Twórczość fortepianowa Mariana Sawy
Brak miniatury
Data
2011
Autorzy
Tytuł czasopisma
ISSN czasopisma
Tytuł tomu
Wydawca
Wyższe Seminaria Duchowne Towarzystwa Salezjańskiego
Abstrakt
Marian Sawa (1937-2005), composer, organist, improviser and pedagogue, owes his reputation primarily to his prolific organ output (over 200 works for organ solo, including five concertos), choral music (several dozen compositions) and vocal-instrumental sacred music. Pride of place goes to the Droga Krzyżowa (The Way of the Cross), Missa claromontana and works for organ: the Witraże (Stained-glass), Ecce lignum crucis and Hymnus in honorem sancti Petri et Pauli. Works for piano are modest in number, less known and rather rarely performed but they are hardly of a marginal character. Marian Sawa’s piano output comprises a dozen or so pieces of diverse genres and styles. The earliest compositions, dating from Sawa’s studies at the State Higher School of Music in Warsaw, include the Four Etudes, a cycle of Variations and Prelude and Fugue, all in the neoclassical style (1966-67). In the etudes, the composer explored several technical problems, such as the technique of double stops and octaves. The later Toccata (1970) and Stylized Prelude (1975) are, by and large, the continuation of the same style. In the Toccata one can notice the genre’s characteristic features including the motoric drive, a sense of mobility and the repetitiveness of notes (similar effects can be found in toccatas by such composers as Bolesław Woytowicz and Sławomir Czarnecki). Sawa’s most interesting piano works date from the 1980s and 1990s, the Scherzino (1983) and Four Mazurkas (1993/94) being the most frequently performed pieces. Sawa’s output also includes compositions which draw freely on the sonata fonn: the Sonata Ha-Fis (Sonata B-F sharp) for keyboard instruments (1995, the title refers to the two opening notes), the Sonatina for harpsichord, piano or organ (1995), and arrangements of Polish Christmas carols. One of Sawa’s most spectacular pieces is the Fugue-Bolero for two pianos (1996), which is an arrangement of his earlier, highly popular version for organ. Three styles can be distinguished in Sawa’s piano music: dance/folk, motoric/toccata and sacred. The first employs the dance forms popular in Polish folk music (mazurek, oberek, krakowiak), the rhythm pattem of the “mazur” and bourdon fifths. The main features of the second style are the figurative texture, virtuosity, a sense of mobility and, in the majority of works (including those from the 1990s), references to the neoclassical style. The sacred style manifests itself in the use of quotations from church songs. For example, in the Third Mazurka (1993) it is a quotation from a Polish church song to St Joseph, while the musical material of the Three Elegies (1995) is based on the religious song Ja wiem, w kogo ja wierzę (I know in whom I believe). These works are also renowned for their specific mood of meditation and contemplation, creating an aura of spiritual music. The arrangements of Polish Christmas carols also belong to this group (the Four Christmas Carols for two pianos, 2003; the Kolędowe granie (Playing the carols), 2004).
Opis
Tłumaczenie streszczenia / Summary translated by Michał Kubicki.
Słowa kluczowe
Marian Sawa, mazurek (taniec polski), etiuda, muzyka fortepianowa, kolędy, neoklasycyzm, muzyka sakralna, folklor, twórczość fortepianowa Mariana Sawy, muzyka, muzycy, pianiści, muzyka religijna, muzyka instrumentalna, mazurka (Polish dance), study, piano music, carol, Neoclassicism, sacred music, folklore, Marian Sawa’s piano works, music, musicians, pianists, religious music, instrumental music
Cytowanie
Seminare, 2011, Tom 29, s. 317-335.
Kolekcje
Licencja
CC-BY-ND - Uznanie autorstwa - Bez utworów zależnych

