Showing posts with label Gorecki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gorecki. Show all posts

Saturday, December 6, 2014

Henryk Górecki - Today's Birthday part 3 - The Three String Quartets - The Royal String Quartet - Hyperion Records 2011

Henryk Gorecki's intriguing String Quartets were all commissions by the Kronos Quartet. 



Indeed, after experiencing "Already it is dusk", the first String Quartet (Op. 62), time has passed very quickly and one is left feeling that the composer has aimed to, and succeeded in, conveying something very precise, very finely sifted - and without your understanding quite why. In its quarter of an hour, just the right amount of musical material has led the listener to draw just the right conclusions about Gorecki's feelings when he wrote the piece and to marvel at his success in conveying them. That's because the Royals have understood the piece so well; and not been tempted for a minute to allow its surface contrasts - chiefly of tempo and dynamic - to be emphasized at the expense of substance. 

The Second Quartet, "Quasi una fantasia" dates from the same period but is over twice as long - and contains greater variety. As is to be inferred from that title, it too acknowledges the influence of Beethoven; surely Shostakovich's bleak quartet writing must have affected Górecki. This second quartet, though, is less uncompromising than the first. While retaining some of the latter's insistences, it boasts greater variety - though there is a great deal of ostinato writing - especially in the fourth and final movement - despite a preponderance of writing in unison. The markings also give a taste of what to expect: Deciso; Energico; Marcatissimo sempre; Molto espressivo; Molto appassionato; Sempre con grande passione; Molto marcato! This can be hard for players to interpret intelligently if all they have at their disposal is unbridled sawing. The Royals, for all their adherence to such instructions, never for a second allow such extremes to cloud or distort Gorecki's music. They are as aware of the arch and development of each movement, and the four movements in their places as part of the second quartet's statement as a whole, as they are of the need to promote precision and clarity in any one passage. And seem more bent on both than on spurious 'atmosphere' for atmosphere's sake. 

The Third Quartet - it, too, has a title from a poem (..."songs are sung"): a lamentation - is equally lugubrious. In five movements this time, it's but a little more relaxed. Slower and more downbeat, it needs to be listened to very carefully for its subtleties to be revealed. The third movement - the only fast one; and perhaps the one which most shows such influences as those of Shostakovich again - is more jovial and illustrates the side of Gorecki's character which responded to fun and lightheartedness. Once more, it would not have been enough for the players to drone and drown in woe. The content of the music, not its atmosphere, was always needed to convey what the composer wanted. 




The Royals' precision, attention to detail, refusal to linger or over-play anything and adeptness with nuance make this, too, a highly accomplished interpretation. It's as sure of foot as it is rich in well-digested interpretative strengths. The quartet also successfully suggests the slow but now discernible progression that Gorecki's chamber writing made over the almost 20 years during which he completed these three works. Although, when taken as a whole, they represent a new phase in the composer's writing, they too matured. Lastly, despite the musical influences mentioned, the Royals make this music Gorecki's own; and very enjoyable too.

This music's idiom, its preoccupations and unrelenting emphasis on implied severity and vehemence (though never musical shortcuts to achieve these) will be familiar to anyone who knows Gorecki's famous Third Symphony. But the slimmer and more fervent (though not so outwardly lachrymose) idiom of the string quartet needs finely-tuned and technically very sensitive touches from string players as exposed as the Royals are. They live up to the challenge admirably.


Enjoy!

Disc one
Górecki_The_3_String_Quartets(Disc1)Tzadik.zip

http://www42.zippyshare.com/v/8161715/file.html

Disc two
Górecki_The_3_String_Quartets(Disc2)Tzadik.zip

http://www19.zippyshare.com/v/732576/file.html


Henryk Górecki - Today's Birthday - Symphony No. 2 "Copernican" - Beatus Vir - Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra and Choir - Silesian Philharmonic Choir - Zofia Kilanowicz, Soprano - Antoni Wit

A major birthday today, Henryk Mikołaj Górecki  was one of Poland's greatest composers of all time, and I think it's safe to say one of the greatest of composers in general. Gorecki was born December 6th, 1933 and died November 12th, 2010. While "Beatus Vir" is 'relatively' well known, Gorecki's Symphony No. 2 "Copernican" is not.


The Symphony No. 2 is a major work; of that there can be no doubt whatsoever. The background to the composition was a commission from the Kosciuszko Foundation in New York to produce a piece of music to celebrate the half millennium of the great Polish astronomer Mikolaj Kopernik (1473-1543) - better known to the world as Copernicus.




What resulted was a work that touched the heavens but is also deeply rooted on earth. Gorecki uses a whole range of material to produce what can only be regarded as a timeless masterpiece.

What was Copernicus' achievement? Quite simply he was the first person (in 'modern times') to suggest that the world went round the sun. It is as simple as that. But with this straightforward discovery he turned the entire scientific and theological system upside down. It was the end of an era. Humankind was no longer the centre of the universe. Gorecki himself wrote, "…we became nothing. Hence the duality of the two movement symphony; first the whole mechanism, let us say, of the world, followed by contemplation". And that is exactly what the piece achieves.

The first movement opens with great clusters of sound; dense, mechanical and violent. It seems to describe the mechanical lumbering of the universe as it churns on its journey through time and space. There is a pause from this fearsome construction. A gentler version of this material gives the listener a respite from the opening pages. There are a number of digressions; many with unusual sonorities, before the return of the first theme complete with full choir.

The second movement makes use of soprano and baritone. Here the effect can at times be almost operatic. They sing long phrases at two octaves apart. But before this great song the baritone has to struggle to realise what the importance of the Copernican revolution actually is. Here there are intimations of the later Symphony No. 3. The second movement closes with what is the finest ending of almost any symphony. Time itself is made to stand still. One is reminded of the effect of certain pieces by Messiaen and the later school of minimalists. Yet there is a great beauty in these closing pages. Simple yet exceedingly complex. There is no doubt that the Symphony ends on an optimistic note. In spite of the great 'world shattering' discovery of Copernicus, God is still the God "who created the heavens and the earth ... the sun to rule by day, the moon and stars to rule by night". So in some respects nothing has changed.

Antoni Wit and his forces handle this symphony admirably. The sound scheme created by Gorecki straddles two worlds. The world of the Polish experimentalists such as Penderecki and Lutoslawski and the new 'accessible' style first really apparent in the "Pieces In Olden Style" (1962). The soprano is radiant and the baritone is able to infect the music with a sense of wonderment and discovery.

The coupling on this disc is the "Beatus Vir" that was composed to celebrate the 900th anniversary of the martyrdom of the Bishop of Cracow. The commission came from Karol Wojtyla, then Cardinal of Cracow but soon to become Pope John Paul II. The work is dedicated to the Pope. There is no doubt that this is an extremely accessible choral work; it would sound stunning in any one of the great cathedrals of Europe. Beatus Vir are words from the 33rd (Anglican 34th) Psalm - 'Blessed is the man who trusts in Him.' The work is characterized by straightforward melodic patterns and harmonies; lovely melodies that seem to be straight out of the churches' ecclesiastical music books. The pages are truly beautiful and perfect in every respect. Gorecki was a deeply religious man. He was brought up during the Nazi holocaust and the Communist repression that followed yet he retained his Catholicism. This tradition and this devotion shows tellingly in this great work.


Enjoy!

Górecki_Symphony_No._2_Beatus_Vir_Tzadik.zip

http://www59.zippyshare.com/v/10551534/file.html

Henryk Górecki - Symphony No.3 - Three Pieces in the Old Style - Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra, Antoni Wit - Zofia Kilanowicz, Soprano - Naxos 1994

As everyone and even their pet lemur already have *at least* one recording I'm sure of Gorecki's masterpiece the Symphony No. 3 ('Symphony of Sorrowful Songs') (1976), it needs absolutely no introduction. In fact I'm mainly posting this because I'm adding this to my iTunes library anyway, after ripping it years ago I put it only on an external hdd, always listening to the physical copy. The mp3s I'm uploading are from my amazon account, I also bought a copy there when my orig disc went missing for about a year. I mentioned this already but this recording is practically tied with the Dawn Upshaw disc on Nonesuch for me. Plus "Three Pieces in the Old Style"/"Three Olden Style Pieces" is also very well played. A must have disc, even if only one or two visitors benefit from it at this point!


The mp3 tags display different cover art (from amazon) then the disc I have, which is the above. The disc received it seems an album art "refresh" some years ago, Naxos has been doing this I've noticed
on quite a few releases. 

Enjoy (someone, someplace ;)

Gorecki_SymphonyNo.3_Three_Pieces_in_Old Style_Tzadik.zip

http://www7.zippyshare.com/v/80891860/file.html

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Henryk Górecki - Kleines Requiem für eine Polka - Harpsichord Concerto - Good Night

This Nonesuch disc from 1995 is a favorite of mine, especially for the rapid-fire and electrifying
Harpsichord Concerto, a relentlessly motoric and delightfully quirky work. "Kleines Requiem für eine Polka" (Little Requiem for a Polka...hmm) is an oddball piece, grave and intense yet with a bit of humor even to be had in the 3rd movement-with a touch of psychosis that is! Then there's "Good Night" for alto flute, piano, soprano (Dawn Upshaw no less) and 3 tam-tams. It's hard to know what
to make of this piece but somehow I love it's mystery. Much of it is very slow moving, with only the alto flute and piano; frankly those are the parts I like the most. Enjoy.




Górecki_Harpsichord_Concerto_Etc.zip

http://www19.zippyshare.com/v/80162779/file.html