Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra – Feliks Nowowiejski : Piano Concerto in D minor “Slavic”, Op. 60, Cello Concerto, Op. 55 (2023) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra - Feliks Nowowiejski : Piano Concerto in D minor

Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra – Feliks Nowowiejski : Piano Concerto in D minor “Slavic”, Op. 60, Cello Concerto, Op. 55 (2023)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:15:44 minutes | 1,32 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Digital Booklet, Front Cover | © DUX Recording Producers

This new release from DUX presents Feliks Nowowiejski’s Piano Concerto in D Minor Op 60, and Slavic Cello Concerto, Op 55, performed here by Jacek Kortus (piano), and Bartosz Koziak (cello). Written in 1938, the Cello Concerto is dedicated to the Polish cellist, Dezyderiusz Danczowski. The very extensive, three movement work is a very rare example of such a composition in the Polish music of the inter-war period.

Stylistically, the piece belongs to “Slavic Modernism”: it combines liltingness, lyricism, and inspiration drawn from the Slavic body of motifs with the symphonic accomplishments of Albert Roussel. Full use of the orchestra and monolithic tutti are juxtaposed with chamber moments (here, the influence of German Modernists, whose music Nowowiejski also followed very closely, is easily discernible).

Frequent dialogues between the soloist and instruments of the orchestra, as well as emancipation of individual instrumental groups make the work formally close to the sinfonia concertante that enjoyed enormous popularity in the works of neo-Classicist composers of the 1930s.

Bartosz Koziak, the soloist, performs the concerto on the instrument that once belonged to Dezyderiusz Danczowski, the piece’s first performer.

The Piano Concerto was composed in 1941 and presents something of a sum of Nowowiejski’s oeuvre: fascination with modernism, which imbues the Cello Concerto and Symphony No. 2 (Praca i rytm – Labour and Rhythm), yields to the previous Slavic liltingness and the Neo-Romantic idiom.

The piano part, which in this Concerto presents itself in a truly imposing way, refers directly to the achievements of late-Romantic virtuosity. The formal structure brings to mind the classical form.

Tracklist:

1-1. Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra – Piano Concerto in D minor, Op. 60 “Slavic” : Allegro con fuoco (Allegro con fuoco) (10:16)
1-2. Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra – Piano Concerto in D minor, Op. 60 “Slavic” : Andantino. Poetry of Old Cracow (Andantino. Poetry of Old Cracow) (07:02)
1-3. Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra – Piano Concerto in D minor, Op. 60 “Slavic” : Maestoso (Maestoso – Vivace) (10:45)
1-4. Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra – Allegro con brio (Allegro con brio) (12:19)
1-5. Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra – Aria – Andante tranquillo (Aria – Andante tranquillo) (11:53)
1-6. Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra – Passacaglia – Allegro moderato (Passacaglia – Allegro moderato) (10:42)
1-7. Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra – Passacaglia – Allegro moderato – 2nd version (Passacaglia – Allegro moderato – 2nd version) (12:43)

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