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Classical concerts featuring
Katarzyna Jawor

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Upcoming Concerts

Concerts featuring Katarzyna Jawor in season 2024/25 or later

January 29, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Memoirs of a Geisha and other gems of cinematography

Wed, Jan 29, 2025, 19:30
Katarzyna Jawor (Violin), Karolina Szefer-Trocha (Violin), Dawid Jadamus (Viola), Łukasz Frant (Cello), Joanna Galon-Frant (Piano)
This is the essence of chamber musicianship – we play what we like. We play for pleasure - our own and that of our listeners. The idea of chamber music is summarised in the Italian term da camera, which means playing for a chamber, a room, or a small hall. It denotes semi-private, intimate music. It is lovely when such a mood is carried into the concert hall. Today, there is an opportunity to do so because we love the tunes we already know, and there are plenty of them here. Most listeners will recognise Sting's Roxanne, Satie's Gnosienne or Barber's Adagio. Exactly like in the programme Name That Tune, after two sounds, we will already know what's coming next. Concert hall goers, on the other hand, will once again be seduced by gripping Schubert's Andante or Arvo Pärt's Fratres. Lovers of cinematic melodramas will get a handful of John Williams tunes, while refined musical gourmets will get Glass's Mishima, Vasks' Meditation and Schnittke's waltz. Not a single note goes to waste here! Adam Suprynowicz
March 20, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

American Minimalism

Thu, Mar 20, 2025, 19:30
Beata Ogryzek (Violin), Katarzyna Jawor (Violin), Aleksander Daszkiewicz (Viola), Natalia Kurzac-Kotula (Cello)
American minimalism stems from the assumptions of experimental music – firstly, we create a working model and see what happens when we repeat it, gradually introducing variations. The perception of the human brain tricks us, which is why such procedures result in mesmerising auditory illusions. Philip Glass and Steve Reich are the founding fathers of this popular genre. Glass's quartets are more classical and never evade romantic phrases or recitative melodies. Steve Reich's Different Trains, written in 1988, on the other hand, is a classic of the genre and undoubtedly one of the masterpieces of the 20th century. During the Second World War, a few-year-old Reich used to travel by train between New York and Los Angeles, where his separated parents lived. He later realised that if he had lived in Europe, as a Jew, he could have gone to a concentration camp. In his harrowing work, the music mimics the shape of sentences played back from a recording taken from the wartime memories of Jews from both continents. Adam Suprynowicz Concert duration: approximately 90 minutes