Populista
presents
Barbara Kinga Majewska, Emilia Sitarz
play
Franz Schubert
Winterreise
BR POP14
1. Gute Nacht
2. Die Wetterfahne
3. Gefrorne Tränen
4. Erstarrung
5. Der Lindenbaum
6. Die Post
7. Auf dem Flusse
8. Rückblick
9. Irrlicht
10. Der greise Kopf
11. Wasserflut
12. Die Krähe
13. Letzte Hoffnung
14. Im Dorfe
15. Der stürmische Morgen
16. Täuschung
17. Mut
18. Rast
19. Frühglinstraum
20. Einsamkeit
21. Der Wegweiser
22. Das Wirsthaus
23. Die Nebensonnen
24. Der Leiermann
Voice by Barbara Kinga Majewska
Piano by Emilia Sitarz
Concept and rearrangement by Barbara Kinga Majewska and Michał Libera
Recorded and edited at homes by Barbara Kinga Majewska and Michał Libera in 2015
Additional recordings by Michał Kupicz
Additional edits by Robert Migas
Mixed and mastered by Ralf Meinz
***
Populista
presents
Richard Youngs
plays
Parallel Winter
BR POP15
Voice, guitar and zither by Richard Youngs
Composed, recorded, mixed and mastered by Richard Youngs
***
BR
POP16
Populista
presents
Joanna
Halszka Sokołowska
plays
Franz
Schubert
Winterreise
Voice
by Joanna
Halszka Sokołowska
Recorded
by Michał
Libera in
Komuna//
Warszawa
on 29th of October 2015
Mixed
and mastered by Ralf
Meinz
Premiered
at Playback
Play in
Dwa Osiem
on 12th of December 2014
***
All three CDs:
Produced
by Michał
Libera
Cover
art work by Aleksandra
Waliszewska
Layout
by Piotr
Bukowski
Published
by BôłtRecords
Distributed
by MonotypeRec
***
Motto
of Populista Winter Triangle came about on 13th
of December, 2014. It was a cold and windy day, a classic of
pre-winter Warsaw, cold, wet, transparent yet at the same time grey,
or perhaps mostly grey. It was also a day of the first Warsaw show of
Richard
Youngs in
Komuna// Warszawa. Not fully by accident, there was a piano in the
room, which made Richard propose performing „Parallel Winter”.
Few hours later he was introducing the piece to the audience saying
that its duration is something in between fifteen and forty five
minutes. It is because, he continued, that the piece has as many
lines as we have winter days and hence is something one needs to go
through, not unlike going through winter.
Is
there a better introduction to „Winterreise”?
Legendary
music cycle of Franz Schubert accompanies the poems of Wilhelm
Müller
and is today more than a classic, it is a must in virtually all and
any music canon, a model of romantic songbook about misery, love and
solitude and last but not least – a 19th
Century equivalent of a pop album mirroring emotional lives of
generations to follow after its completion in 1828. Musicians'
encounters with Schubert are rarely coincidences, especially in case
of „Winterreise”. Regardless of approach, methodology in
developing the interpretation, performance's concepts and techniques,
facing the cycle is always a challange. It is due to the scale of the
piece, varied and settled performance traditions, canonic value and
more than often inconspicious refinment of the music which all
together require musician to engage deeply and responsibly. It always
means something when somebody takes on Schubert.
Interpratations
of Barbara
Kinga Majewska
and Emilia
Sitarz are
crazy, funny, touching, sad, passionate, icy, irreverent, charming,
sharp, ironic, tender, sweet, sensual, repulsive, ostensibly true and
movingly artificial. Most of all however, they are a consistent,
unhesitating and precise story of high integrity, not easy to forsee
though, even for Winterreise's experts. The story is a far reaching
interpretation of Schubert and Müller,
bold and consequent, not stopping half way, not sucking up to the
history of great performances of the piece. Quite the contrary, it is
an undogmatic exegesis, open and idiosyncratic, the one that only the
two artists in team with the producer, Michał
Libera
could create, an interpretation displaying new tensions and new
interrelations existing in Schubert's cycle. At the same time, it is
a work of great admiration and respect, more than often characterized
by prudish perfections and surprising faithfulness to the romantic
original.
The
version of Joanna
Halszka Sokołowska
is diametrically different, although the distance from Schubert seems
comparable in both cases. The album is in a way a field recording of
a night session in the theatre. In less than two hours, her singing
was captured with no rehearsals, in one go, and was followed by no
overdubs or other studio treatments. It seems to be closer to Richard
Young's „Parallel Winter” than the other take on Schubert.
Perhaps because they both share a thoroughly camouflaged conceptual
content uniting all the details and formal decisions with the content
interpretation. It is switfly covered with the sound of pop or folk
music or whatever kind of music it is which is more about playing
than performing. Hence its theory comes more from an instinct and
accurate decision than detailed exegesis, which by the way seems
quite close to Schubert's fascination with folk songs. But there the
similiarities with the original end.
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