News
King Roger in Covent Garden
2015-05-04
On 1 May 2015 the Karol Szymanowski's 1926 opera King Roger got its Covent Garden premiere.
David Karlin: The founding fathers would be every bit as astonished at the sound world that Szymanowski creates. The orchestral timbre is exceptionally dense and multilayered, engulfing you in ocean waves that roll and break. The instrumentation is rich, but where many composers use complex instrumentation to bring out individual instruments, most of Szymanowski’s music in Król Roger does the opposite, using blended sounds that are constantly shifting. You don’t hear the individual horn or clarinet line: you just feel enveloped by the totality of the orchestral sound.
http://bachtrack.com/review-krol-roger-holten-pappano-kwiecien-royal-opera-london-may-2015
Mark Valencia: And what a score it is – and how searingly Antonio Pappano and the Royal Opera forces deliver it. In one of the great opening nights at Covent Garden everyone gave a red-hot performance, even Mariusz Kwiecień in the gruelling title role despite (so we were told, though we'd never have guessed) suffering from a cold. Singing for once in his native language, the Polish baritone was gripping and emotionally engaged through some Berg-like passages of introspection until the King's – and the opera's – ravishingly clear-hued climax.
http://www.whatsonstage.com/london-theatre/reviews/krl-roger-royal-opera-house_37728.html
Rupert Christiansen: Szymanowski imbues the music with a magnificent oriental archaism: the influence of his Hungarian neighbour Bartok may be salient, but the flavour is more voluptuously romantic than formally modernist. Much of the vocal writing is melismatic and incantatory, threaded through sumptuously coloured orchestral tapestries that shimmer and glow. Nothing in the score is more beautiful than the spectral nocturne that opens the final scene; nothing more exciting than the orgy than brings the second scene to its climax. Antonio Pappano’s conducting of its intensities is masterly, and the orchestra luxuriates in them.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/opera/11576865/Krol-Roger-Royal-Opera-House-review-a-major-triumph.html
There are five performances at Covent Garden from 6 to 19 May, the performance on 16 May will be live-streamed.
Most popular:
The esteemed American-Canadian jazz musician Michael Bates, his Acrobat Ensemble and the Lutosławski Quartet will perform three concerts in Poland in November. The repertoire will include material recorded by the musicians on the album METAMORPHOSES: VARIATIONS ON LUTOSŁAWSKI, released by ANAKLASIS in the REVISIONS series.
The artists have already successfully presented it at Lincoln Center and Barbès Jazz Club in New York. In autumn 2024 we will have the opportunity to hear them live for the first time in Poland: 14.11 - Krakow, 15.11 - Lublin, 17.11 - Wroclaw.
The Fryderyk Chopin Institute in Warsaw invites to the inaugural session of the biennial International Digital Musicology Conference, which will be held 23–25 October 2024, at the Fryderyk Chopin Institute in Warsaw, Poland. The conference focuses on the integration of digital technologies into musicological research, with a special emphasis on introducing digital tools and methods to the Polish academic community, where digital musicology has not yet been widely adopted.
It’ s like a game. The memory game, thanks to which you can look at a very ordinary family from an extraordinary perspective. ALBUM RODZINNY [Family album] – an opera by Jerzy Kornowicz with a libretto by Michał Rusinek – is another premiere of the ANAKLASIS label this year. This time, the record brand is expanding its audience to include the youngest listeners. The album will be released on 21st June.
Time passes constantly, changing the world and its soundscape around us. The title IL TEMPO PASSA may be both a reflection on the impermanence of life, world and things and a piece of advice to enjoy the moment. The latest album by ANAKLASIS presents Joanna Wnuk-Nazarowa’s cameral and symphonic works from recent years. Premiere on 28 May 2024, on the composer’s 75th birthday.
It is a musical-literary tale about a quest for identity, truth, and for what makes us human. The new stage work by Aleksander Nowak – which is, at the same time, Radek Rak’s operatic debut – explores the sources of good and evil, fusing reality with mythology and steering towards ‘the left-hand side of the world’. The authors spin a tale about the dual human nature. THE TALE OF THE HEART. FAVOLA IN MUSICA – the album that presents their joint project – will go on sale on 6th October.
Spectacularly successful as Ludomir Różycki’s music was in his lifetime, it is seldom programmed nowadays. All the same, such remarkable art could hardly fall into utter oblivion. It has attracted and fascinated excellent jazz pianist Kuba Stankiewicz, who has translated it into the language of jazz. The effects have been recorded and released on ANAKLASIS label’s most recent album, INSPIRED BY LUDOMIR RÓŻYCKI, which goes on sale as of 28th August.
PWM Edition is entering the execution phase of the revitalisation of its Warsaw department. With the commencement of the renovation and the implementation of the assumptions of the architectural design, the Hire Department and the editorial office of “Ruch Muzyczny” are moving to a temporary headquarters at 19 Wiejska Street, Warsaw.
This is by no means a piece about the centuries-long Polish-German conflict. It is, instead, a tale of impossible love, of tragic conflict between personal happiness and the common good.
PWM Edition resumes cooperation with the Italian publishing house Ricordi, as well as with its international partners forming Universal Music Publishing Classics & Screen. This means that rentals of orchestral materials from the catalogues of all publishing houses belonging to Classics & Screen is carried out in Poland by Dział Zbiorów Nutowych (Sheet Music Department) of PWM.