Symphonic Concert Filharmonia Narodowa

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Symphonic Concert
Ingo Metzmacher (photo: Felix Broede)

The two outstanding vocal-instrumental works presented in this concert are linked by their similar dates of composition (1944 and 1962) and the particularly important and, in both cases, highly individual significance of their composers in the history of twentieth-century music. However, the musical language, as well as the ideological and aesthetic context to which both composers refer, are radically different.

Trois petites liturgies de la presence divine is a broadly religious work, derived from Olivier Messiaen’s deep personal faith. Based on the composer’s own texts, it contemplates the notion of God’s presence: in man, in the created world, in God himself. Scored for a very unusual ensemble, it amazes and captivates the listener primarily with its sound (airy, luminous, pastel-hued) and its rich, complex texture. It exudes an aura of mystical peace, meditation and inner calm. 

Dmitri Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 13 (‘Babi Yar’) was inspired by the mass murder of Jews by the Nazis in the Babi Yar ravine near Kyiv in 1941, described in a poem by Yevgeny Yevtushenko. It also uses other works by the Russian poet, containing references to everyday life in post-war Soviet reality. The composer achieved the dramatic and monumental character of the Symphony, which does not shy away from the grotesque, through the use of both a massive orchestral sound and, above all, vocal forces reminiscent of the tradition of Orthodox church music (bass voice and male choir).


Robert Losiak

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Adam Kośmieja

Considered as one of the most innovative and modern Polish pianists, Adam Kośmieja is known as a musical chameleon, who successfully performs both classical repertoire and broadly defined new music, including multimedia and improvisations.

He performs extensively in Poland and abroad. His artistic activity has taken him to concert halls in over 20 countries in North America, Europe and Asia, including Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall, Berliner Philharmonie, Grieghallen in Bergen, Shenzhen Concert Hall, Shandong Grand Theatre, Warsaw Philharmonic, Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra concert hall in Katowice, NFM in Wrocław and the Great Amber Concert Hall in Latvia. In 2022, he made his debut with the Kremerata Baltica chamber orchestra, founded and directed by Gidon Kremer. Adam Kośmieja is an artist associated with Warner Music label. His discography, represented by albums such as Tribute to Gulda (Warner Classics), Infinity (Warner Classics) and Phase_1_4 (Kairos), reflects a wide spectrum of inspiration. The album Elżbieta Sikora – Concertos (Anaklasis) received an award from the French Académie Charles Cros (2024).

He is a graduate of the Manhattan School of Music in New York and the Feliks Nowowiejski Academy of Music in Bydgoszcz. He currently serves as head of the piano department at the Bydgoszcz academy (with a habilitated doctor’s degree). He studied under such teachers as Ludmila Kasjanenko, Jerzy Sulikowski, Solomon Mikowsky and Katarzyna Popowa-Zydroń. He has conducted various artistic and educational activities and lectures, including at the Manhattan School of Music, Frost School of Music (University of Miami), Schulich School of Music (McGill University) in Montreal, Royal Academy of Music in London, Royal Birmingham Conservatoire and music academies in Katowice, Bydgoszcz and Gdańsk.

Adam Kośmieja was nominated for the Coryphaeus of Polish Music Award in the ‘Discovery of the Year’ category (2021). The city of Bydgoszcz honoured the artist with the Marian Rejewski Laurel, an award given to individuals who raise the city’s profile on the international stage (2023).

 

[2026]

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