Witold Lutosławski (1913-1994) Symphony No. 1 Silesian Triptych Jeux venitiens Chantefleurs et Chantefables Postludium I Witold Lutosławski...
Witold
Lutosławski (1913-1994)
Symphony No. 1
Silesian Triptych
Jeux venitiens
Chantefleurs et
Chantefables
Postludium I
Witold Lutosławski remains among the most
distinguished Polish composers, by the side of his close contemporary Andrezj
Panufnik, in the generation after Szymanowski and before that of Penderecki and
Gorecki. Lutosławski was born in 1913 into
a family of some intellectual distinction. His mother, a mathematician by early
training, was a doctor and his father Jozef, once reputedly a pupil of Eugen
d'Albert, like his brothers, a man of culture and of strong patriotic
instincts. The dangers of German occupation in the war of 1914 led the family
to take refuge in Russia, where Jozef and his brother Marian fell early victims
to the Bolsheviks. In 1919 Lutosławski
returned
with his mother and older brothers to Poland, eventually settling in Warsaw,
where he was able to develop his musical abilities. Here he studied the violin
with a former pupil of Joachim and in 1927 entered the Junior Conservatory, from
which school-work later compelled him to withdraw. He was able, however, to
study composition with Witold Maliszewski, a former pupil of Rimsky-Korsakov in
St Petersburg, and to continue with the same teacher when, in 1933, he
abandoned his university study of mathematics to enter the Conservatory. During
his years there he began to make a name for himself as a composer, with what he
later regarded as his true professional debut in 1939, with the performance of
his Symphonic Variatians.
The war brought inevitable difficulties and hardships, after the
invasion of Poland by Germany in the autumn of 1939 and the subsequent
partition of the country with Soviet Russia. Serving as an officer cadet, Lutosławski was taken prisoner, but managed to escape and
make his way to Warsaw, where his mother had moved, while his brother Henryk
fell victim to the Red Army. In the following years he collaborated with
Panufnik, playing a wide repertoire of music for piano duo in cafes and other
meeting-places. Much of this store of compositions and arrangements accumulated
for this purpose was destroyed in the Warsaw uprising. At the same time he
began work on his Symphony No. 1, the first movement of which occupied
him intermittently between 1941 and 1944, when it was completed. The other
three movements were eventually finished in 1947.
In the years that followed, Lutosławski
was to
some extent overshadowed by Panufnik, a situation that ended when the latter
chose to take refuge abroad from a regime that he found repressive. Lutosławski too experienced problems with the Communist
musical establishment and his new symphony was condemned as
"formalist" the charge leveled in the same year against Shostakovich,
Prokofiev and others in Russia. His reaction to censure came in a series of
safer compositions, although he himself described works of the period, which
made use of folk material, as a necessary stage in his development, in no way
the result of political pressure. Nevertheless, it was necessary to earn a
living. The later relaxation of cultural policy brought increased contact with
contemporary trends abroad and a growing international reputation for Lutosławski, in addition to the unassailable position he
now held in Polish music at home and which he maintained until his death in
1994.
's Symphony No.
1 is scored for a full orchestra that includes a large percussion section, with
tam-tam, tubular bells, xylophone and celesta, a harp and a piano. The first
movement opens boldly, soon to introduce a rhythmic trumpet theme. A second
subject, heard first from the lower strings, provides a lyrical contrast. The
material is developed, leading to a formal recapitulation and coda. In the slow
movement an extended figure unwinds in the lower strings, to which the French
horn adds a poignant melody. Violins and violas introduce a quirky
accompanimental figure, leading to an oboe melody. A solo violin takes up a
derivative of the first theme and after increasing dynamic tension, elements of
the principal theme are heard, as the movement draws to a close, the texture
darkened by a solo viola. Pizzicato double basses, imitated by the
cellos, open the Allegretto misterioso. This bizarre scherzo material,
initially using the twelve semitones of the octave in a repeated series, is
soon followed by something akin to a contrasting trio and the movement
continues with a contrast and collaboration of these two elements. A rapid and
energetic finale ends the symphony, its tension relaxed briefly before the end.
The composer regarded the symphony as marking a closing stage in his career in
a musical language that seemed unlikely to lead anywhere. Now he sought a new
approach to the organization of his musical material.
The Silesian Triptych, for soprano and orchestra, was completed
and first performed in Warsaw in 1951. The three folk-songs are tonal in
character, admirably suiting their texts. In the first song, marked Allegro
non troppo, the girl hears the lark but laments her parting from her lover,
who has deserted her for another. The second of the set, marked Andante
quieto, is delicately scored, its texture coloured by the harp and the
celesta. For the singer the well-water seems to regret the faithlessness of her
lover. The song ends with a wordless vocalise. The Triptych ends with an
Allegro vivace, as the cuckoo sings and the girl warns against marrying
a rich girl. She has wealth enough in her virginity and her Sunday clothes.
Jeux venitiens ('Venetian Games') was commissioned by the conductor
Andrezj Markowski for the 1961 Venice Biennale. Scored for a relatively small
orchestra, the work marked a new stage in Lutosławski's development as a composer, influenced now by the chance hearing of a
broadcast of John Cage's Concerto for Piano and Orchestra. The new
technique now involved an element of chance, with considerable freedom given to
the players, who were nevertheless controlled by the constraints of timings and
the order in which aleatoric sections should be played. This aleatoric
counterpoint became a feature of Lutosławski's style. Here the
first of the Games makes use of a series of given sections, identified
by the first eight letters of the alphabet and to be played in that order, the
length of each section determined by the conductor. The second part opens with
a subdued texture for violins and violas to which other instruments add their
own interruption. Other instruments are added and rôles reversed, before a
dynamic climax in which clusters of piano keys are depressed by the use of
cardboard cylinders covering a range of notes, black and white. The third part
is a flute solo of some freedom, accompanied by the other instruments, with the
strings providing a more or less measured element. There is again an element of
chance in the final part, although its sections are strictly timed and
controlled by the conductor. Tension mounts in an increasing welter of sound,
before percussion leads to a more delicate texture, as a piccolo heralds the
close of the work.
For his song-cycle of 1991, Chantefleurs et Chantefables, first
performed in London in the same year, Lutosławski again turned to poems by the French surrealist Robert
Desnos, whose words he had used in his 1975 Les espaces du sommeil, for
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. Desnos died of typhus in Terezin (Theresienstadt) in
1945. His Chantefleurs et Chantefables had been written for children of
his friends and part of the collection later to be published had been given to
his publisher before his arrest. There is a winning simplicity about the poems
and Lutosławski's settings, skilfully
coloured in their instrumentation. Dedicated to Paul Sacher, the work is scored
for an orchestra of single woodwind and brass, timpani, harp and strings, with
a percussion section that includes a xylophone, vibraphone, xilorimba,
glockenspiel, tubular bells, side drum and tambourine. There are sections where
performers are allowed a measure of freedom and there is occasional use of
quarter-tones. The first song, La belle-de-nuit ('The Marvel of Peru'),
uses vibraphone and strings in its instrumentation, with equally delicate and
appropriate scoring of La sauterelle ('The Grasshopper'), as it hops
from place to place La veronique ('The Speedwell'), the French name of
which inevitably recalls the bull-ring, is a conversation between the flower
and a bull, while L'eglantine, l'aubepine et la glycine ('The Wild Rose,
the Hawthorn and the Wisteria') inspires a more energetic setting. La tortue
('The Tortoise') moves slowly, followed by La rose ('The Rose'),
opened by the harp with clarinet and bassoon, which gently evokes the rose and
its scent. L'alligator ('The Alligator') calls for Mississippi rhythms, L'angetique
('The Angelica') is wistful in its delicacy and the final Le papillon ('The
Butterfly') brings more elaborate textures.
The three Postludia were written between 1958 and 1960 and the
first, in celebration of the Centenary Congress of the Red Cross, had its first
performance in Geneva in 1963, with the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande under
Ernest Ansermet. The work has been described as enigmatic, marking a period of
some uncertainty in Lutosławski's development as a
composer, coming, as it did, after the success of the Musique funebre (Funeral
Music) in memory of Bola Bartok. The first Postludium makes relatively
delicate use of a large orchestra, as melodic fragments are heard over
continuing string textures, leading to a dramatic climax, stressed by the drums
and tambourine of the percussion section.