – to proste!’ (‘Write music – it’s easy!’) composing workshops for children and co-produced the ‘Obrazogranie’ (‘Picture playing’) project at the National Museum in Poznań.

As Director of the Warsaw Philharmonic Choir, he has conducted Szymanowski’s Kurpian Songs, masses by Kodály and Gretchaninov, Rossini’s Petite messe solennelle (the recording has been nominated for an ICMA award), Mozart’s Coronation Mass and Requiem, and oratorios: Paulus by Mendelssohn, Messiah by Handel, Christ on the Mount of Olives by Beethoven and Litanies of Ostra Brama by Moniuszko. He prepared the ensemble for the first ever performance of Anton Rubinstein’s sacred opera Moses (conducted by Michail Jurowski and recorded in 2018) and for a performance and the first ever recording of Moniuszko’s opera The Pariah in Italian, and has also helped prepare vocal-instrumental concerts of the Warsaw Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra, collaborating with such eminent conductors as Andrzej Boreyko, Ton Koopman, Christoph König, Matthew Halls, Martin Haselböck, Jacek Kaspszyk and Krzysztof Penderecki.

In April 2024, the Warsaw Philharmonic Choir under his direction recorded a new album – Paweł Łukaszewski. The Adoration.

He has participated in renowned festivals including the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival and Ludwig van Beethoven Easter Festival, and has collaborated regularly with renowned institutions and orchestras. He has numerous first performances to his credit.

In addition to gaining experience as a conductor, Bartosz Michałowski has spent many years working on enhancing his skills and knowledge in the field of voice production, completing masterclasses with Poppy Holden (Great Britain), Christian Elsner (Germany) and Józef Frakstein (Poland). He holds a PhD and is a lecturer at the Chopin University of Music.

 

[2024]