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Kazimierz Serocki

Kazimierz Serocki

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Pianophonie. Guided listening
Pianophonie. Guided listening
00:32:27
Poesies
00:11:38
Segmenti
00:07:12
Symphony No. 1
00:28:49
Eyes of the Air
00:10:28
Musica Concertante
00:18:08
Piano Sonata
00:18:12
Symphonic Frescoes
00:13:14
Continuum
00:11:08
Fantasia elegiaca
00:16:17
Fantasmagoria
00:16:14
Impromptu fantasque
00:12:03
The Gnomes. Miniatures for children
00:07:31
Episodes
00:12:13
Sinfonietta
00:14:18
Dramatic Story
00:16:57
Concerto for trombone
00:21:00
Arrangements (version for 1 recorder)
00:07:51
Arrangements (version for 2 recorders)
00:07:57
Arrangements (version for 3 recorders)
00:07:40
Arrangements (version for 4 recorders)
00:09:30
Pianophonie
00:32:32
Ad Libitum
00:18:10
A piacere
00:07:08
Swinging music
00:03:56
Suite of Preludes
00:10:55
Kazimierz Serocki / Symphony No. 1

Symphony No. 1

Symphony No. 1 (1952) for orchestra

Kazimierz Serocki’s oeuvre contains only two symphonies, both written in his early years as a composer, a period associated with the work of Group 49 (founded by Serocki, Tadeusz Baird and Jan Krenz) as well as political determinants characteristic of the era. Symphony No. 1 was the composer’s first work to be praised by Polish music critics as a work close to the ideal – so desirable in the aesthetics of socialist realism – of balance between form and expression.

Ideologized interpretations of this music stressed its dramatic emotionality, honesty and openness of artistic expression devoid of “oblique statements and dark recesses” (Tadeusz Marek, “Grupa 49 (prĂ³ba charakterystyki”), Muzyka 1953 no. 5–6, pp. 49–51), and the way in which thematic conflicts were shaped provided the critics with arguments to call the work a “symphony of struggle”.

Indeed, Symphony No. 1 is a work that is not without a tendency, characteristic of Serocki’s other pieces from the 1950s, to modernize the sound language (see e.g. Suite of Preludes). It is based on a classic structural pattern. The first movement (Maestoso) is a clash of two themes played, respectively, by the strings and the brass. The second movement (Scherzo) is an artistic stylization of the Polish dance oberek, captivating with its colour and rhythm extravaganza. The third movement (Espressivo) contains a lyrical folk theme played by the violins against an ostinato (staccato) accompaniment provided by the piano as well as the violas and cellos. In the finale (Appassionato) the main theme based on note repetitions and small rhythmic values is confronted with a fanfare-like secondary theme introduced by the French horns. The entire last movement resembles a cheerful march and provides a striking ending to Serocki’s first symphonic work, which is also his first composition published in print.

It was premiered during Group 49’s concert in Warsaw on 30 May 1952. 

Discover in Graph
date:
24.04.1992
author:
Kazimierz Serocki
contributor(s):
Polish Radio
leading topic:
audio recording
IPR status:
in copyright, text: CC BY-NC
copyright holder:
Polish Radio/ FINA
conductor name:
Janusz Przybylski
performers names:
Wielka Orkiestra Symfoniczna Polskiego Radia i Telewizji in Katowice (orchestra); Przybylski Janusz (conductor)