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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 / The Gnomes. Miniatures for ...

The Gnomes. Miniatures for children

The Gnomes performed by Kazimierz Serocki.

  1. Krakowiak
  2. Kujawiak
  3. Mazurek
  4. Piosenka
  5. Walczyk
  6. Kołysanka
  7. Oberek

The Gnomes (1953). Miniatures for children for piano

This piano cycle composed by Serocki is still used in the education of the youngest pianists. It was dedicated to Maria Drzewiecka, who was the future composer’s first piano teacher. The story of the piece began in 1949, when Serocki compiled a list of his compositions for the Polish Composers’ Union. Among them he proudly listed a “children’s suite” for piano entitled Five Gnomes, which consisted of Polka, Lullaby, Mazurka, Waltz and March. Interestingly, Serocki, who at that time was very active as a concert pianist, included this children’s suite, alongside great works by Bach, Chopin, Beethoven or Ravel, in the programmes of recitals he gave in Poland and abroad.

It may have been his concert practice that inspired him to rework the cycle and expand it to seven parts: Krakowiak, Kujawiak, Mazurka, Song, Little Waltz, Lullaby and Oberek. He completed the cycle in 1953 and soon recorded it for the Polish Radio (the recording can be heard on the MIM website).

The various parts of the piano Gnomes are primarily stylizations of characteristic Polish dances, which are interspersed with easy, cheerful little pieces (Song, Little Waltz, Lullaby). The dances have metres, tempos and rhythms typical of their folk originals, and the entire cycle is based on a well thought-out dramatic design, characterized by expressive variability and strong finale – the lively Oberek.

Serocki’s Gnomes proved to be such an attractive teaching material that in 1975 the composer arranged the miniatures for various instrumental trios, including recorder trio and guitar trio.

Discover in Graph
date:
31.03.1953
author:
Kazimierz Serocki
contributor(s):
Polish Radio
leading topic:
audio recording
IPR status:
in copyright, text: CC BY-NC
copyright holder:
Polish Radio/ FINA
performers names:
Kazimierz Serocki (piano)