Chicago
Philharmonic Proudly Celebrates Polish Classical Music with Ground-Breaking
Five Day Festival
As Chicago’s vibrant Polish community celebrates the 100 year anniversary
of the regaining of Polish independence, Chicago Philharmonic honors the rich
music traditions of Poland and the importance of the community in the cultural
history of Chicago in Chicago
Philharmonic Festival: Poland 2018, November 7-11.The ambitious
festivalwill present world-class Polish musicians and soloists, Polish-Chicago
music and arts organizations, music from Polish composers, the Chicago
Philharmonic orchestra, and Artistic Director Scott Speck across five concerts
presented in five days throughout the city of Chicago culminating in a free
performance on November 11 – the day celebrating the 100th year of
independence and Armistice Day. The festival comes following a tour of 10 Chi
Phil musicians to Poland in April of this year and this is the first project of
its kind from the organization, with plans to celebrate Chicago’s many diverse
communities with similar festivals in the future.
The
festival opens on November 7 with a guest performance from award-winning Polish
string ensemble The Silesian Quartet
performing at Fourth Presbyterian Church in downtown Chicago. The quartet is
known for their skilled, enthusiastic interpretations of Polish repertoire both
timeless and contemporary; “The highest level of performance. They play like
devils.” (NRC Handelsblad)The
ensemble will showcase their stunning textural range and artistry in masterful
20th century string quartets. Featured is trailblazing female
composer Grażyna Bacewicz’s driving,
expressive String Quartet No. 4, written in post-WWII Poland in 1951; String
Quartet No. 2 by Karol Szymanowski,
who took inspiration for the piece from the folk music of the Tatra Mountains
in southern Poland; and String Quartet No. 1 by Henryk Górecki, which is centered around the 16th
century Polish church song “Already it is Dusk”. Rounding out the program is
String Quartet No. 3 (“Leaves of an Unwritten Diary”) by beloved Polish
composer Krzysztof Penderecki.
Introducing the concert and the festival is Chicago Philharmonic Executive Director Donna Milanovich,
who traveled with Chicago Philharmonic musicians and Artistic Director Scott
Speck to Poland in April 2018.
On
November 8, the festival continues at the stunning St. John Cantius Church (named “The Most Beautiful Church in
America” in 2016) with a solo performance from Kraków born and raised organ
master Andrzej Białko. Recipient of
the Polish Medal for Merit to Culture - Gloria Artis, Białko will perform organ
music from Poland, Eastern Europe, and North America on the church’s historic
92-year old Casavant Frères pipe organ. The program will begin with Prelude and
Fugue on B-A-C-H by Hungarian composer Franz
Liszt as the composer explores the popular B-A-C-H motif in music. Also
featured are pieces by Polish composers including church and organ composer Mieczysław Surzyński, living sacred
choral music composer Paweł Łukaszewski,
and a Christmas Carol-inspired fantasy Christmas
Eve on Wawel Hill by Feliks Nowowiejski.
Also performed is an excerpt from prominent Czech composer Petr Eben’s“Job” for Organ cycle. In addition to these Eastern
European composers, Białko completes the program with English-Canadian Healy Willan’sFive Preludes, influenced
by the composer’s love of Gregorian chants. Speaking before the concert is
Director of Liturgy and Music Chaplain of the Patrons of Sacred Music at St.
John Cantius and enthusiastic supporter of the festival, Father Scott A. Haynes S.J.C.
In
partnership with the Polish Museum of
America, the Chicago Philharmonic will present jazz pianist Piotr
Orzechowski on November 9 at the museum in an evening event with music, food,
and drink. Orzechowski will bring his 24
Preludes and Improvisations, based on Johann Sebastian Bach’s pivotal 24
Preludes and Fugues. The first ever Pole to win the prestigious 1st
Prize at Montreux Jazz Festival, Orzechowski’s 24 Preludes and Improvisations
allow his extraordinary composition and improvisational talents to shine. Richard Owsiany, President of the
Polish Museum of America, will speak before the concert.
On
Saturday, November 10, the festival’s first full orchestral concert, Celebrate Polonia, will take place at
the Copernicus Center. Consul General of the Republic of Poland in
Chicago Piotr Janicki will introduce this concert. Joined by young piano
virtuoso Łukasz Krupiński, the
Chicago Philharmonic and Principal Conductor Scott Speck will perform legendary Polish pianist, composer, and
politician Ignacy Jan Paderewski’s
Piano Concerto and Frédéric Chopin’s dazzling, technically demanding Andante spianato et grande polonaise
brillante for solo piano and orchestra.Also featured is Karol Szymanowski’s Concert Overture,
masterfully orchestrated in the style of the composer’s contemporary Richard
Strauss. Finishing the program is the Tragic Overture by 20th
century composer Sir Andrzej Panufnik,
composed in secret during World War II and later reconstructed by the composer
from memory after the score was lost in the devastating fires of the Warsaw
Uprising. Pre-concert entertainment will be provided by the Lira Ensemble singers, Chicago’s
premier Polish music ensemble.
November
11 2018 marks the 100th anniversary of the regaining of Polish
Independence and Armistice Day. Chicago Philharmonic will join in the worldwide
celebration with a free performance of Polish composer Wojciech Kilar’s Missa pro pace (Concert
for Peace).Kilar has
composed for symphony orchestra, chamber ensembles, and soloists, but is best
known for his film score compositions including those for The Pianist and Francis Ford Coppola’s Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Kilar’s 2001 Mass, Missa pro pace, was composed for a full symphony orchestra, mixed
choir, organ, and a quartet of vocal soloists. The piece is inspired by the
composer’s deeply spiritual background, and was performed in the presence of
Pope John Paul II, the first Polish pope. The performance will be presented in a
liturgical setting in Chicago’s stunning St.
Hyacinth Basilica. Chicago Philharmonic will be joined by Kilar expert
conductor Marek Mośand guest vocal
soloists. Also included in the program is the world premiere of Fanfara by Krysztof Penderecki, commissioned by PWM edition and being performed
in 11 cities around the world all on November 11.Consul General of the Republic of Poland in Chicago Piotr Janicki
will speak before the concert on this historic day.
The Silesian Quartet
November
7, 7:30pm
Fourth
Presbyterian Church
126
E Chestnut Street
Szymanowski String Quartet No.
2, Op. 56
Bacewicz String Quartet No. 4
Górecki String Quartet No. 1,
Op. 62 (“Already it is dusk”)
Penderecki String Quartet No. 3
(“Leaves of an Unwritten Diary”)
Andrzej Białko, Organ
November
8, 7:30pm
St.
John Cantius Church
825
N Carpenter Street
Liszt Prelude and Fugue on
B-A-C-H
Anonymous from the
Tablature of Jan of Lublin Salve Regina
Surzyński Elegy in F sharp
Minor, Op. 30
Willan Five Preludes on
Plainchant Melodies
Nowowiejski Polish Phantasy
“Christmas Eve on Wawel Hill” Op. 9, No. 1
Łukaszewski Icon
Eben From “Job” for
Organ, “God’s Reward”
Piotr Orzechowski,
Jazz Piano
November
9, 8pm
Polish
Museum of America
984
N Milwaukee Ave
Orzechowski 24 Preludes and
Improvisations
Celebrate Polonia
November
10, 7:30pm
Copernicus
Center
5216
W Lawrence Ave
Scott Speck conductor
ŁukaszKrupińskipiano
Paderewski Piano Concerto
Chopin Andante spianato et grande polonaise brillante
Szymanowski Concert Overture
Panufnik Tragic Overture
Concert for Peace
November
11, 1:30pm
St.
Hyacinth Basilica
3636
W Wolfram Street
Chicago
Philharmonic with members of Paderewski Symphony Chorus
Marek Moś conductor
Natalia Rubiś soprano
KatarzynaSądej mezzo-soprano
Jesse Donner tenor
Kurt Link bass
Andrzej Białko organ
Kilar Missa pro pace (Mass for Peace)
Single
tickets $25 - $75 | Students from $10
Festival
package $89 - $116
chicagophilharmonic.org
(312)
957 0000
Chicago
Philharmonic Festival: Poland 2018 is made possible in part by an International
Connections Fund from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, as
well as support from the Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in
Chicago, Polskie Wydawnictwo Muzyczne (Polish Music Publishing House) in
Warsaw, the Polish Cultural Institute New York, the Polish Museum of America,
Copernicus Center in Chicago, the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, LOT Polish
Airlines, the Robert B. Kyts and Jadwiga Roguska-Kyts, M.D. Charitable
Foundation, the Chicago Society Foundation, and Most Reverend Andrew P. Wypych,
Auxiliary Bishop of Chicago.
The
Chicago Philharmonic Festival: Poland 2018 is also supported by many partner
organizations and individuals, including the Academy of Music in Kraków, The
Krzysztof Penderecki European Centre for Music in Lusławice, Richard Guérin at
RSG Music Inc. in New York, AniaPerzanowska, Dr. Karolina Jarosz at the Academy
of Music in Kraków, and Joanna Dobecka-Lembert.
ABOUT
THE CHICAGO PHILHARMONIC SOCIETY
The
Chicago Philharmonic Society is a collaboration of over 200 of the
highest-level classical musicians performing in the Chicago metropolitan area.
Governed under a groundbreaking structure of musician leadership, the Society
presents concerts at venues throughout the Chicago area that cover
the full spectrum of classical music, from Bach to Bernstein and beyond. The
Society’s orchestra, known simply as the Chicago Philharmonic, has been called
“one of the country’s finest symphonic orchestras” (Chicago Tribune),
and its unique chamber music ensembles, which perform as the Chicago
Philharmonic Chamber Players, draw from its vast pool of versatile
musicians. The Society’s outreach programs connect Chicago-area youth to
classical music and provide performance opportunities for members of the
community. Founded nearly 30 years ago, the Chicago Philharmonic currently
serves as the official orchestra of the Joffrey Ballet, continues its 25-year
association with the Ravinia Festival, is a resident company of Harris Theater
Chicago, and performs at Auditorium Theater, Symphony Center and all the great
concert halls of the Chicago and North Shore area. In 2018, the Illinois
Council of Orchestras awarded the Chicago Philharmonic "Orchestra of the
Year".
BIOGRAPHIES
Scott Speck, Artistic
Director and Principal Conductor, has inspired international acclaim as a
conductor of passion, intelligence, and winning personality. Speck is the
Artistic Director of the Chicago Philharmonic, and Music Director of the
Joffrey Ballet, Mobile (AL) and West Michigan Symphony Orchestras. Speck led
four performances for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 2014-15 and was
immediately reengaged for four more concerts the following season. His concerts
with the Moscow RTV Symphony Orchestra in Tchaikovsky Hall garnered unanimous
praise. His gala performances with Yo-Yo Ma, Itzhak Perlman, Joshua Bell,
Midori, Evelyn Glennie, and Olga Kern have highlighted his recent and current
seasons as Music Director of the Mobile Symphony. He was invited to the White
House as former Music Director of the Washington Ballet.
In
past seasons Speck has conducted at London’s Royal Opera House at Covent
Garden, the Paris Opera, Chicago’s Symphony Center, Washington’s Kennedy
Center, San Francisco’s War Memorial Opera House, and the Los Angeles Music
Center. He has led numerous performances with the symphony orchestras of
Chicago, Houston, Baltimore, Paris, Moscow, Shanghai, Beijing, Vancouver,
Romania, Slovakia, Buffalo, Columbus (OH), Honolulu, Louisville, New Orleans,
Oregon, Rochester, Florida, and Virginia, among many others.
Previously
he held positions as Conductor of the San Francisco Ballet, Music Advisor and
Conductor of the Honolulu Symphony, and Associate Conductor of the Los Angeles
Opera. During a tour of Asia he was named Principal Guest Conductor of the
China Film Philharmonic in Beijing.
In
addition, Speck is the co-author of two of the world’s best-selling books on
classical music for a popular audience, Classical Music for Dummies and Opera
for Dummies. These books have received stellar reviews in both the national and
international press and have garnered enthusiastic endorsements from major
American orchestras. They have been translated into twenty languages and are available
around the world. His third book in the series, Ballet for Dummies, was
released to great acclaim as well.
The
Silesian Quartet,
winner of multiple awards and distinctions both in its native Poland and
abroad, is one of the country’s leading chamber music ensembles. Its members –
SzymonKrzeszowiec and ArkadiuszKubica on violin, ŁukaszSyrnicki on viola, and
Piotr Janosik on cello – spent the early years of their career developing their
abilities under the supervision of musicians from such quartets as the LaSalle,
Amadeus, Juilliard, Smetana, and Alban Berg string quartets. Today, the
ensemble enjoys international renown, giving concerts throughout the world. It
has performed in such famous venues as the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, Wiener
Konzerthaus, deSingel in Antwerp, Berliner Schauspielhaus, Tivoli in
Copenhagen, Salle Pleyel in Paris, Carnegie Hall in New York, Jordan Hall in Boston,
Hoam Art Hall in Seoul, and Sala de las BellasArtes in Mexico City. The Quartet
performs the canon of great chamber music masterpieces, but also devotes
special attention to the music of our time. Its extensive discography includes
recordings of music from many different eras, with particular emphasis on
Polish music from the last three decades. Among its more than forty CDs, its
set of Bacewicz’s complete string quartets on Chandos won the Gramophone
Award in the chamber music category in 2017 and three have won the Fryderyk
Award of the Polish Phonographic Academy for the Best Chamber Music Album. For
twenty-five years, ‘The Silesian Quartet and Its Guests’ International Chamber
Music Festival, organized annually by the Quartet, has attracted dozens of
outstanding Polish and foreign artists.
Andrzej Białko,
organ. Born
in Kraków in 1959, Białko studied piano at the Musical Secondary School. In
1973, he began learning to play the organ, first privately and then at the
Academy of Music in Kraków under the supervision of Professor Joachim Grubich.
In 1981 he received the first prize in the International Organ Competition in
Rome, Italy. In 1985, he was awarded first prize in the framework of the
National Organ Competition in Bydgoszcz-Gdańsk.
Białko
has taken part in many Polish organ festivals and has also performed in
Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, The Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France,
Germany, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Slovakia, Switzerland, Sweden, Ukraine,
United Kingdom, Lebanon and in both North and South America. He has been active
as a teacher as the professor of the Organ Department at the Academy of Music
in Kraków and the WładysławŻeleński State School of Music in Kraków. He
collaborates with numerous music ensembles including Kraków Philharmonic and
National Philharmonic in Warsaw.
Kraków
music lovers remember his unforgettable performances of complete organ works of
Johann Sebastian Bach in the season 1990/91 and in the Jubilee Year 2000. He
also presented an anthology of organ music from the 16th to the 20th
centuries in a series of 20 concerts under the common title ‘Arsorgani’ in the
years 2001-2002. In 2006 he was awarded a silver medal "Gloria Artis"
by the Polish Minister of Art and Culture.
In
his diverse and ever-expanding repertoire, embracing all styles, Białko has
also performed the complete organ works of Dietrich Buxtehude, Nicolaus Bruhns,
Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, César Franck, Franz Liszt and Johannes Brahms.
Several of his recordings became a precious contribution to the tape archives
of the 2nd channel of the Polish Radio. He also recorded 20 CDs.
Piotr
Orzechowski, jazz pianist. Born in 1990, pianist and composer Piotr Orzechowski is
one of the most award-winning young jazz musicians. A graduate of Berklee
College of Music, he has received many prizes, including 1st Prize at the
Montreux Jazz Solo Piano Competition (2011), which he was the first Pole to win
in the legendary Swiss festival’s history.
The
artist is the leader of the High Definition Quartet, with which he has won
several international competitions, and undertaken a collaboration with
contemporary jazz trumpet giant Randy Brecker which resulted in two concert
tours: in Poland (2012) and the Persian Gulf countries (2013). Piotr toured
with such eminent jazz personalities as Victor Mendoza (Taiwan, 2014) and
PericoSambeat (Ecuador, 2015).
He
has to his credit some albums as follows: a solo disc with arrangements and
pieces inspired by the oeuvre of Krzysztof Penderecki – Experiment:
Penderecki (Decca/Universal, 2012); a disc recorded with High Definition
Quartet entitled HOPASA, containing his own compositions
(EmArcy/Universal, 2013); and an album recorded in collaboration with Marcin
Masecki accompanied by the Capella Cracoviensis, entitled Bach Rewrite
(Decca/Universal, 2013). He released a piano solo album - 15 Studies for the
Oberek (Decca/Universal, 2014) andBukolics(Bukoliki) that is his own
arrangement of WitoldLutosławski music (ForTune, 2015).
He
has worked with such eminent personalities as, among others, Philip Glass,
Steve Reich, Krzysztof Penderecki, Adrian Utley of Portishead, Avishai Cohen,
Randy Brecker, Victor Mendoza, Carlos Zíngaro, Skalpel, Adam Bałdych and
Vladislav ‘Adzik’ Sendecki.
Łukasz Krupiński,
piano,
winner of the 7th International Piano Competition in San Marino, and
the winner of all contest prizes: the Audience Award, the Music Critics Award,
and the Orchestra Award (September 2016). Finalist of the International
Competition of Ferruccio Busoni in Bolzano (2017) and the winner of
International Piano Competitions in Aachen (2016) and Hanover (2015). In
October 2015 Łukasz found himself in the prestigious group of the best 20
pianists of the 17th Frederic Chopin International Piano Competition.
His
debut album Espressione,inspired by his musical travels to Italy with
works of Haydn, Chopin and Scriabin, was released in January 2017 and received
excellent reviews from Pizzicato Magazine, MDR Kultur, Radio Luxembourg, and
Radio France. ŁukaszKrupiński has given numerous concerts in Poland, Lithuania,
Belarus, Belgium, France, Norway, Germany, Spain, Great Britain, Italy, Russia,
China, South Korea, Australia and the USA. Two-time laureate of the "Pro
Polonia" Foundation Award (2013, 2014), the Minister of Culture and National
Heritage Prize for remarkable artistic accomplishments (2013, 2014), the
Minister of Culture and National Heritage Scholarship (2015) and
KrystianZimerman Foundation Scholarship (2015). In 2016 he was honored with a
Commemorative Medal of Frederic Chopin University of Music in recognition of
artistic achievements.
Krupiński has
won numerous prestigious prizes and awards at international piano competitions,
including the Stanislaw Moniuszko International Competition of Slavic Music in
Minsk, Belarus, 2011 (First Prize and Special Award), the 2nd Chopin Siberian
International Piano Competition in Tomsk, 2013 (Grand Prix and two Special
Awards), Yamaha Music Foundation of Europe Scholarship Competition 2014 (First
Prize), the 46th Polish National F. Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw, 2015
(Second Prize), the 15th International Piano Competition 2015 of
Chopin-Gesellschaft Hannover (First Prize), and the ClaviCologne International
Piano Competition 2016 in Aachen (First Prize).
Krupiński
is a graduate of the Frederick Chopin University of Music in Warsaw under the
supervision of Professor AlicjaPaleta-Bugaj and Dr. Konrad Skolarski. Currently
he has been a student of Professor ArieVardi at Hannover University of Music,
Drama and Media.
The Lira Ensemble is the nation’s only
professional performing arts company specializing in Polish music, song and
dance. Its mission is to bring the best of Polish culture into American life.
Founded as the Lira Singers in 1965, the ensemble now makes about 50
appearances a year in the Chicago area, across the Midwest, occasionally around
the nation, and has made six concert tours of Poland. Lira has produced nine
major recordings that are sold nationwide.
Lira
presents the full spectrum of Polish music and dance, both classical and folk,
with informative and witty English language narrations that explain the
traditions and history behind the works performed. Lira has long been trusted
by Polish Americans as an expert culture bearer.
Lira
is the arts outreach group of Chicagoland’s Polish-American community and often
represents Polish Americans and Polish and Polish American culture at city,
state and national events. Lira has won high praise, as well as awards, for its
series of concerts performed jointly with Mexican Americans and African
Americans and its outreach concerts for the American Jewish community, as well
as outreach to other ethnic groups.
The
company consists of a symphony orchestra, chamber ensembles, singers and
dancers who perform serious, folk and popular Polish dance and music in the
original language and in English translation. When appropriate, Lira artists
perform in authentic folk garb of various regions of Poland as well as
historically correct costumes from several periods of Polish history.
Lira
is based in Chicago as artist-in-resident at Loyola University Chicago, which
makes a significant, on-going contribution to the promotion of Polish culture
in the United States by donating free office, rehearsal and storage space to
the Lira company.
LucynaMigala,
co-founder of Lira, serves as artistic director/general manager and narrates
Lira performances; Mina Zikri is conductor of the Lira Ensemble. IwonaPuc is
choreographer and director of the Lira Dancers.
Marek
Moś,conductor, is
the foundingArtistic Director of the AUKSO Chamber Orchestra and Artistic
Director of the AUSKO Summer Philharmonic Festival in the Polish lake district.
An outstanding Polish violinist and chamber musician, he studied in Bytom and
Katowice under Kazimierz Dębicki and Andrzej Grabiec.
Moś
is the founder and for many years primarius of the Silesian Quartet, which has
become one of Europe’s finest ensembles. Together with this quartet Marek Moś
has performed at important festivals and in prestigious venues in Europe and
all over the world, such as the Konzerthaus in Vienna, Concertgebouw and
Ijsbreker in Amsterdam, Vredenburg in Utrecht, Schauspielhaus in Berlin, Tivoli
in Copenhagen, Tonhalle in Düsseldorf, De Singel in Antwerp, Merkin Hall in New
York and Jordan Hall in Boston. It was also with the Silesian Quartet that Moś
has made 30 world premiere performances of contemporary works – some of them
dedicated to the ensemble.
Marek
Moś has received numerous individual awards, including the Contemporary Music
Competition in Cracow (1979), International UNESCO Tribune in Paris (1984,
1988) and from the Polish Composers Association (1994, 2005). He also received
the silver "Gloria Artis" award from the Minister of Culture (2005)
and the Silesian County Marshall Award (2005). Currently, in addition to very
intensive concert activity, Marek Moś is also professor at the Karol
Szymanowski Music Academy in Katowice.
Natalia
Rubiś, soprano,
praised by the German press for her clear and warm voice with luminous
coloraturas, is currently studying under the tutelage of Doris Yarick-Cross at
the internationally renowned Opera Program at Yale University. Miss Rubiś is a
native of the small village Raba Wyżna, South of Poland. Since leaving her
hometown she has had the opportunity to perform all across Europe. She made her
professional operatic debut as Calisto in Händel'sGiove in Argo at
HändelFestspiele in Halle in June 2014. Fiordiligi in Mozart's Così fan tutte
(Kraków), Donna Elvira in Mozart's Don Giovanni (cover, Znojmo), Helena
in Benjamin Britten's A Midsummer Night's Dream (New Haven), Romilda in
Händel'sXerxes (Dresden), and Sivene in Gluck's Le Cinesi (Bad
Lauchstädt) are just a few of the roles she has performed.
Since
October 2013 she has studied with Prof. HendrikjeWangemann at the
HochschulefürMusik in Dresden. In 2014 she completed her Masters Degree at the
Music Academy in Wroclaw, Poland with the highest degree.
Rubiś
has won several prizes including Special Prize at the Maria Malibran Vocal
Competition in Milan and "GiovanePromessa" at the Musica Sacra
International Competition in Rome. She was Laureate of the 2nd Prize at The
International Competition "21st Century Art" in Kiev, Ukraine and at
the 10th Vocal Competition in Wroclaw.
In
October 2014 she took part in the Polish premiere of Tempo e tempi by
Elliott Carter (for soprano and ensemble) during the Nostalgia Festival in
Poznan, Poland. She has performed in many other festivals, such as Chopin and
his Europe in Warsaw, MusikforumViktring Klagenfurt, Music bridge Prague -
Dresden, TheatrumMusicum in Krakow, WratislaviaCantans in Wroclaw. She works
with Fabio Bonizzoni, Vàclav Luks, Roman Válek, Rune Bergmann, Werner Ehrhardt,
Jan Tomasz Adamus, Adam Banaszak, Jacek Rogala, Marek Czekała and others.
Katarzyna Sądej, mezzo-soprano, performs internationally in recital, concert, opera and oratorio. She has performed at Carnegie Hall, the Cartagena International Music Festival, the Zagreb Music Biennale, the Bard Summerscape Music Festival, the Nuits Blanches Festival of Toronto, the Ojai Music Festival, and Le Salon de Musiques in Los Angeles, among other prestigious venues.
Recent
opera performances include her L.A. Opera debut as the Page of Herodias in
Strauss’ Salome, her SOPAC Ottawa debut as Le Prince Charmant in
Massenet’s Cendrillon, and an appearance in the title role of Bizet’s Carmen
in the Palm Springs Opera Guild annual gala concert. She will make her Chinese
debut at Opera Chengdu in 2019 as Giannetta in Donizetti’s L’ElisirD’Amore.
Upcoming, she will be singing the mezzo-soprano solo in Durufle’sRequiem
in Ottawa’s Concerts by the Canal series, and she will make her debut with the
Chicago Philharmonic as the alto soloist in Wojciech Kilar’s Missa Pro Pace.
Other
recent highlights include her San Diego Opera and Industry Opera debuts as well
as the mezzo-soprano solos in J.S. Bach’s Mass in B minor at Festival
Mozaic in San Luis Obispo. Her numerous recital performances have taken her
around the world throughout North America, South America, Europe and Asia.
Katarzyna is a graduate of Bard’s Vocal Arts Program and the University of
Toronto’s Opera School. She is a featured soloist on the 2013 Metier Records’
CD Rising at Dawn. Her performance on the recording was described as
“…nothing short of enthralling. Hers is a stunningly rich, beautiful voice,
with a deep, perfectly centered vibrato and pitch allied to profound
expressiveness.” (James Altena, Fanfare Magazine) Katarzyna has performed
numerous world premieres, including a premiere of Pulitzer prize-winning
composer John Harbison’s song cycle A Right to Pleasure.
Jesse
Donner, tenor,
is rapidly emerging on the operatic and concert stage with a voice that is
“vibrant” (Chicago Classical Review) and “fresh and juicy” (Chicago Tribune).
Donner holds a bachelor’s degrees from Iowa State University and a master’s
degree from the University of Michigan, where he was seen in Ariadne auf
Naxos, Der Kaiser von Atlantis and L’incoronazione di Poppea.
The
Des Moines, Iowa native received the coveted 2015 Men’s Voice Fellowship from
the Luminarts Cultural Foundation and the Bel Canto grand prize, received the
2014 George Shirley Award for Opera Performance, a Special Encouragement Award
from the 2014 Metropolitan Opera National Council Regional Auditions, and First
Place in the 2012 Michigan Friends of Opera Competition.
At
Lyric Opera, Jesse Donner has appeared in Capriccio (Diener), Tannhäuser
(Walther), Nabucco (Abdallo) and Der Rosenkavalier (Kellner). He
also covered the lead tenor roles of General Alfredo in the world premiere of Bel
Canto, Ismaele in Nabucco, and the Drum Major in Wozzeck.
Other performing credits include his debut with Opera in the Ozarks as
Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly, as a tenor soloist in Beethoven’s
Symphony No. 9 with Adrian Symphony, and with the Civic Orchestra of Chicago in
both Mozart’s Great Mass in C Minor and Poulenc’s Les mamelles de Tiresias.
Other concert appearances include with the Grant Park Orchestra, the Toledo
Symphony, and University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra.
Kurt
Link, bass,
has earned a reputation as one of America’s finest basses as a winner of the
Metropolitan Opera, Liederkranz, Opera Index and Sullivan competitions. He has
performed major bass roles with companies such as the Metropolitan Opera, New
York City Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago, La Monnaie, Santa Fe Opera, Houston
Grand Opera, Washington Opera, Dublin Grand Opera, Canadian Opera Company,
Florida Grand Opera, Atlanta Opera, New Israeli Opera, the opera companies of
Portland, Minnesota, Michigan, St. Louis, Utah, Edmonton and the opera
festivals of Chautauqua, Wexford (Ireland), Hong Kong, Wolf Trap, Glimmerglass
and Spoleto (USA and Italy).
Engagements
from recent seasons include Turandot with Opera Birmingham, Don
Giovanni with the Arizona Opera, I Capuletti et I Montecchi and Il
Barbiere di Siviglia with the Florentine Opera, Lucia di Lammermoor
with Utah Symphony Orchestra & Opera, Roméo et Juliette with the
Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center, La Traviata with El Paso Opera, and
with the Metropolitan Opera for productions of War and Peace, The
Gambler and Macbeth. In concert, recent engagements include Verdi’s
Requiem with the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra and at the National
Cathedral in Washington, Beethoven’s 9th Symphony with the Huntsville Symphony
Orchestra, Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, Kansas City Symphony and with the
Japan Symphony, Mozart’s Mass in c minor with the Huntsville Symphony Orchestra,
Mozart’s Requiem in Vienna, Munich, Budapest and Prague with the Dallas
Symphony Chorus, and the bass soloist in Dvorak’s Stabat Mater with the
OrchestreSymphonique de Montréal.
Widely
acclaimed in symphonic works, Mr. Link often performs The Creation, St. Matthew
Passion (BWV 244), MissaSolemnis,
the Requiem Masses of Verdi, Mozart
and Gabriel Fauré, J.S. Bach’s Mass in B minor (BWV 232), Beethoven’s Symphony
No. 9 and many other works with Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Philadelphia
Orchestra, Montreal, Tokyo, Baltimore, Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, Atlanta
Symphony Orchestra, Florida, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Minneapolis
Symphony Orchestra, Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, Indianapolis Symphony
Orchestra, Charleston, Phoenix, Jacksonville, Aspen, San Antonio, Milwaukee.
Paderewski
Symphony Chorus
Founded in January of 2000, the Chorus of the Paderewski Symphony Orchestra is composed of the seasoned choral musicians and vocal music enthusiasts. It is an integral part of the PaSO Organization. Its members meet on weekly basis yearlong under the expert tutelage of Maestro Luciano Laurentiu. To date, the choir has performed more than 100 concerts with the orchestra as well as on its own. Covering a full range of music styles and forms from oratorio to opera and sacred music, the PaSO Chorus has performed in a multitude of Chicago area churches and concert halls, including the Orchestra Hall at Symphony Center, Rosemont Theatre, Harris Theatre, Millennium Park and the Copernicus Center. The highlights of past seasons include Harnasieby Karol Szymanowski, Angelus and Exodus by Wojciech Kilar, Messiah by Haendel, Missa in F- major by MichałPoniatowski, LitaniaOstrobramskaby StanisławMoniuszko, Oratorio The lord call on us by WłodzimierzKorcz, oratorio Tues Petrus by Piotr Rubik, and the Haunted Manor Opera by StanisławMoniuszko, as well as a large selection of excerpts from opera, operetta, musicals and hundreds of popular and artistic songs.
Founded in January of 2000, the Chorus of the Paderewski Symphony Orchestra is composed of the seasoned choral musicians and vocal music enthusiasts. It is an integral part of the PaSO Organization. Its members meet on weekly basis yearlong under the expert tutelage of Maestro Luciano Laurentiu. To date, the choir has performed more than 100 concerts with the orchestra as well as on its own. Covering a full range of music styles and forms from oratorio to opera and sacred music, the PaSO Chorus has performed in a multitude of Chicago area churches and concert halls, including the Orchestra Hall at Symphony Center, Rosemont Theatre, Harris Theatre, Millennium Park and the Copernicus Center. The highlights of past seasons include Harnasieby Karol Szymanowski, Angelus and Exodus by Wojciech Kilar, Messiah by Haendel, Missa in F- major by MichałPoniatowski, LitaniaOstrobramskaby StanisławMoniuszko, Oratorio The lord call on us by WłodzimierzKorcz, oratorio Tues Petrus by Piotr Rubik, and the Haunted Manor Opera by StanisławMoniuszko, as well as a large selection of excerpts from opera, operetta, musicals and hundreds of popular and artistic songs.
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Dr. Maja Trochimczyk