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Showing posts with label Krystof Penderecki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Krystof Penderecki. Show all posts

26.9.25

#ClassicalDiscoveries: The Podcast. Episode 018 - Penderecki: A Life in Four Quartets


Welcome to #ClassicalDiscoveries. Here is a little introduction to who we are and what we would like to achive at the first (or, in a nod to Bruckner, "double-zeroëth" episode). Your comments, criticism, and suggestions remain most welcome, of whatever nature they may be. Now here’s Episode 018, which I believe might be our best one yet! It attempts to cover the whole stylistic world of Krysztof Penderecki in just over 70 minutes! Fear not, that’s not the length of our podcast today, it’s the time it takes to perform all his compositions involving string quartet and string trio. And they conveniently trace the composer’s startlingly divergent stylistic output, from the wild-as-it-comes 1960 String Quartet No.1 via the masterly String Trio to the romanticism of the Third and beyond..




1.5.15

NSO's Cellists in Penderecki


available at Amazon
K. Penderecki, Concerto Grosso No. 1 (inter alia), I. Monighetti, A. Noras, R. Kwiatkowski, Warsaw NPO, A. Wit
(Naxos, 2008)
Charles T. Downey, At NSO, a rewarding introduction
Washington Post, May 1
The list of pieces performed for the first time by the National Symphony Orchestra under Christoph Eschenbach continues to grow. This week’s concerts introduce Krzysztof Penderecki’s Concerto Grosso for Three Cellos and Orchestra, a piece premiered in 2001, to the Kennedy Center Concert Hall. Three of the NSO’s cellists, from the often-overlooked middle of the section, took the solo parts Thursday night and brought rather different timbres and musical personae to this long, intricate and ultimately rewarding work.

Penderecki’s earlier, more experimental music is hard to love... [Continue reading]
National Symphony Orchestra
Music by Strauss, Penderecki, Beethoven
Kennedy Center Concert Hall

PREVIOUSLY:
Eschenbach's Beethoven: no. 3 and no. 7 in 2012, no. 5 in 2011, no. 9 in 2010, nos. 1 and 2 last year

NSO's cello section featured in not the best light in Villa-Lobos in March

18.12.12

Ionarts-at-Large: Penderecki's New Double Concerto


On November 15th and 16th, under the eyes of the composer, Julian Rachlin and Janine Jansen gave the German premiere of Krzysztof Penderecki’s brand new Double Concerto which had received its world premiere in Vienna just a few weeks earlier. The last time I heard Julian Rachlin première a work it was Giya Kancheli’s Ciaruscuro for Soloist, a concerto for violin and viola, but, as the name indicates, just for one player. Penderecki’s Double Concerto, inspired by, if not exactly modeled on, Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante, also opts for violin and viola, but two players. Rachlin picked the viola part which puts Janine Jansen on violin. They could just as well have traded the parts, given that Jansen, according to Rachlin, plays a mean viola, except she doesn’t because “she’s too lazy to carry a double case” (see “I Always Wanted to be a Cellist”, Playbill Arts) and sticks to the violin, instead.


Jansons’ Beethoven on ionarts:


Symphony No.3 / Shchedrin, Heiligenstadt Testament Fragments WP (20.12.08)

Symphonies Nos.6 & 2 / Misato Mochizuki, Nirai WP (17.12.12)

Symphonies Nos.7 & 8 / Widmann, Con Brio WP (24.10.08)

Symphony No.9 / Kancheli, Dixi, WP (7.11.09)



Symphony No.3 / Shchedrin, Self-Portrait Variations (20.10.12)
The 25 minute concerto begins as a soft conversation between the two instruments trading soft flageolets and pizzicatos back and forth. From tenderness it moves quickly to heated passion and after a while the full orchestra joins the two exposed soloists and their acerbic-yet-lyrical lines. It’s a melodic piece, technically challenging to both soloists, and often with pedal points in the low strings of the orchestra where the melodies go to the winds, especially the flute. With the BRSO audience on the slightly more adventurous side than that of the other orchestras in conservative Munich (except for the re-invented MKO), the work and the temperate tension it places on the ears found the approval of the audience. The presence of the composer always helps, of course.

Penderecki’s intricately and deeply romantic language came out even more overtly in the encore Rachlin and Jansen provided: the superb Chaconne, composed for Rachlin like the concerto, a work filled with the fragile beauty of woven silvery question marks and indeed one of the finest pieces for solo violin and viola I have heard.

Beethoven framed Penderecki. The Egmont Overture to open; grooving the groves and jumping the jumps, at its worst might have been pandering to the obvious, but it was also good fun with its military clatter-a-crack and the brash brass. The Seventh Symphony, unlike the Sixth a week earlier (review here), was 21st century Beethoven, the crisp and a lean kind, muscular, explosive and with edges, in this case also full bodied and with all hands on deck for the brawn necessary to fill the modern concert hall. Not that the Herkulessaal is modern, or that big, and ready for anything but mothballing. Only the comfortable new chairs might be worth salvaging if the city ever decides to bother with a proper venue for Symphonic classical music.

Wobbly winds and overly excited horns aside, a visibly and audibly healthy Jansons led the BRSO in the kind of performance that leaves one admiring the music and forget the interpretation rat race for a while. It wasn’t the most novel or even the most exciting approach, but it was just the thing to bring out of the majestic and the simple, deeply felt beauties of Beethoven in the moment.

6.9.10

Ionarts-at-Large: From the 2010 ARD Competition, Day 15 - Flute, Final



Winning Prizeless

Ivanna Ternay (Ukraine), who turned in the best concerto performance of the competition with her Mozart in the semi final. In the final on Sunday night, too, she emerged as the most promising, most satisfying of the participants, which was (at last) meaningful in the flute finale, because all four competitors were very good.

Competitors like Sooyun Kim, who started with the Penderecki concerto (written in 1992) with the Munich Radio Orchestra under Marko Letonja accompanying. Except that Penderecki’s work is not mere accompagnato, it’s really a concerto grosso with embedded woodwind concertino plus obbligato flute. The soloist blends seamlessly in with the woodwind chirping, once airborne he or she is then left alone for a bit before echoes of strings catch up with the flute again. Sparse textures with a little percussion include the flute more as part of its virtuosic tapestry rather than having the soloist in front of mere background music. It’s a difficult concerto to win an audience prize with, because it doesn’t go for effect, but musically it’s terrific. Sooyun Kim’s performance made the concerto come across nicely, but perhaps with the flute part just a wee too incidental and her style a little mechanical. Sooyun Kim came third and won the prize for the best interpretation of the commissioned work by Bruno Mantovani.


Le petite Rampal?

Loïc Schneider—a recurring regular at competitions, which goes to show how hard it must be to establish a successful solo career with that instrument, when only one, two top players per generation are needed—doesn’t know the word mechanical. He also doesn’t know the word restraint, as his showy, entertaining, but borderline flamboyant performances show. That 1970s sized white collar carefully arranged over his suit jacket made him look less the hipster flutist or cool cat than it made him look like he got stuck in a little sailor suit. [The photographer evidently reigned it in in the picture to the left.] The concerto he picked, Rodrigo’s (a Galway commission from 1978), is equally flashy, with many large jumps of an octave and more, and in every way the opposite from Penderecki’s piece. Take away the soloist from Penderecki’s concerto and you are left with a neat little concerto grosso. Take away the soloist from Rodrigo’s concerto and you are left with empty musical phrases and simplistic (if effective) string arrangements that barely come to life with some solo flute pasted on top. The music-per-minute ratio of the work is shockingly low, but the appeal to the audience undeniable. (Leave it to Galway to know what moves the masses.) The critique of the concerto is not to take away from Schneider’s awesome control he has over the instrument, or how admirably he articulated and navigated the empty phrase-cliffs. Only his tone, too airy for me, leaves room for some criticism. Mr. Schneider won the first and audience prize.

The youngest participant in the finale, Daniela Koch, choose another different work, one by Jindřich Feld. This one—which I had never heard before—was commissioned by Jean-Pierre Rampal, another flute-lion and it’s quite pleasing… a sort of mild-mannered Bartók-meets-Martinů, with a slow movement that sounds like the opening of Brahms First symphony looped. The finale has its stretches, seemingly incorporating two more slow movements, and if Koch couldn’t excite me here, I was perfectly willing to place blame on Feld more than the soloist, especially since her tone was particularly beautiful. And while Mlle. Koch might be eight years younger than Schneider, but with her technique she was hardly an outsider in the finale, having just last year left him behind herself as winner of the Kobe International Flute Competition. This time she came second.

ionarts-Coverage of the
ARD International Music
Competition 2010

Flute
Final
Semi Final

Cello
Final
Semi Final
First Round

French Horn
Final
Semi Final

Piano Duo
Final


At last came Ivanna Ternay, and thankfully she, too, performed the wonderful Penderecki concerto—and not entirely unexpectedly a notch above Mlle. Kim’s performance. A tone easily as solid as that of the orchestra’s clarinet, air-free and pure gives her an inviting quality that is even through all registers and dynamic gradations, but never employed in the service of sameness. She put the flute just a little further up front in the concerto, without changing the collaborative character of the concerto. Dynamic gradations were rich and varied; everything seemed even more alive. When I noticed that she performed with the music (I almost hadn’t, and my colleague didn’t at all, so absorbed was he in the music), I was delighted: What a gutsy move, what a wonderful nod to the realities of performance and memorization.

Music-Rules. Not.

As early as after the first round of cellists I had wanted to write a piece about how the ARD Competition could root out the idiotic habit of not playing from the score by requiring that notes be used, and in a way Ternay's performance seemed the answer even before I got to write about it: the sure-fire winner of the competition showed that having the notes in front of oneself could be a plus; showed that she wasn’t afraid of being mis-judged for using them. From Sviatoslav Richter to Alexandre Tharaud—great artists who insist(ed) on avoiding the circus trick of playing ‘from memory’—I sensed an air approval surrounding Ivanna Ternay. Alas, I didn’t count on the jury (who all ‘needed’ the score to follow all three concertos) and the rules of the ARD Music Competition. “No score may be used in the performance of a concerto.” Consequently, Ivanna Ternay got no prize at all. We learn from this the following: It is better to perform a work badly from memory (I’m not referring to Mlle. Kim, but a hypothetical bad performance) than to perform a work absolutely wonderfully… from the notes.

This, of course, is perverse. Sure, they love their rules, those Germans. Obviously more than music. But that much more than music? If the rule had been put in to prevent some amateurish, insecure performance of a concerto (hello, cello semi finals!), then it might be vaguely understandable. But as it is, isn’t it just the dead-on confirmation that music competitions are about everything, just not music?! How can perhaps the most musical, most successful performer be excluded on grounds of using the music? Rules have been bent in the past at the ARD competition; when the organizers didn’t like the jury’s decision, for example, they created a new special prize to suit their own purpose. It would be hard to believe that the rules could not have been bent here, too.* More importantly, the rule should be changed. Not only is it not at all desirable that people need to perform works—new or old, accompanied or solo—from memory. It is actually undesirable that they be taught this post-Liszt glamorama circus trick as somehow being essential to proper music etiquette. I doubt that any competition, not the ARD or any other, will any time soon go the desirable step and suggest their participants use music under all circumstances, but I do have some hope that the organizers here (a wonderful bunch, really) realized the mistake that the current rules on their books have ‘forced’ the jurors to make.

As far as Mlle. Ternay is concerned? May her no-prize be something akin to Ivo Pogorelich’s no-prize at the Chopin Competition (without the eventual descent toward total dysfunction, of course). As for the rest of the players, it’s almost unfair that no-prize should overshadow their achievements, seeing how they—all six flutists that got as far as the semi final, really—were the elite of the 2010 Competition.




All pictures courtesy ARD International Music Competition, © Sigi Müller (modified where deemed necessary)

* Edit. Two further points: In last year’s violin final, the performers also played from the notes, upon explicit request from the conductor (smart man). So far, so good, but someone in the audience saw fit to launch an official complaint with the federation of music competitions, which in turn officially admonished the ARD Competition.
And Mlle Ternay was given that same BR Klassik prize I mentioned as having been created specially to suit their purpose. That redeems the competition on two counts: namely that they obviously felt they really could not bend the rules this time and that they obviously tried to ameliorate the situation with their own prize. Still, now I we can wonder why the anti-musical rule wasn’t changed last year, when they knew it could be potential trouble.

19.12.08

Ionarts at Large: Penderecki conducts Penderecki


Flanked by substantial choral forces to the left and right above the stage and another 33 singes in front of him, Krystof Penderecki took the stage at the Philharmonic Hall of the Gasteig on November 11th to the new sounds of Mikłai Zieleńsky, a Polish Renaissance composer born somewhere around 1550 who probably died some time after 1615, in a place also unknown. We only know that he existed at all, because he left an Offertorium (published in Venice in 1611), from which the 8 minute Magnificat, that Penderecki presented, was culled.

available at Amazon
Penderecki, 7 Gates of Jerusalem, Warsaw National Philharmonic Orchestra / Wit
Renaissance polyphony is a kind of music so rarely heard outside special-interest early music concerts that is a real tonic to ears otherwise offered orchestral fare from no earlier than the late classical period. The waiflike beauty of the music, and the full surround sound of the three choirs, far outweighed the occasionally forced, squeaky tones that some of the Philharmonic Chorus’ sopranos emitted. Something that was true in equal measure for the borderline new-age, pretty and simplistic, “Amen” op.34 of Gorecki, circling through the fifths on one word.


With three choirs, brass chorales from the wings, the lowest strings, and a large gong, the Seven Gates of Jerusalem open overwhelmingly: a combination of brute force, movie-music, religiosity, severity, and a dash of Aida. As would be a secret to no one who has witnessed the curious powers of musical coercion by works like Mahler’s 8th, Harvegal Brian’s “Gothic”, or a handful of Shostakovich symphonies (the 11th, for example), sheer power works. And it works here, too, organized around seven movements and dominant seven-note themes.

The Lauda, Jerusalem, Dominum makes use of two “Tubaphones”, a Penderecki development based on an New Zealand aborigines’ instrument that now looks like toppled anti-aircraft guns ready to massacre the first three rows of listeners with one salvo each. Several very long plastic tubes are played with felt-covered fly swatters – the result being ½ whack the mole, ½ Blue Man Group accessory. The six soloists are musical also-rans when compared to the importance of the choir, and while the latter just needed to be able to sing properly, and loudly, without sounding ugly (which they achieved), the singers distinguished themselves a bit more, most notably so the Finnish tenor Jorma Silvasti.