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Symphony No. 3 (Górecki)

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Symphony by Henryk Gorecki

Symphony No. 3
byHenryk Górecki
Cover of the 1992 release of Symphony No. 3, conducted byDavid Zinman with sopranoDawn Upshaw
Opus36
Composed1976
Published1977
Movements3
Premiere
Date4 April 1977 (1977-04-04)
LocationRoyan, France
ConductorErnest Bour
PerformersStefania Woytowicz (soprano),Southwest German Radio Symphony Orchestra

TheSymphony No. 3,Op. 36, also known as theSymphony of Sorrowful Songs (Polish:Symfonia pieśni żałosnych), is asymphony in threemovements composed byHenryk Górecki inKatowice, Poland, between October and December 1976. The work is indicative of the transition between Górecki's earlierdissonant style and his later moretonal style and "represented a stylistic breakthrough: austerely plaintive, emotionally direct and steeped in medieval modes".[1] It was premièred on 4 April 1977, at theRoyan International Festival, withStefania Woytowicz as soprano andErnest Bour as conductor.[2]

A solosoprano sings Polish texts in each of the three movements.[3] The first is a 15th-century Polish lament ofMary, mother of Jesus; the second a message written on the wall of aGestapo cell during World War II; and the third aSilesian folk song of a mother searching for her son killed by the Germans in theSilesian uprisings.[4] The first and third movements are written from the perspective of a parent who has lost a child, and the second movement from that of a child separated from a parent. The dominant themes of the symphony are motherhood, despair and suffering.

Until 1992, Górecki was known only toconnoisseurs, primarily as one of several composers from thePolish School responsible for the postwarPolish music renaissance.[5] That year,Elektra Nonesuch released a recording of the 15-year-old symphony performed by theLondon Sinfonietta that topped the classicalcharts in Britain and the United States.[6] It has sold more than a million copies, vastly exceeding the expected lifetime sales of a typical symphonic recording by a 20th-century composer. This success, however, has not generated similar interest in Górecki's other works.[7]

In May 2024 a very careful handwritten copy of the score from the collection of theNational Library of Poland, written by the composer himself, was presented to apermanent exhibition in the Palace of the Commonwealth.[8][9]

Background

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Despite a political climate that was unfavorable to modern art (often denounced as "formalist" by thecommunist authorities), post-war Polish composers enjoyed an unprecedented degree of compositional freedom following the establishment of theWarsaw Autumn festival in 1956.[10] Górecki had won recognition among avant-garde composers for the experimental,dissonant andserialist works of his early career; he became visible on the international scene through such modernist works asScontri, which was a success at the 1960 Warsaw Autumn, and his First Symphony, which was awarded a prize at the 1961 Paris Youth Bienniale.[11] Throughout the 1960s, he continued to form acquaintanceships with other experimental and serialist composers such asPierre Boulez andKarlheinz Stockhausen.

During the 1970s, Górecki began to distance himself from the serialism and extreme dissonance of his earlier work, and his Third Symphony, like the preceding choral piecesEuntes ibant et flebant (Op. 32, 1972) andAmen (Op. 35, 1975), starkly rejects such techniques. The lack of harmonic variation in Górecki's Third Symphony, and its reliance on repetition, marked a stage in Górecki's progression towards the harmonicminimalism and the simplified textures of his more recent work.[4] Because of the religious nature of many of his works during this period, critics and musicologists often align him with other modernist composers who began to explore radically simplified musical textures,tonality, andmelody, and who also infused many of their works with religious significance. Like-minded composers, such asArvo Pärt andJohn Tavener, are frequently grouped with Górecki under the term "holy minimalism", although none of the composers classified as such have admitted to common influences.

Composition

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In 1973, Górecki approached the Polishfolklorist Adolf Dygacz in search of traditional melodies to incorporate in a new work. Dygacz presented four songs which had been recorded in theSilesia region in south-western Poland. Górecki was impressed by the melody "Where has he gone, my dear young son?" (Kajże się podzioł mój synocek miły?), which describes a mother's mourning for a son lost in war, and probably dates from theSilesian Uprisings of 1919–21. Górecki had heard a version of the song in the 1960s and had not been impressed by the arrangement, but the words and the melody of Dygacz's new version made a lasting impression on him. He said "for me, it is a wonderfully poetic text. I do not know if a 'professional' poet would create such a powerful entity out of such terse, simple words. It is not sorrow, despair or resignation, or the wringing of hands: it is just the great grief and lamenting of a mother who has lost her son."[12]

The Palace inZakopane; the former Nazi Gestapo prison was where the composer took an inscription scrawled on a cell wall for the composition of his symphony.

Later that year, Górecki learned of an inscription scrawled on the wall of a cell in a GermanGestapo prison in the town ofZakopane, which lies at the foot of theTatra mountains in southern Poland. The words were those of 18-year-oldHelena Wanda Błażusiakówna, a highland woman incarcerated on 25 September 1944. It readO Mamo, nie płacz, nie. Niebios Przeczysta Królowo, Ty zawsze wspieraj mnie (Oh Mamma do not cry, no. Immaculate Queen of Heaven, always support me). The composer recalled, "I have to admit that I have always been irritated by grand words, by calls for revenge. Perhaps in the face of death I would shout out in this way. But the sentence I found is different, almost an apology or explanation for having got herself into such trouble; she is seeking comfort and support in simple, short but meaningful words".[13] He later explained, "In prison, the whole wall was covered with inscriptions screaming out loud: 'I'm innocent', 'Murderers', 'Executioners', 'Free me', 'You have to save me'—it was all so loud, so banal. Adults were writing this, while here it is an eighteen-year-old girl, almost a child. And she is so different. She does not despair, does not cry, does not scream for revenge. She does not think about herself; whether she deserves her fate or not. Instead, she only thinks about her mother: because it is her mother who will experience true despair. This inscription was something extraordinary. And it really fascinated me."[14]

Górecki now had two texts: one from a mother to her son, the other from a daughter to her mother. While looking for a third that would continue the theme, he decided on a mid-15th-centuryfolk song from the southern city ofOpole.[15] Its text contains a passage in which theVirgin Mary speaks to herSon dying on the cross: "O my son, beloved and chosen, Share your wounds with your mother ..." (Synku miły i wybrany, rozdziel z matką swoje rany ...). Górecki said, "this text was folk-like, anonymous. So now I had three acts, three persons ... Originally, I wanted to frame these texts with an introduction and a conclusion. I even chose two verses (5 and 6) fromPsalm 93/94 in the translation by Wujek: 'They humiliated Your people, O Lord, and afflicted Your heritage, they killed the widow and the passer-by, murdered the orphans.'"[16] However, he rejected this format because he believed the structure would position the work as a symphony "about war". Górecki sought to transcend such specifics, and instead structured the work as three independentlaments.[16]

Instrumentation and score

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The symphony is constructed around simple harmonies, set in a neo-modal style[17] which makes use of themedieval musical modes, but does not adhere strictly to medieval rules of composition. A performance typically lasts about 54 minutes. Ronald Blum describes the piece as "mournful, likeMahler, but without the bombast of percussion, horns and choir, just the sorrow of strings and the lone soprano".[18] The work consists of threeelegiac movements, each markedLento to indicate their slowtempi.[19] Strings dominate the musical textures and the music is rarely loud—the dynamics reachfortissimo in only a few bars.[4]

The symphony is scored for solosoprano, fourflutes (two players doubling onpiccolos), fourclarinets in B, twobassoons, twocontrabassoons, fourhorns in F, fourtrombones,harp,piano andstrings. Górecki specifies exact complements for the string forces: 16 firstviolins, 16 second violins, 12violas, 12cellos, and 8double basses. For most of the score, these are in turn divided into two parts, each notated on a separatestaff. Thus the string writing is mainly in ten different parts, on ten separate staves. In some sections some of these parts are divided even further into separate parts, which are written on the same staff, so that ten staves are still used for a greater number of parts.

Unusually, the score omitsoboes,English horns,bass clarinets, andtrumpets. The bassoons, contrabassoons, and trombones play only in the first movement, and only for a few bars (bassoons and contrabassoons: 339–342 and 362–369; trombones: 343–348 and 367–369).

Themusicologist Adrian Thomas notes that the symphony lacksdissonance outside ofmodal inflections (that is, occasional use of pitches that fall outside the mode), and that it does not require nonstandard techniques orvirtuosic playing. Thomas further observes that "there is no second-hand stylistic referencing, although if predecessors were to be sought they might be found, distantly removed, in the music of composers as varied asBach,Schubert,Tchaikovsky, and evenDebussy."[20]

Lento—Sostenuto tranquillo ma cantabile

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Typically 27 minutes in duration, the first movement equals the combined length of the second and third movements,[15] and is based on a late 15th-centurylament ofMary from theLysagora Songs collection of the Holy Cross Monastery (Św. Krzyż Monastery) in theŚwiętokrzyskie Mountains. Comprising threethematic sections, the movement opens with acanon based on a 24-bar theme, which is repeated several times. The canon begins in 2 parts; then, for each repetition of the theme, an extra part is added, until the canon is in eight parts (with the top two parts doubled at the octave, making for ten voices total), using a 24-bar melody in theAeolian mode on E. It begins with the double basses, 2nd part, with each succeeding entry occurring onemeasure later (i.e., a new entry begins every 25 measures), each starting a diatonicfifth above the last. That means that each appearance of the melody in a new part is in a different mode, in this order:

  1. Aeolian on E (double basses, 2nd part)
  2. Phrygian on B (double basses, 1st part)
  3. Locrian on F (cellos, 2nd part)
  4. Lydian on C (cellos, 1st part)
  5. Ionian on G (violas, 2nd part)
  6. Mixolydian on D (violas, 1st part)
  7. Dorian on A (2nd violins, 2nd part)
  8. Aeolian on E (1st violins, 2nd part)

After the 8-part canon is played, it is repeated, with the 1st parts of the 1st and 2nd violins (silent up to this point) doubling the other violin parts an octave higher.

After that, the canon continues, but the voices gradually drop out one by one, from the lowest upwards and the highest downwards; the instruments in question then double, or play the parts of, a higher or lower voice that is still playing, in this order ('→' means 'double/play the parts of'):

  1. Double basses: 2nd part (low E Aeolian) → 1st part (B Phrygian) [canon reduced to 7 voices]
  2. 1st violins: 1st part (highest E Aeolian) → 2nd part (high E Aeolian)
  3. Double basses (B Phrygian) → Cellos, 2nd part (F Locrian)
  4. Cellos: 2nd part (F Locrian) → 1st part (C Lydian) [canon reduced to 6 voices]
  5. 2nd violins: 1st part (high A Dorian) → 2nd part (A Dorian)
  6. Double basses (F Locrian) → Cellos (C Lydian)
  7. Cellos (C Lydian) → Violas, 2nd part (G Ionian)
  8. 2nd violins (A Dorian) → Violas, 1st part (D Mixolydian)
  9. 1st violins (high E Aeolian) → 2nd violins (A Dorian) [canon reduced to 4 voices]
  10. Double basses fall silent
  11. 1st violins (A Dorian) → 2nd violins + violas, 1st part (D Mixolydian) [canon reduced to 2 voices]

The canon ends with all the strings (except the double basses) sustaining a single note, E4.

The soprano enters on the same note in the second section and builds to a climax on the final word, at which point the strings enter forcefully with the climax of the opening canon. The third section of the movement (Lento—Cantabile semplice) is a longdénouement, another canon based on the same melody in the opening canon; but this time it starts with 8 parts (the top two doubled in octaves), and the voices drop out from high to low:

  1. 1st violins: 1st part (highest E Aeolian) → 2nd part (high E Aeolian)
  2. 2nd violins: 1st part (high A Dorian) → 2nd part (A Dorian)
  3. 1st violins sustain an E5 drone
  4. 2nd violins sustain an E4 drone as 1st violins fall silent
  5. Violas: 1st part (D Mixolydian) → 2nd part (G Ionian)
  6. Violas sustain an E3 drone as 2nd violins fall silent
  7. Cellos: 1st part (C Lydian) → 2nd part (F Locrian)
  8. Cellos sustain an E2 drone as violas fall silent
  9. Double Basses: 1st part (B Phrygian) → 2nd part (melody in low E Aeolian)

The movement thus ends with the lower strings, and the piano (briefly recalling the second section of the movement).

Lento e largo—Tranquillissimo

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The nine-minute second movement is for soprano, clarinets, horns, harp, piano, and strings, and contains alibretto formed from the prayer to the Virgin Mary inscribed byHelena Błażusiakówna on the cell wall inZakopane.[15] According to the composer, "I wanted the second movement to be of a highland character, not in the sense of pure folklore, but the climate ofPodhale ... I wanted the girl's monologue as if hummed ... on the one hand almost unreal, on the other towering over the orchestra."[21]

The movement opens with a folkdrone, A–E, and a melodic fragment, E–G–F, which alternate with sudden plunges to a low B–Ddyad. Thomas describes the effect as "almost cinematic ... suggest[ing] the bright open air of the mountains".[21] As the soprano begins to sing, her words are supported by the orchestra until she reaches a climaxing top A. The movement is resolved when the strings hold a chord withoutdiminuendo for nearly one and a half minutes. The final words of the movement are the first two lines of the PolishAve Maria, sung twice on a repeated pitch by the soprano.

Lento—Cantabile-semplice

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The tempo of the third movement is similar to that of the previous two, and subtle changes in dynamism andmode make it more complex and involving than it may at first appear. With a duration of approximately seventeen minutes, it comprises three verses inA minor[4] and, like the first movement, is constructed from evolving variations on a simple motif. The melody is established in the opening verse, and the second and third verses revisit the cradling motifs of the second movement. As in the second movement, the motifs are built up from inversions of plaintriads andseventh chords stretching across several octaves. As the soprano sings the final words, the key changes to a purediatonicA major which accompanies, in writer David Ellis's words, the "ecstatic final stanza":[4]

O sing for him / God's little song-birds / Since his mother cannot find him.
And you, God's little flowers / May you blossom all around / that my son may sleep a happy sleep.[22]

The orchestra returns to A minor before a final postlude in A major.[4] In Górecki's own words: "Finally there came that unvarying, persistent, obstinate 'walczyk' [on the chord of A], sounding well when played piano, so that all the notes were audible. For the soprano, I used a device characteristic of highland singing: suspending the melody on the third [C] and descending from the fifth to the third while the ensemble moves stepwise downward [in sixths]".[13]

Interpretation

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Madonna and Child, 15th century (venerated in Górecki's Katowice)

The symphony was dedicated to Górecki's wife Jadwiga Rurańska. When asked why, Górecki responded, "Who was I supposed to dedicate it to?"[23] He never sought to explain the symphony as a response to a political or historical event. Instead, he maintained that the work is an evocation of the ties between mother and child. Górecki was commissioned to write music in response to the Holocaust in the 1960s but was unable to finish any of the pieces he started for that purpose.[11] While Górecki stated that for many years he sought to produce a work specifically in response toAuschwitz, he resisted that interpretation of the symphony, which he preferred to be viewed in a wider context. Other critics have attempted to interpret the symphony in spiritual terms, an approach which Górecki also dismissed.[24] Still others have suggested that the symphony can be understood as a compendium of Polish history:

The symphony alludes to each of the main historical and political developments in Poland's history from the 14th century to 1976, the year of its composition. What is more, each of the three movements appears to represent a different age . . . and [they are] chronologically contiguous. The composer seems to have created three separate and discrete "chapters" in his summary of Poland's history.[25]

Górecki said of the work, "Many of my family died in concentration camps. I had a grandfather who was in Dachau, an aunt in Auschwitz. You know how it is between Poles and Germans. But Bach was a German too—and Schubert, and Strauss. Everyone has his place on this little earth. That's all behind me. So the Third Symphony is not about war; it's not aDies Irae; it's a normal Symphony of Sorrowful Songs."[26]

Reception

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Initial

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Górecki's Symphony No. 3 was written in 1976, when Górecki was, in the words of the music critic Jane Perlez, "a fiery figure, fashionable only among a small circle of modern-music aficionados".[24] The 1977 world première at the Royan Festival,Ernest Bour conducting, was reviewed by six western critics, all of them harshly dismissive.[27] Heinz Koch, writing forMusica, said that the symphony "drags through three old folk melodies (and nothing else) for an endless 55 minutes".[28] Górecki recalled that, at the premiere, he sat next to a "prominent French musician", probablyPierre Boulez, who, after hearing the twenty-one repetitions of an A-major chord at the end of the symphony, loudly exclaimed: "Merde!"[29]

The symphony was first recorded in Poland in 1978 by the sopranoStefania Woytowicz.[27] It was deemed a masterpiece by Polish critics,[30] although, during the late 1970s and early 1980s, recordings and performances were widely criticised by the press outside Poland.[27] The symphony drew hostility from critics who felt that Górecki had moved too far away from the established avant-garde style and was, according to Dietmar Polaczek (writing forÖsterreichische Musikzeitschrift), "simply adding to the decadent trash that encircled the true pinnacles of avant-gardism".[31]

Increasing recognition

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Lemminkäinen's Mother (1897) byAkseli Gallen-Kallela is an earlier evocation of the themes of motherhood and war explored in Górecki's Third Symphony. This work depicts a scene from theFinnishepic poemKalevala.[32]

In 1985, the French filmmakerMaurice Pialat featured a section of the third movement in the credits of his filmPolice. When the work was later repackaged as a "soundtrack album", it sold well. Although Gorecki's name was featured prominently on the front cover, thesleeve notes on the back provided little information about the work,[33] and Górecki's name appeared in smaller type than those of the main actors.[34]

In the mid-1980s, the Britishindustrial music groupTest Dept used the symphony as a backdrop for videocollages during their concerts to express sympathy with the PolishSolidarity movement,[35] which Górecki also supported (his 1981 pieceMiserere was composed in part as a response to government opposition of Solidarity trade unions).[36]

London Sinfonietta recording and commercial success

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During the late 1980s, the symphony received increasing airplay on US and British classical radio stations, notablyClassic FM (From 1992). Thefall of communism helped to spread the popularity of Polish music generally, and by 1990 the symphony was being performed in major cities such as New York, London and Sydney.[24]

A 1991 recording with theLondon Sinfonietta,conducted byDavid Zinman and featuring the soloistDawn Upshaw, was released in 1992 by theElektra imprintNonesuch Records. Within two years, it sold more than 700,000 copies worldwide;[18] it reached number 6 on the mainstream UK album charts,[37] and while it did not appear on the USBillboard 200, it topped the US classical charts for 38 weeks and stayed on the chart for 138 weeks.[38] The Zinman/Upshaw recording has sold over a million copies,[39] making it probably the best selling contemporary classical record.[40]

Michael Steinberg described the symphony's success as essentially a phenomenon of thecompact disc. While live performances are still given, they do not always sell out.[5] Some critics, wondering at the sudden success of the piece nearly two decades after its composition, suggest that it resonated with a particular mood in the popular culture at the time. Stephen Johnson, writing inA guide to the symphony, wondered whether the success was "a flash in the pan" or would have lasting significance.[41] In 1998, Steinberg asked, "[are people] really listening to this symphony? How many CD buyers discover that fifty-four minutes of very slow music with a little singing in a language they don't understand is more than they want? Is it being played as background music to Chardonnay and brie?"[5] Steinberg compared the success of Górecki's symphony to theDoctor Zhivago phenomenon of 1958: "Everybody rushed to buy the book; few managed actually to read it. The appearance of the movie in 1965 rescued us all from the necessity."[5] Górecki was as surprised as anyone else at the recording's success, and later speculated that "perhaps people find something they need in this piece of music…. Somehow I hit the right note, something they were missing. Something, somewhere had been lost to them. I feel that I instinctively knew what they needed."[5]

At least a dozen recordings were issued in the wake of the success of the Nonesuch recording, and the work enjoyed significant exposure in a number of artistic media worldwide and became a best-selling and multi-award winning DVD by Tony Palmer, made for The South Bank Show on ITV, and uniquely shown without commercial breaks. It was also used by several other filmmakers in the 1990s and onwards to elicit a sense of pathos or sorrow, including as an accompaniment to a plane crash inPeter Weir'sFearless (1993), and in the soundtrack toJulian Schnabel'sBasquiat (1996), in the Netflix series (season 2, episode 7)The Crown, and in Terrence Malick'sA Hidden Life (2019).[42] An art gallery inSanta Fe, New Mexico opened an exhibit in 1995 dedicated entirely to visual art inspired by the piece.[42] It is also used as one of the songs in the music playlist at theJohns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research.

In 2017 Canadian choreographerCrystal Pite set the first movement of the symphony as a ballet calledFlight Pattern, commissioned by theRoyal Opera House. In 2022 she expanded this into a setting of all three movements,Light of Passage.[43]

Discography

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YearSopranoConductorOrchestraLabel
1978 Woytowicz , StefaniaStefania Woytowicz Katlewicz , JerzyJerzy KatlewiczPolish National Radio Symphony Orchestra (Katowice)Polskie Nagrania 1980, 1993, 2010, 2017
1982 Woytowicz , StefaniaStefania Woytowicz Kamirski , WłodzimierzWłodzimierz KamirskiRadio-Symphonie-Orchester BerlinKoch Schwann 1988
1985 Woytowicz , StefaniaStefania Woytowicz Bour , ErnestErnest BourSWR Sinfonieorchester Baden-BadenErato 1985, Belart 1993, Apex 2003
1987 Woytowicz , StefaniaStefania Woytowicz Katlewicz , JerzyJerzy KatlewiczPolish National Radio Symphony Orchestra (Katowice)Olympia 1988
1992 Upshaw , DawnDawn Upshaw Zinman , DavidDavid ZinmanLondon SinfoniettaNonesuch (Warner)
1993 Kilanowicz , ZofiaZofia Kilanowicz Swoboda , JerzyJerzy SwobodaPolish State Philharmonic Orchestra of KatowiceKarusell UK 1994
1993 Kilanowicz , ZofiaZofia Kilanowicz Kaspszyk , JacekJacek KaspszykKraków Philharmonic OrchestraEMI Classics 1995, 1999, HMV Classics 1997
1994 Kilanowicz , ZofiaZofia Kilanowicz Wit , AntoniAntoni WitPolish National Radio Symphony Orchestra (Katowice)Naxos
1994 Kozłowska , JoannaJoanna Kozłowska Kord , KazimierzKazimierz KordWarsaw National Philharmonic OrchestraPhilips
1994 Castellani , LuisaLuisa Castellani Nanut , AntonAnton NanutSlovenian Symphony OrchestraAudiophile Classics
1995 de Feis , DoreenDoreen de Feis Leaper , AdrianAdrian LeaperOrquesta Filarmónica de Gran CanariaArte Nova
2004 Kenny , YvonneYvonne Kenny Yuasa , TakuoTakuo YuasaAdelaide Symphony OrchestraABC Classics
2006 Perruche , IngridIngrid Perruche Altinoglu , AlainAlain AltinogluSinfonia VarsoviaNaive V5019
2007 Gritton , SusanSusan Gritton Simonov , YuriYuri SimonovRoyal Philharmonic OrchestraAllegro
2009 Brewer , ChristineChristine Brewer Runnicles , DonaldDonald RunniclesAtlanta Symphony OrchestraTelarc CD80699
2012 Bayrakdarian , IsabelIsabel Bayrakdarian Axelrod , JohnJohn AxelrodDanish National Symphony OrchestraSony
2016 Tritt , BarbaraBarbara Tritt Boguszewski , BohdanBohdan BoguszewskiSzczecin PhilharmonicDUX 1200
2018 Izykowska , EwaEwa Izykowska Boreyko , AndrzejAndrzej BoreykoPoznań Philharmonic OrchestraDUX 1459
2019 Gibbons , BethBeth Gibbons Penderecki , KrzysztofKrzysztof PendereckiPolish National Radio Symphony OrchestraDomino Records
2020 Gerrard, LisaLisa Gerrard Kamdzhalov , YordanYordan KamdzhalovGenesis OrchestraSony Classical

Notes

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  1. ^Robin, William (9 June 2017)."How A Somber Symphony Sold More Than a Million Records".New York Times.Archived from the original on 15 January 2019. Retrieved14 January 2019.
  2. ^Thomas, 163
  3. ^"Words in Gorecki's Symphony No. 3 (in translation)".Web.ics.purdue.edu. 1944-09-26.Archived from the original on 2017-04-29. Retrieved2017-01-27.
  4. ^abcdefEllis, David. "Evocations of MahlerArchived 2012-09-17 at theWayback Machine" (PDF).Naturlaut 4(1): 2–7, 2005. Retrieved 22 June 2007.
  5. ^abcdeSteinberg 1998, p. 171.
  6. ^Alison Moore, Is the Unspeakable Singable? Henryk Górecki’s Symphony of Sorrowful Songs and the Ethics of Holocaust Empathy, Portal, Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies, 8 (1) January 2011, 1-17.
  7. ^Steinberg 1998, p. 170.
  8. ^"Palace of the Commonwealth open to visitors". National Library of Poland. 2024-05-28.Archived from the original on 2024-06-12. Retrieved2024-06-11.
  9. ^Makowski, Tomasz; Sapała, Patryk, eds. (2024).The Palace of the Commonwealth. Three times opened. Treasures from the National Library of Poland at the Palace of the Commonwealth. Warsaw: National Library of Poland. p. 206.
  10. ^Thomas 2005, pp. 85–6.
  11. ^abHoward 1998, p. 134.
  12. ^Thomas 1997, p. 81.
  13. ^abThomas 1997, p. 82.
  14. ^Górecki 2003.
  15. ^abcMcCusker, Eamonn. "Symphony No.3: Sorrowful SongsArchived 2007-06-07 at theWayback Machine".CD Times. Retrieved on 19 June 2007.
  16. ^abThomas 1997, p. 83.
  17. ^Kertesz, Imre. "Górecki's Symphony no.3, 'Symphony of Sorrowful Songs'Archived 2007-09-27 at theWayback Machine".Le Chercheur de traces. Retrieved on 7 July 2007.
  18. ^abBlum, Ronald. "The Impact of Górecki's Symphony No. 3".Chicago Sun-Times, 26 June 1994.
  19. ^Han-Leon, Chia. "Symphony No.3, op.36 (1976)Archived 2007-06-11 at theWayback Machine".The Flying Inkpot, 9 December 1999. Retrieved on 22 June 2007.
  20. ^Thomas 2005, p. 265.
  21. ^abThomas 1997, p. 91.
  22. ^Mason Hodges, John. "A Polish Composer Makes Minimalism Meaningful[permanent dead link]".Critique, 1993. Retrieved on 22 June 2007.
  23. ^Howard 1998, p. 133.
  24. ^abcPerlez, Jane (27 February 1994)."Henryk Górecki".The New York Times Magazine. Retrieved 3 October 2012.
  25. ^Howard 2007, pp. 215–6.
  26. ^Jacobson 1995, p. 191.
  27. ^abcHoward 1998, p. 136.
  28. ^Koch, Heinz. "Mit wichtigen bundesdeutschen Beiträgen". Musica 31, no. 4. 1977. p 332.Da schleift einer drei alte Volksliedmelodien (und sonst nichts) 55 endlose Minuten lang.
  29. ^Howard 2007, p. 216.
  30. ^Howard 2007, p. 217.
  31. ^Polaczek, Dietmar. "Neue Musik in Royan",Österreichische Musikzeitschrift, July–August, 1977. 358
  32. ^A warrior named Lemminkäinen had been murdered, cut into pieces and thrown to the river atTuonela. His mother went to the river of God Tuoni, found the corpse of her dead son and brought him back to life.
  33. ^Howard 1998, p. 137.
  34. ^Wierzbicki, James. "Henryk GóreckiArchived 2009-08-14 at theWayback Machine".St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 7, 1991. Retrieved 29 May 2007.
  35. ^Howard 1998, p. 138.
  36. ^Thomas, Adrian. "Górecki, Henryk Mikolaj".The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. (London): Macmillan, 2001, v.10, p. 160.
  37. ^Howard 1998, p. 144.
  38. ^Howard 1998, p. 145.
  39. ^"Top 10 Discs of the Decade".BBC Music Magazine. 2002-11-01. pp. 27–28.
  40. ^Performing Pain: Music and Trauma in Eastern Europe - Page 134 Maria Cizmic - 2011 soprano Dawn Upshaw, Górecki's Third Symphony encountered a rather incredible period in its reception history: it became the best-selling classical record of all time, even crossing over into the popular music charts in the United Kingdom. [this cannot be correct across all classical categories - see sources for Switched on Bach, Essential Pavarotti etc].
  41. ^Layton 1995, p. 401.
  42. ^abHoward 1998, p. 152.
  43. ^"Light of Passage".Royal Ballet and Opera. Archived fromthe original on 10 March 2025.

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