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Upcoming Concerts

online streaming concerts in season 2024/25 or later

April 26, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Symphonic Concert

Sat, Apr 26, 2025, 18:00
Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, Warsaw Philharmonic Choir, Anna Sułkowska-Migoń (Conductor), Andrzej Ciepliński (Clarinet), Bartosz Michałowski (Chorus Director)
Anna Sułkowska-Migoń, photo: Joanna Gałuszka The contemplative nature of much of Ralph Vaughan Williams’s work is said to stem from his love of poetry. After his teacher introduced him to the visionary work of Walt Whitman, the collection Leaves of Grass became the composer’s ‘constant companion’ and the inspiration for Toward the Unknown Region, a song for choir and orchestra first performed in Leeds in 1907. One critic at the time hailed Williams as the leading British composer of the new generation. Futurist poetry, meanwhile, would suit the character of Carl Nielsen’s Clarinet Concerto. This work reveals the complex nature of the instrument, which, according to the composer, ‘can be at the same time warm-hearted and completely hysterical, as mild as balsam, and screaming like a tram-car on poorly-greased rails’. Having befriended the members of the Copenhagen Brass Quintet, he wished to compose a musical portrait for each of them, in the form of a solo concerto. Perhaps it was the broad phrases of Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy’s symphonic writing that led observers to associate many of his works with the landscapes of the countries he visited. His Symphony No. 3 in A minor, for example, supposedly evokes the dense fog-shrouded mountain landscapes of Scotland, which the composer visited in 1829. Yet the composer himself did not refer to such inspirations after completing the long journey of several years to completing this work, which received its Scottish nickname from well-meaning listeners.
May 24, 2025
Artistic depiction of the event

Symphonic Concert

Sat, May 24, 2025, 18:00
Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, Christoph König (Conductor)
Christoph König, photo: Christian Wind Who doesn’t like riddles? The history of music is full of them. Suffice it to mention mediaeval and Renaissance canons or Baroque rhetorical figures hidden on various levels of a score. There are also musical-philosophical puzzles for which there is no simple solution. Perhaps this kind of test was what Gustav Mahler had in mind when he wrote in a letter to an Austrian writer and musicologist: ‘My Sixth will pose riddles that only a generation that has absorbed and digested my first five symphonies may hope to solve’. Seemingly classical, in four movements, it is a monumental symphony in every respect. Written for the largest ensemble of the composer’s purely instrumental works, the Symphony No. 6 in A minor demands huge commitment from the performers and conductor, but does not spare the listener in any respect either. We do not find here too many of the catchy melodies familiar from Mahler’s previous works. There is another unsolved riddle associated with this work, concerning the order in which the movements should be played. Originally, the gloomy first movement was to be followed by the frenzied Scherzo and then the melancholic Andante moderato. However, the score published on the basis of the version from the first performance had the two inner movements switched by the composer. It was only after Mahler’s death that his wife Alma pointed out that the original order was correct!
June 14, 2025
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Closing Concert in the 2024/2025 Season

Sat, Jun 14, 2025, 18:00
Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, Warsaw Philharmonic Choir, Krzysztof Urbański (Conductor), Sophia Brommer (Soprano), Sophie Harmsen (Mezzo-Soprano), Martin Platz (Tenor), Andrew Moore (Bass-Bariton), Bartosz Michałowski (Chorus Director)
Krzysztof Urbański, photo: Marco Borggreve Ludwig van Beethoven was regarded as a revolutionary (but also an eccentric) in his time, while for subsequent generations he became the epitome of the Classical (and, for many, of what was finest in music). The turbulent reception history of his monumental Symphony No. 9 in D minor proves that the significance of a work is never defined once and for all. It has fascinated not only musicians and listeners with different tastes, but also representatives of different political options and adherents of extreme ideologies. Along the way, it has encountered both nationalism and hope-giving universalism. Today, one of the themes of the Symphony’s finale, considered by some of Beethoven’s contemporaries to be a sign of extravagance, is one of the most recognisable melodies in Western musical culture and is known as the anthem of the European Union.