Grażyna Bacewicz - Violin Concerto No.3

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Krzysztof Jakowicz/ Podlasie Opera PO in Białystok/Marcin Nałęcz-Niesiołowski
00:00 Allegro Molto Moderato
08:36 Andante
16:17 Vivo
Grażyna Bacewicz (1909 - 1969) was a Polish Composer and Violinist. She is the second Polish female composer to have achieved national and international recognition, the first being Maria Szymanowska in the early 19th century. In 1928 she began studying at the Warsaw Conservatory, where she studied violin with Józef Jarzębski and piano with Józef Turczyński, and composition with Kazimierz Sikorski, graduating in 1932 as a violinist and composer. She continued her education in Paris, having been granted a stipend by Ignacy Jan Paderewski to attend the École Normale de Musique, and studied there in 1932–33 with Nadia Boulanger (composition) and André Touret (violin). From 1936 to 1938 she was the principal violinist of the Polish Radio Orchestra, which was directed then by Grzegorz Fitelberg. After the war, she took up the position of professor at the State Conservatoire of Music in Łódź. At this time she was shifting her musical activity towards composition, drawn by her many awards and commissions. Composition finally became her only occupation from 1954, the year in which she suffered serious injuries in a car accident.

Many of her compositions feature the violin. Among them are seven violin concertos, five sonatas for violin with piano, three for violin solo (including an early, unnumbered one from 1929), a Quartet for four violins, seven string quartets, and two piano quintets. Her orchestral works include four numbered symphonies (1945, 1951, 1952, and 1953), a Symphony for Strings (1946), and two early symphonies, now lost. There is no copyright infringement intended. If you wish your recording to be removed, it can be done, please just leave me an email, which can be found at the channel's about section.
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What a exquisite and poli-faced composer ! A most interesting point to me, is the individual strong approach vis a vis Hindemith, Bartok and even Sibelius, just to name a few. Is it too naif of me to say this unique lady transmits in a very personal way, the bloody grievances of war and destruction in quite a number of her pieces? And as expected, the paramount are the strings quartets...Poland should be very proud of her. As an European (I´m Portuguese) I am indeed.

alexandrecosta
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I didn't know a solo violin could sound like that...
Btw. Will you ever return the Vasilije Mokranjac's Sonata romantica recording? I can't find a recording of that piece anywhere else, except here, but it's all gone private.

K.R-tn
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It seems all your videos except this and one from 8 months ago have disappeared? When I look at your profile I see only 2 videos. Youtube shenanigans?

baileyrob
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this composer makes the violin do some weird stuff lol

aramkhachaturian
welcome to shbcf.ru