Warsaw Music Salon
ARTISTS:
Arte dei Suonatori Piano Quartet
Katarzyna Drogosz – piano
Ewa Golińska – violin
Natalia Reichert – viola
Maciej Łukaszuk – cello
Katarzyna Drogosz – piano
Ewa Golińska – violin
Natalia Reichert – viola
Maciej Łukaszuk – cello
RELEASE DATE: 04/2020
CATALOGUE NO. ACD 269
GENRE: chamber music
DESCRIPTION
Every composer whose piece appears on this CD was an essential figure in the very best of the late eighteenth- and the early nineteenth-century salon culture. Each participated in a variety of ways: as hosts, guests, performers or composers.
The word “salon” referred both to a place and an event. Salons were usually weekly or fortnightly gatherings of noblemen, artists, writers, philosophers, politicians, scholars, scientists, musicians and youthful talent, who talked, read aloud, listened to music, ate and sometimes danced. They took place in the richly furnished drawing rooms or boudoirs of the aristocracy or more modest sitting rooms of the emerging bourgeoisie. In most cases, these were exclusive events for a carefully chosen group of guests.(…)
These Warsaw salons took their inspiration from those of the French Enlightenment, thanks to the last Polish king, Stanisław August Poniatowski. Prior to taking the crown, he absorbed the atmosphere of the Madame Geoffrin Paris salon, frequented by French encyclopaedists and thereafter, he founded the Thursday Dinners salon at his Warsaw palace, to which he invited scholars and artists. In the first decades of the nineteenth century, around the time when Fryderyk Chopin lived in Warsaw, there were about a dozen salons where music played a significant role. Their hosts were, among others, the families of Wołowskis, who play a prominent role in the
music on this CD: Barbara and Franciszek Wołowski were the parents of Maria Szymanowska. Both Józef Elsner and Franciszek Lessel were guests at their salons.
Jolanta Brózda-Wiśniewska
The word “salon” referred both to a place and an event. Salons were usually weekly or fortnightly gatherings of noblemen, artists, writers, philosophers, politicians, scholars, scientists, musicians and youthful talent, who talked, read aloud, listened to music, ate and sometimes danced. They took place in the richly furnished drawing rooms or boudoirs of the aristocracy or more modest sitting rooms of the emerging bourgeoisie. In most cases, these were exclusive events for a carefully chosen group of guests.(…)
These Warsaw salons took their inspiration from those of the French Enlightenment, thanks to the last Polish king, Stanisław August Poniatowski. Prior to taking the crown, he absorbed the atmosphere of the Madame Geoffrin Paris salon, frequented by French encyclopaedists and thereafter, he founded the Thursday Dinners salon at his Warsaw palace, to which he invited scholars and artists. In the first decades of the nineteenth century, around the time when Fryderyk Chopin lived in Warsaw, there were about a dozen salons where music played a significant role. Their hosts were, among others, the families of Wołowskis, who play a prominent role in the
music on this CD: Barbara and Franciszek Wołowski were the parents of Maria Szymanowska. Both Józef Elsner and Franciszek Lessel were guests at their salons.
Jolanta Brózda-Wiśniewska
TRACKLIST
JÓZEF ELSNER (1769-1854)
Piano Quartet in E-flat major Op. 15
1. Moderato 11:50
2. Romance: Andantino 5:43
3. Rondo: Allegro assai 5:02
MARIA SZYMANOWSKA (1789-1831)
4. Fantaisie in F major for piano 10:21
WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART (1756-1791)
Piano Quartet in G minor K. 478
5. Allegro 10:55
6. Andante 7:17
7. Rondo: Allegro moderato 8:14
FRANCISZEK LESSEL (1780-1838)
Trio in E major Op. 5 for piano, violin and cello
8. Allegro brillante 8:58
9. Reve: Adagio 4:16
10. Rondo: Allegro di molto 4:39
Total time: 77:48
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