![]() Polish contemporary music Between the two world wars, most Polish composers were associated with the Association des Jeunes Musiciens Polonais, founded in 1926 in Paris. They studied with Vincent d'Indy, Paul Dukas, Albert Roussel and Nadia Boulanger. The dominant style in Polish music was then – neoclassicism, of which Grażyna Bacewicz became the most eminent representative. Shortly before World War II, Witold Lutosławski, Roman Palester and Andrzej Panufnik presented their first works (Lutosławski and Panufnik – in the photo on the right). The 17th Festival of the International Society for Contemporary Music (ISCM), organised in Warsaw and Cracow in April 1939, opened up brilliant opportunities for Polish music, but with the outbreak of the war, these hopes were shattered. Polish music was methodically eradicated as an expression of the national identity, and Chopin performances were banned. Concerts were held only in the underground.![]() The 1970s marked the beginning of a trend which rejected radicalism in sound while referring more and more openly to tradition. Even earlier, in 1965, Krzysztof Penderecki, recently made famous by his avant-garde compositions such as Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima, revealed his new artistic personality in St Luke Passion. It was, however, Henryk Mikołaj Górecki’s Symfonia pieśni żałosnych [Symphony of Sorrowful Songs] that became the symbol of this change. Its first performance in 1977 was a shock to Polish audiences, whereas fifteen years later the Symphony caused a sensation among audiences throughout the world; today, it is still the most popular work written by a contemporary Polish composer. The younger generation of composers, with Eugeniusz Knapik and Paweł Szymański, followed in the masters’ footsteps, drawing heavily upon the universal tradition of European music, which they placed into their own, late 20th-century perspective. |
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