Andrzej Panufnik is one of four
Polish composers who changed the face of that country’s music: the others were
Witold Lutosławski (1913-94), Krzystof Penderecki (b.1933) and Henryk Górecki
(1933-2010)). In the United Kingdom, certainly, he is sadly undervalued. One of
the most important and innovative of the émigré composers who arrived in
Britain to escape Fascism or Communism, his musical style has been seen as too
modern by traditionalists and too conservative by the ‘Glockian’ avant-garde in
the 1950s and 60s.
There is no
need to give a detailed biography of the composer in this review. There is
ample information in the standard reference works as well as Wikipedia, and the Panufnik webpages. A
few brief notes will suffice. Andrzej Panufnik was born in Warsaw on 24
September 1914. After study in Warsaw,
Paris and London, he went to Vienna to master conducting with Felix Weingartner.
During the tragic war years, he performed as a concert pianist with his fellow
composer Witold Lutosławski. After the
war, Panufnik worked with the Krakow Philharmonic and was instrumental in the
re-formation of the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra. He was regarded as one of
Poland’s most significant composers and conductors. However, he became disenchanted with ‘socialist
realism’ as demanded by the Communist authorities. Panufnik defected to the
United Kingdom in 1954. He and his music were ‘officially’ forgotten in Poland.
After two years as conductor of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra he
decided to concentrate wholly on composition. He took British citizenship in
1961. In 1991, the year of his death, he was awarded a Knighthood. His native
country gave him a posthumous award of the Polonia
Restituta Medal.
Panufnik’s catalogue
includes ten symphonies, eight or so concerted works, three string quartets and
a number of vocal pieces. Many of his early compositions have been lost or
destroyed. His most ‘popular’ work would
appear to be the Concerto for violin and strings, commissioned by Menuhin in
1971. He is reasonably well-represented on CD, with most of his works available
in at least a single recording.
Andrzej
Panufnik’s life and music has been explored in some detail in books, essays,
thesis and websites. Clearly, his Polish background results in much of the
literature being written in that language. The first attempt to provide a
scholarly overview of Panufnik’s achievement in English, was written by the
composer and writer Harold Truscott (Tempo,
Autumn/Winter 1960). This is still a valuable introduction to his music. Other
articles followed, including Peter French’s ‘The Music of Andrzej Panufnik’ (Tempo Spring, 1968) and a similarly
entitled submission by Stephen Walsh (Tempo,
December 1974). Truscott was to revisit
his theme with his article ‘The Achievement of Andrzej Panufnik’ (Tempo, December 1987) and ‘The
Symphonies of Andrzej Panufnik’ (Musical
Times, July 1989).
A major source
for musical historians is the composer’s autobiographical Composing Myself, published in 1987, some four years before his
death. This account majors on his life and times in Poland and England, rather
than providing a detailed commentary on the music. Included is some discussion,
albeit non-technical, of his methodology for the ‘manipulation’ of three note
cells. A further short booklet by the composer was Impulse and Design in my Music (London: Boosey & Hawkes, 1974)
There is an unpublished
doctoral thesis, An Analytical Study of the Music of Andrzej
Panufnik by Christopher Stasiak
(Belfast, 1990). An engaging introduction to Panufnik and his contemporaries is
presented in Bernard Jacobson’s The
Polish Renaissance (Phaidon Press, 1996).
There are the usual dictionary and encyclopaedic
references to Panufnik, as well as a plethora of reviews of concerts, CDs and
scores. As noted above, there is a
comprehensive website dedicated to Panufnik, which includes a catalogue
of his music, sound samples, a good bibliography and a discography of past and
current recordings.
Beata
Bolesławska is ideally qualified to have written this present book. She studied
at the Institute of Musicology at Warsaw University, and has made a major input
to the scholarly investigation of 20th century Polish music.
Her
CV refers to a number of important contributions to the literature of Polish
Music in general and Panufnik in particular. In 1998, she offered her Master’s thesis to
the Institute of Musicology, Symmetry in Andrzej
Panufnik’s Symphonies: Theories and Practice. Her doctoral thesis completed
whilst studying at Cardiff University, was Symphony
and Symphonic Thinking in Polish Music after 1956. (2010). She has published
many articles and essays for musicological journals in Poland and abroad. Bolesławska
has written much material for websites devoted to Gorecki and Panufnik. Between 1997
and 2005 she worked for the Warsaw Autumn International Festival of
Contemporary Music and latterly she has been employed by the Culture Channel
TVP (Kultura) on Polish TV. Beata Bolesławska is active in the Polish
Composers’ Union.
In 2001, Bolesławska was commissioned by the Polish
State Music Publishers to write a monograph about Panufnik. The present book is
a reworking of this volume conveniently translated into English by Richard J.
Reisner.
The
concept of The Life and Works of
Andrzej Panufnik is threefold: firstly, to present the course of
Panufnik’s ‘eventful life’, secondly, to ‘explain the controversies that grew
up around the composer’ in Poland and the United Kingdom. And thirdly, to examine his music by way of reception
history, notes by the composer on his own music, and the author’s musical
analysis.
Bolesławska’s
source materials include documents from the ‘Stalinist’ period of Poland’s
history, as well as interviews with many people who knew and worked with the
composer.
Any study of Panufnik’s music has
to consider a number of influences: these include the strong bond with the
musical traditions of Poland, the folk music of that country, his religious
faith, the landscape and aesthetic concepts of symmetry. The composer himself was always open in discussing his
‘musical inspirations’ whether in scores, concert programmes or interviews. Beata
Bolesławska concedes that this study does not include a ‘thorough analysis of
all his compositions, or lengthy studies of individual scores’. This is a task
for scholars in the future. The main
thrust of the argument is Panufnik’s use of symmetry and geometrical patterns
as ‘pre-composition techniques’ for any ‘future piece.’ The key compositional
aim was to ‘strive towards a perfect balance between the form, the construction
of the work and its emotional content.’
This analytical section of the
book is a consideration of this symmetry in his music. The four chapters examine
this in terms of the composer’s ‘self-reflection’, in ‘harmony and tonality’,
in the musical syntax (how it appears on paper) and finally in ‘form.’ The author acknowledges that this is of necessity
‘brief.’
In
spite of Bolesławska’s wish to appeal to ‘a broader public not well versed in
musicology’ her ‘detailed analyses’ of Panufnik’s music does require some grounding
in 20th century musical theory in order to gain benefit from these
pages.
As
an example of her modus operandi, I refer to one of my personal favourite
pieces of Panufnik’s music: the beautiful Lullaby for string instruments and two
harps. It was one of the first Polish works to utilise quarter-tones
(the gap between C and C# etc.)
This
serves as an excellent example of Bolesławska’s approach to the music.
She notes that the idea came to him during a stay in London in 1947. He had
been invited to the capital to conduct a concert with the London Philharmonic
Orchestra. Bolesławska quotes from Composing
Myself, how Panufnik had paused ‘one night on Waterloo Bridge…[watching] the
river’s flow and the night sky over the misty city prompted the idea…’ Panufnik
explained that the music was on three planes: the pulsating rhythm of harps representing
the gentle flow of the river, solo string instruments, some moving in
quartertones for the drifting clouds and, as the same moon was looking down on
London as on Poland, the pentatonic (e.g. black notes only on piano) song of a
Polish peasant, played on a succession of string instruments.
Bolesławska then quotes comments
from essays by Nigel Osborne, and the Polish critics Stefan Kisielewski, S.
Lobaczewska and Z. Mycielski to complete the ‘scholarly reception history.’
Further reference is made to Lullaby in her comments on ‘Symmetry in Terms of
Harmony and Tonality’, pointing out that the work, along with Nocturne was
considered by some musicologist to be avant-garde, and therefore suggested to
some critics that Panufnik was ‘the father of the Polish school of composers in
the 1960s.’ It is a profitable way of
studying this book, taking trajectories of compositions derived from the index
and reading the associated references.
Of
considerable interest to readers is the ‘Chronological List of Compositions’. Bolesławska does not claim that this is a complete
listing, and indicates that incidental music written for films and radio plays
is not included. The earliest work referred to are the ‘Cabaret Songs’ dating
from 1931 (now lost) whilst the final major work is the Cello Concerto,
completed in 1991. The very last piece Panufnik was working on before his death
was a revision of the gorgeous Love Song
(1976) in a version for soprano, harp (or piano) and string orchestra. For full
details the reader will probably (I have not seen this volume) need to consult
the Krystyna Jaraczewska-Mockałło, Andrzej
Panufnik: Katalog dzieł i bibliografia [Catalogue
of Works and Bibliography] Series,1997, assuming they can get a hold of a copy.
I would have appreciated details of first performances and revisions, if and
where appropriate. Much of this information is available on the website noted
above.
I
am not convinced by the format of the bibliography in this book: it is
presented at the end of each chapter, as opposed to the end of the book. This
means that various essays and volumes are cited more than once. It also becomes
difficult to find cross references. Although Harold Truscott, for example, is
cited in the chapter-end bibliographies, he does not feature in the index. There
is no detailed information about the
location of primary source material such as scores, letters, diaries etc.
The Life and Works of Andrzej Panufnik concludes with an index which lists
people and places associated with the composer’s life and times as well as his musical
works. The book is well produced on high
quality paper and is well-bound. The printed text is in a relatively small, but
well defined, font. The translation has been well done: I have had little cause
to feel that I was ‘missing something’ from the original Polish.
There
are a number of plates featuring the composer, his family, friends and
colleagues. These are printed on standard paper, so are not like ‘plates’. The
analytical section of the book is well illustrated with extracts from
Panufnik’s scores, with diagrams and tables of compositional processes.
The biographical details
presented in The Life and Works of
Andrzej Panufnik will be of interest not only to musical historians, but
also to students of ‘social realism’ and the impact of Stalinist dogma on the
arts. As noted above I found examining
individual works by way of the index helpful: this is extremely useful to the
engaged listener in exploring the music.
As the first monograph about
Panufnik’s music to appear in English, this book will clearly appeal to
scholars, critics and reviewers of his music. Yet, there is always a danger
with a composer like Panufnik that he will be only approached by enthusiasts
and intellectuals who wish to discuss his music without really listening to it,
and, more to the point, savouring it. My
explorations of Panufnik’s work suggests that his style will (or ought to)
appeal to a wide range of musical tastes: this book will help present a
framework for enjoying and appreciating his compositions.
Panufnik will never be a regular on ‘Classic FM’, but with the CDs and YouTube files available, there is little excuse for the listener not being able to explore his ‘individual and original’ music.
The Life and Works of Andrzej Panufnik (1914-1991)
Panufnik will never be a regular on ‘Classic FM’, but with the CDs and YouTube files available, there is little excuse for the listener not being able to explore his ‘individual and original’ music.
The Life and Works of Andrzej Panufnik (1914-1991)
by Beata Bolesławska, translated by Richard J. Reisner
Hardback, 350pp, published 2015
ISBN: 9781409463290
Ashgate Publishing
Company
£70.00
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