Iwona Sobotka – Szymanowski: Orchestral Works (2024) [FLAC 24bit/96kHz]

Iwona Sobotka - Szymanowski: Orchestral Works (2024) [FLAC 24bit/96kHz] Download

Iwona Sobotka – Szymanowski: Orchestral Works (2024)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 55:42 minutes | 980 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Digital Booklet, Front Cover | © CD Accord

An orchestral debut, one of numerous song cycles and finally a short yet massive vocalinstrumental work. Years spanning their dates of inception: twelve. Significantly greater span – between the dates of their premieres, interspersed by greater and lesser historical events, most notably the First World War and both Russian revolutions, along with a series of personal trials and reappraisals of the artist’s spirituality, as well as bad luck and unfavourable circumstances. What – apart from the author – links these works? Seemingly very little, yet certain common threads can be found. Among them that each of the three works is linked to a degree with some kind of specific literary text. ‘Some kind of’ that is to say different in each instance. Songs of a Fairy Princess is a clear example of a ‘musical setting’. Symphony No. 3 subtitled ‘The Song of the Night’, has at its core the text of a Persian mystic, yet is fundamentally an instrumental work capable of being performed without voices. What about the Overture? In keeping with the spirit – or manner – of the era, the first version of the work was preceded by a poetic motto from the poem Witez Wlast by Tadeusz Micinski (1873-1918), a close friend of the composer, a cult figure in today’s slang and in yesterday’s stricter definition, a type of ‘magus’, and one of the leaders of Polish modernism at the turn of the 20th century. In the climactic point of his verse Micinski wrote about ‘the proud and brutal triumph’ of his hero, not quite the legitimate descendant of a Nietzschean superman. Later – like in Mahler’s Symphony No. 1 – the motto disappeared. Perhaps just as well. Triumph? Undoubtedly, even infused with pride, however bloody sacrificial stones or any brutality are nowhere to be found in the sunlit E major of the Overture – Rafal Augustyn (transl. by Anna Kaspszyk)

Tracklist:

1-01. NFM Wrocław Philharmonic – Concert Overture in E Major, Op. 12 (13:07)
1-02. Iwona Sobotka – No. 1, Samotny księży (04:25)
1-03. Iwona Sobotka – 6 Songs of the Fairy Tale Princess, Op. 31 (Version for Voice & Orchestra): No. 2, Słowik (02:52)
1-04. Iwona Sobotka – 6 Songs of the Fairy Tale Princess, Op. 31 (Arr. for Voice & Orchestra by Bruno Dozza): No. 3, Złote trzewiczi (02:46)
1-05. Iwona Sobotka – 6 Songs of the Fairy Tale Princess, Op. 31 (Version for Voice & Orchestra): No. 4, Taniec (01:46)
1-06. Iwona Sobotka – 6 Songs of the Fairy Tale Princess, Op. 31 (Arr. for Voice & Orchestra by Bruno Dozza): No. 5, Pieśń o fali (03:44)
1-07. Iwona Sobotka – 6 Songs of the Fairy Tale Princess, Op. 31 (Arr. for Voice & Orchestra by Bruno Dozza): No. 6, Uczta (02:17)
1-08. Iwona Sobotka – Symphony No. 3, Op. 27 “The Song of the Night”: Moderato assai (07:52)
1-09. Iwona Sobotka – Symphony No. 3, Op. 27 “The Song of the Night”: Vivace scherzando (07:32)
1-10. Iwona Sobotka – Symphony No. 3, Op. 27 “The Song of the Night”: Largo (09:17)

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