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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
Piano Sonata (1955)
Title page of the manuscript of Piano Sonata. Warsaw University Library. Courtesy of the Polish Music Information Centre
Kazimierz Serocki / Piano Sonata

Piano Sonata

  1. Ingiatamente
  2. Veloce
  3. Elegiaco
  4. Barbaro

Piano Sonata (1955)

Together with Sinfonietta for two string orchestras, Sonata for piano, which was added to Kazimierz Serocki’s catalogue in 1955, crowns the first period in his creative journey. The piece comprises primarily neoclassical and virtuoso elements and when it comes to important stylistic inspirations – “the percussiveness of Prokofiev, barbarism of Bartók and Szymanowski’s nationalism.” (Humphrey Searle quoted by Bogusław Maciejewski in Twelve Polish Composers, p. 121).

However, these idioms are transformed so much here that they make up a completely new, original quality. Sonata testifies, on the one hand, to Serocki’s interest in sound and on the other – to his efforts to renew a traditional musical form. During the piece the melody and harmony are often transformed into “purely sonorous values” – dynamic accents or ethereal murmurs, typical of Serocki’s later sonoristic works.  In addition, the four movements of the Sonata are not just creative transformations of the “classic” sonata-, variation- or ternary form, but also four different “characters” – restless and turbulent in Inquietamente, quick and ethereal in Veloce, elegiac and calm in Elegiaco as well as barbarian and wild in Barbaro (the title of this movement is a direct reference to Bartók). This is a clear foretaste of Serocki’s later concepts concerning the expressive and emotional content of a musical work.

Worthy of note is also the excellence of the piano texture in the Sonata, which is idiomatic for the instrument and does not let us forget that the composer was also an exceptionally talented pianist.

Discover in Graph
date:
31.10.1979
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:
Matacz Jolanta (piano)