Penderecki: Magnificat CD review - a peculiar and gripping mix played at full throttle

Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra & Choir/Wit
(Naxos)

Krzysztof Penderecki first began writing sacred music in response to religious repression in the communist Poland of his youth, and through all his stylistic evolution – vehemently embracing then abandoning postwar modernism – his spiritual works have retained that thrust of blazing defiance. His Magnificat dates from 1974, a crossroads between early-period astringency and the effusive neo-Romanticism he favoured from that point. It’s a peculiar and gripping mix: clammy tone clusters and slithering violins cut to resounding diatonic chords and bellowing bass solos – a massive sound here from Wojtek Gierlach. Antoni Wit conducts it all at full throttle, but the orchestra sounds more incisive than the choir, which is unfocused and a little stretched at the top.

The other work on the disc is Kadisz, a 2009 memorial to the decimated Jewish ghetto of Łódź in Poland. It’s full of lush chords, triangle halos and sombre, scented choral passages. Soprano Olga Pasichnyk is ardent and lyrical in her solos; Daniel Olbrychski provides cartoonishly lurid narration.

Contributor

Kate Molleson

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
When Poles collide: Jonny Greenwood's collaboration with Krzysztof Penderecki

Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood holds Krzysztof Penderecki, Poland's foremost contemporary composer, in awe. And the feelings are very much mutual, the pair explain

Tom Service

23, Feb, 2012 @9:00 PM

Article image
Penderecki: Complete Quartets review | Andrew Clements's classical album of the week
Heard together, the differences between Penderecki’s First and Fourth quartets map an epic journey in 20th-century music

Andrew Clements

02, Sep, 2021 @4:19 PM

AUKSO Chamber Orchestra/Penderecki/Mos – review

The Threnody is still so shockingly powerful that placing it first rendered what some of what followed anticlimactic, writes Tim Ashley

Tim Ashley

23, Mar, 2012 @5:48 PM

Article image
Krzysztof Penderecki obituary
Polish composer and conductor who was a leading figure in contemporary music

Keith Potter

29, Mar, 2020 @1:10 PM

Article image
Penderecki Conducts Penderecki Vol 2 CD review – uplifting choral works
Warsaw Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra/ Penderecki
(Warner Classics)

Fiona Maddocks

22, Oct, 2017 @6:25 AM

Article image
Belcea Quartet review – perfunctory Penderecki and poised Schubert
The Belceas gave the premiere of Penderecki’s brief neo-Romantic Fourth String Quartet, and in two Schubert quartets, blended technical refinement with emotional extremes

Tim Ashley

13, Dec, 2016 @3:31 PM

Article image
RNCM Symphony Orchestra/Penderecki review – a biblical maelstrom
With the charisma of an Old Testament prophet, the composer brought a spiritual intensity to the first UK performance of his Seventh Symphony

Alfred Hickling

28, Jun, 2015 @2:42 PM

Article image
LPO/Penderecki review – time hasn't blunted the impact of Penderecki's Threnody
This fine concert featured Krzysztof Penderecki’s own compositions – with Radovan Vlatkovic the impressive soloist in the Horn Concerto – alongside Shostakovich’s Sixth

Tim Ashley

15, Oct, 2015 @11:49 AM

Article image
Bach: St John Passion CD review – an intense, full-throttle account

Kate Molleson

27, Apr, 2017 @2:30 PM

Article image
Krzysztof Penderecki: horror film directors' favourite composer
Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki’s wild, terrifying, and imaginative music has soundtracked horror classics from The Shining to The Exorcist. Tom Service explains why

Tom Service

03, Nov, 2011 @9:30 PM