Polish composer Andrzej Panufnik departed for Britain in 1954, when
the Communist experiment in Poland began to go sour. His music, though,
remained more Polish than British. At times he seems to have aimed at a
somewhat simpler version of the style of his friend Witold Lutoslawski,
with whom he played duets in Warsaw cafes during the darkest days of
World War II (concerts and other public gatherings being forbidden). His
later works often involve the use of small melodic cells, heavily
manipulated. Panufnik's Symphony No. 9 ("Sinfonia di Speranza") was
commissioned in 1986 for the 175th anniversary of the Royal Philharmonic
Society. The orchestra suggested a choral work on the model of
Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125. Panufnik rejected the
suggestion, but the 40-minute symphony, although not tonal, seems to
have characteristics of both the first movement and the chorale finale,
with its reworked and ultimately triumphal musical motif of hope (the
work's subtitle means "symphony of hope"). With a little help from the
booklet notes, which are largely quoted from Panufnik's own writings
about the work, the music is quite accessible. There is a six-note
"hope" motif, falling into two halves, that appears at the beginning of
the work in various melodic and rhythmic guises, falls away in a central
section that Panufnik calls "cold"), and returns for a stirring finale.
The performance here by the Konzerthausorchester Berlin under Lukasz
Borowicz captures the essentially Romantic quality of the work, despite
its modern harmonic world and theoretical basis, and CPO's sound
engineering, executed on the orchestra's home ground of the Konzerthaus
Berlin, is very strong. The very colorful Concertino for timpani,
percussion, and strings, with an unusually melodic timpani part
originally premiered by the great Evelyn Glennie, is a thoroughly
enjoyable curtain-raiser, and either work on the program here might
serve an orchestra well for contemporary programming that makes no
crossover concessions but should be accessible to a wide range of
audiences. by James Manheim
15.2.22
ANDRZEJ PANUFNIK : Speranza - Symphonic Works, Vol. 6 (Łukasz Borowicz, Konzerthausorchester Berlin) (2013) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
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