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Łukasz Borowicz
December 14, 2024
Artistic depiction of the event

Symphonic Concert

Sat, Dec 14, 2024, 18:00
Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, Warsaw Philharmonic Choir, Łukasz Borowicz (Conductor), Emanuel Ax (Piano), Bartosz Michałowski (Chorus Director)
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.
December 13, 2024
Artistic depiction of the event

Symphonic Concert

Fri, Dec 13, 2024, 19:30
Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, Warsaw Philharmonic Choir, Łukasz Borowicz (Conductor), Emanuel Ax (Piano), Bartosz Michałowski (Chorus Director)
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.
November 28, 2024
Artistic depiction of the event

NOSPR / Borowicz / Le Sage / The French musical legend

Thu, Nov 28, 2024, 19:30
Łukasz Borowicz (Conductor), NOSPR, Éric Le Sage (Piano)
French music has prided itself on its separateness for ages. In the 1st half of the 19th century, it became widely associated with neoclassicism - a current that valued balance, clarity of form, emotional frugality and a sense of humour modelled on the 18th-century Viennese classicism, over the excessive exuberance and overexpression of the late romantic period. An advocate of neoclassicism and a legendary teacher of younger generations of composers, many of whom followed this path, was Nadia Boulanger. Her Paris classroom was a shrine nearly all young Polish composers of the interwar generation considered worthy of a pilgrimage. The most prominent one of those was Grażyna Bacewicz, whose own student, Piotr Moss, followed into her footsteps, also honing his skill in Paris. Those were already the final years of Boulanger’s activity, but meeting her left such a strong mark on the Polish composer’s creative imagination that he has now dedicated his latest piece, Mademoiselle – hommage à Nadia Boulanger, to his professor. This year, the composer, who continuously maintains close ties to the city of Paris, celebrates his 75th birthday and 55 years of artistic activity. His work will be performed alongside one by Boulanger herself.Albert Roussel – the greatest French composer of symphonic works in the first half of the 20th century – did not submit to the influence of neoclassicism entirely, yet he certainly shared the current’s enthusiasts’ passion for clear form, regular themes and prominent rhythms. The ballet Bachus and Ariadne is one of his most magnificent scores. The greatest hit of the concert, however, is going to be Claude Debussy’s 1894 Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun – an earnest of the French separateness of the century to come.Adam SuprynowiczConcert duration (intermission included): approximately 100 minutes
September 18, 2024
Artistic depiction of the event

Bruckner's works for the liturgical Gebrauch Mass No. 1 in D minor and further compositions

Wed, Sep 18, 2024, 20:00
Philharmonie Berlin, Main Auditorium (Berlin)
Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin (Orchestra), Łukasz Borowicz (Conductor), Johanna Winkel (Soprano), Catriona Morison (Mezzo-Soprano), Martin Mitterrutzner (Tenor), Arttu Kataja (Bariton), Sebastian Heindl (Organ), RIAS Kammerchor (Choir)
2024 is Bruckner year. This makes the classical world think first and foremost of his symphonies and his monumental religious works. By contrast, his works for liturgical use are much less well-known. The RIAS Kammerchor embarks on a voyage of discovery together with the Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin and, in addition to a number of shorter works, presents the Mass No 1 in D minor – with the aim of rediscovering the sonic experience of the period in which it was written by using a markedly slimmed-down cast.