Tag: Music

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Poland’s Got Talent – and the most popular dance in Poland

Yes, he’s an accordionist, but neither the music nor dance are Polka. The winner of Poland’s Got Talent, Marcin Wyrostek and his group, Tango Corazon Quintet, have just released an album, “Magia del tango” (loosely: The Magic of Tango). Here’s a sample:

Poles have a great affinity for the Tango and it is hard to find a Pole who can’t bust a few great Tango moves.

The Polka, at least in the style found in Polish-American circles, is generally unheard of in Poland. Traditional Polka like dances such as the Mazur in addition to four other dances, the Polonez, Krakowiak, Kujawiak, and Oberek, are the five “National Dances” of Poland. Franz Xaver Scharwenka wrote 5 Polish Dances for piano, Op. 3 which walks through the five. Here is Op.3, No.2

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New Direction Band

Four former members of the City Side Band, Jim Raczkowski, Ron Urbanczyk, Bob Krupka and Gene Rzezenik have joined together with Bruce Nowak (sax and clarinet) to form the New Direction Band.

The Band will make its debut performance on December 5th for the fifth annual Euro-American Holiday Dance at Club Loreli in Hanburg, NY with the Auslanders.

Following on their openning gig, the Band will be featured at Kolędy Night at the Potts Banquet Hall on Saturday, December 19th. This event will benefit the Response to Love Center and will feature the St. John Kanty Choir under the direction of Larry Maguda.. Sister’s Johnice, Catherine and Rose will also be featured leading the Polish and American Christmas Carol Sing-A-Long.

On New Years Eve the New Direction Band will be setting the mood at the Matthew Glab Post Party in Lackawanna, NY.

In addition to our new name, new music and new musicians, the Band will be presenting the Stas and Stella’s Mostly Traditional Polish Wedding at dinner theatres throughout 2010 with some new skits and music. The next show is scheduled at the Lancaster Opera House on April 8th and on April 9th at Ripa’s Restaurant on Walden Avenue in Lancaster.

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Ania and Piotr Filochowski in concert this Sunday

From the Kosciuszko Foundation: Ania and Piotr Filochowski, violinists accompanied by Charity Wicks, pianist in concert at The Kosciuszko Foundation:

Ania and Piotr Filochowski, violinists accompanied by Charity Wicks, pianist will perform a program of works by Brahms, Chopin, Paganini, and Wieniawski on Sunday, November 22, 2009, 3 P.M. at The Kosciuszko Foundation, 15 East 65th Street (between Madison & 5th Avenues), New York City, NY 10065

Ania and Piotr Filochowski are award-winning violinists and international soloists originally from Poland. They have studied with today’s greatest masters of the violin at The Juilliard School and Yale School of Music. Their mentors are world-renowned artists, including Itzhak Perlman, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Midori, Ruggiero Ricci, and Aaron Rosand. All their past concerts were received with great enthusiasm and acclaim, as was their concert featured on PBS, so do not miss the chance to hear the remarkable sibling violinists in their only New York City recital this fall! The program will feature some of the greatest hits for the violin, as well as other beautiful and fun works. It will surely be a concert to remember!

Admission: $20 Tickets available at the door.

For reservations call the Foundation Office at 212.734.2130 or contact the Foundation by E-mail.

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The music scene in Krakow, beyond avant garde…

From A.V. Club: Live Report: Krakow’s Unsound Festival by Andy Battaglia. Check out the entire article and some really nice photos.

I almost puked in a club in a Stalinist suburb in Poland, and not for any of the reasons I had ever almost puked before, in a club or anywhere else. The cause was straightforward enough, but it only really makes sense in context.

I went to Krakow, Poland, at the end of October for Unsound, an ambitious music festival whose bill included a week’s worth of performances by a disparate lot: Stars Of The Lid, Omar-S, Sunn O))), Kode 9, Grouper, Johann Johannsson, Pole, Monolake, Nico Muhly, Biosphere, 2562, Ben Frost, and a group of Hasidic Jews from France who played gleaming blue keytar in front of smiling Stars of David, to name just a few. The mix was all over the place, and the mood followed suit.

The mood of Krakow, as much as could be gleaned during a fleeting week there, was rich. The city itself is beautiful and more than a little eerie. Some of the buildings, including an enormous castle right in the city center, date back to the 11th century. Certain statues and gargoyles could probably get active status in an actors’ guild, so expressive are their writhing gestures and anguished looks. Images of dragons proliferate. At least one of the countless churches open to leering boasts desiccated skulls as decoration. The whole city, especially at night, looks fantastic in a fog.

The Unsound Festival, started in 2003, is one of a group of municipally minded music festivals that belong to a burgeoning collective known as I.C.A.S., or International Cities Of Advanced Sound. Others include Mutek in Montreal, Club Transmediale in Berlin, Dis-patch in Belgrade, Sperm Festival in Prague, and Communikey in Boulder, Colorado. Each shares an affinity for electronic and experimental music, as well as the artier ends of indie-rock and classical composition. Each also answers for a stated ethos that —favors quality, critical reflection, innovation and exchange over profit.— (Disclosure: I went to Krakow as a guest of Unsound, both to cover the festival and to help plan an Unsound offshoot to happen in New York in February 2010.)

Unsound 2009 got off to a disquieting start. Opening night featured a contemplative set by the Polish composer Jacaszek, who traffics in ambient sounds haunted by churchly voices and slathered with strings. He played a laptop, backed by cello and violin, in a serene Japanese art museum called Manggha. A crowd of several hundred sat rapt, especially during a piece that played alongside a black-and-white video of swallows swooping in ethereal formation. After the concert came a screening of Beats Of Freedom, a documentary about revolutionary music in Poland from the 1960s to the fall of Communism in the late ’80s. It was startling, as a visitor, to watch such a film in the presence of an audience for whom the notion of —revolutionary music— is both recent and very real. It was even more startling to hear such an audience throw up its hands and laugh away chilling tales of secret-police interrogations and spells of military aggression—”laughter as absurdist rejoinder…

PNCC,

Congratulations Dominick Costantino

From left, first row: Alvin Celmer, chairman; Felip; Costantino; Agnes Lach, Choir; and Eleanor Kaminski; director. Second row: Bob Swartz, vice chairman; Barbara Swartz, director; Bernadette Truszkowski, recording secretary; and Carol Jean Markowski, Choir.
From left, first row: Alvin Celmer, chairman; Rev. Pawel Filip; Dominick Costantino; Agnes Lach, Choir; and Eleanor Kaminski; director. Second row: Bob Swartz, vice chairman; Barbara Swartz, director; Bernadette Truszkowski, recording secretary; and Carol Jean Markowski, Choir.

From the Times Leader: Dominick Costantino was recently welcomed as the new organist by the Rev. Paul Felip, pastor, and the Parish Committee of Good Shepherd Polish National Catholic Church, 269 E. Main St. Plymouth. Costantino, son of Dominick and Bonnie Costantino of Hanover Township, is a senior at Hanover Area High School.

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Janusz Sporek – My Anniversary Concert Series

My Anniversary: Twenty Years of artistic work in the USA and Ten Years of promoting Polish music and Polish artists at New York’s most prestigious concert halls and featuring the American premiere of Stabat Mater by Stanislaw Moryto, President of Frederic Chopin University of Music, Warsaw, Poland – Honorable Guest of the Evening. Also featuring the Fantasy on Polish Airs, Op. 13 by Frederick Chopin and the Polonaise from the film Pan Tadeusz by Wojciech Kilar.

Saturday, October 10, 2009- Aberdeen, Maryland and Sunday, October 18, 2009, at 2:00 pm Carnegie Hall – Isaac Stern Auditorium

Hosted by: David Dubal, Author, Radio Presenter and Olek Krupa, actor with the Susquehanna Symphony Orchestra, the Choir of the Cathedral of St. Patrick, the Paderewski Festival Choir, and Monika Wolińska, Conductor, Sheldon Bair, Conductor, Janusz Sporek, Conductor.

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Born in Rajcza near Zywiec, South of Poland, Janusz Sporek graduated from the College of Pedagogy, Department of Music in Kielce, where he studied conducting under Prof. Henryk Gostomski, and piano with professor Wlodzimierz Kutrzeba. He earned his Master’s Degree under the guidance of Prof. Jozef Swider at the Silesian University in Katowice, Department of Music Education, majoring in Piano under Prof. Marian Preiss and in Conducting under Prof. Helena Danel. Mr. Sporek worked at Music School in Rybnik, and with several artistic groups. He made numerous artistic tours with his ensembles throughout Western Europe (Germany, Belgium, France and Italy), giving concerts and participating at international festivals.

Mr. Sporek has conducted choruses and orchestras at all prestigious concert halls of New York including Carnegie Hall, Avery Fisher Hall, and Alice Tully Hall of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, St. Patrick’s Cathedral, St. Peter’s Church, John Adams Playhouse of Hofstra University, Long Island and Mary Washington College of Fredericksburg VA. He performed in Detroit, MI, Chicago, IL, Philadelphia, PA, and New Britain, CT. In October 2000, he made a very successful artistic trip to Poland conducting the choir and orchestra at the Cracov Philharmonic Orchestra House. In May 2001, in Johnstown, PA, Mr. Sporek lead the “Festival of J. Świder’s Choral Music” at the International Convention of the Polish Singers Alliance of America and Canada. In August 2001 he established the Paderewski Festival Singers, a mixed choir that has already made two appearances at Isaack Stern Auditorium of Carnegie Hall. He holds the posts of music director and conductor of this group.

Between November 1999 and January 2004, Mr. Sporek has organized ten concerts at Carnegie Hall, promoting Polish musical culture, and becoming the only Polish producer to present over three hundred performers including choruses and individual artists on this prestigious stage in such a short period of time.

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Polish and Fall Festivals Galore

image0038th Annual PolishFest ’09 at the Blessed Virgin Mary of Częstochowa Polish National Catholic Church through Sunday, September 27th.

Portland, Oregon’s Polish Festival 2009 on Failing Street between the Polish Library built in 1911 and St. Stanislaus Church built in 1907, both located on N. Interstate Avenue in Portland Oregon through Sunday, September 27th.

Polish National Catholic Church of The Good Shepherd’s Fall festival at 269 E. Main St., Plymouth,. Pennsylvania. The second Fall Festival will be held from noon-9 p.m. on Saturday, October 3rd. There will be ethnic food, homemade pies and cookies, games, crafts, a basket auction, and music by classic DJ’s. For more information, call 570-824-1560.