• Quick Tour
  • Media Room
  • Composers
  • Musical Crossroads
  • Quick Tour
  • Composers
  • Media Room
  • Musical Friends
  • Education
  • Glossary
  • Musical Crossroads
  • Project Partners
  • Contact Us
  • Credits
  • Mondriaan Fonds
    Mondriaan Fonds
Site by: Rytm Interactive
Kazimierz Serocki

Kazimierz Serocki

open profile
  • Music
  • Video
  • Images
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 / Poesies

Poesies

Concert recording of Poesies at the 13th Warsaw Autumn Festival, 1969. 

  1. Unknown language
  2. Stream
  3. Nothing
  4. Chicks

 

Poesies (1969) for soprano and chamber orchestra

Kazimierz Serocki’s Poesies were born out of a hitherto unsatisfied need to find the right balance between the verbal and instrumental layers of a musical work. The composer used for the purpose Stanisław Różewicz’s poems (Unknown language, Nothing, Stream and Chicks), which he stripped off their titles and arranged in a sequence highlighting the figure and personality of the lyrical subject. In addition, he combined the poetic content with an impressive array of musical means reflecting the idea of “composing with sound colours”.

The work is thus full of varied sounds and their mixtures, which vividly correspond to the poetic images and reflections. To an encounter of two strangers (Unknown language), to an attempt to hold on to memories of childhood against the current stream of events (Stream), to philosophical and linguistic reflections on the word “nothing” (Nothing) or, finally, to a cheerful image of bird birth (Chicks).

Listening to Serocki’s Poesies, we follow changing expressive states, from mystery, reverie and lyricism to drama, while the “theatricality” of the orchestration serves to make the verbal text more comprehensible. After the premiere of the work at the 1969 Warsaw Autumn (Różewicz’s poems translated by Karl Dedecius and set to music by Serocki were sung by Dorothy Dorrow) Ulrich Dibelius wrote:

The listener could observe the harmony between the text and the music which was as clear as it was fascinating. Wreathed in musical aura, in a specific climate the two could move freely within it. Taking the work as a whole, we might say that the poetic pieces, the music and text, follow each other in this order: main part, scherzo, moderato and the finale. 

 [Ulrich Dibelius, Poesies of Kazimierz Serocki, Polish Music 1970 no. 1, p. 12]
Discover in Graph
date:
23.09.1969
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:
Jan Krenz
performers names:
Zespół Kameralny Teatru Wielkiego w Warszawie (orchestra); Dorow Dorothy (soprano); Krenz Jan (conductor)
text author:
Stanisław Różewicz