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Drzewo życia

16.05 Thu 19:00

40 PLN

Every spring Hash­tag Lab pro­pos­es an evening dur­ing which we make a small ges­ture of remem­brance for Pol­ish Jews. On the 81st anniver­sary of the destruc­tion of the Great Syn­a­gogue on Tło­mack­ie Street, we invite you to lis­ten to Artur Zaga­jew­ski’s Drze­wo Życia, set to poet­ry by Cha­va Rosenfarb.

Drze­wo Życia is a work com­mis­sioned by the Marek Edel­man Dia­logue Cen­tre in Łódź, writ­ten to poems by the Yid­dish poet Cha­va Rosen­farb. Cha­va sur­vived the ghet­to and even­tu­al­ly emi­grat­ed to Cana­da, where she died. The great work of her life is the sweep­ing auto­bi­o­graph­i­cal nov­el Drze­wo życia, which was recent­ly trans­lat­ed into Pol­ish. Although the title of Artur Zaga­jew­ski’s com­po­si­tion derives from the nov­el­’s title, the can­vas of the work is not prose at all, but select­ed poems writ­ten by Cha­va short­ly after leav­ing the ghet­to — poems about her expe­ri­ence of extreme aban­don­ment and isolation.

Artur Zaga­jew­s­ki is one of the most inter­est­ing Pol­ish com­posers. He read­i­ly draws on pop-cul­ture aes­thet­ics, skill­ful­ly dos­ing influ­ences from punk rock and the new wave of the 1980s, while main­tain­ing his own indi­vid­ual and recog­nis­able musi­cal lan­guage. How can Zaga­jew­ski’s declar­a­tive, some­times sharp and abra­sive style meet the inti­mate, fem­i­nine and poet­ic record of life’s most dif­fi­cult experiences?

“When I work with a text, I feel a lit­tle like a con­tem­po­rary the­atre direc­tor who builds new and some­times very dis­tant con­texts around clas­si­cal texts. Much as, for exam­ple, Paweł Myki­etyn does in his Pas­ja, where he assigns the part of Jesus to a woman and has Pilate shout to the crowd through a mega­phone accom­pa­nied by loud, rock music. That kind of rein­ter­pre­tive approach is very close to me, although com­pared to my ear­li­er works, in Drze­wo Życia I decid­ed to soft­en my musi­cal lan­guage somewhat.

From the out­set I want­ed to col­lide this poet­ry with the con­tem­po­rary world in some way — to run it through a fil­ter of today. In cer­tain sec­tions of the work I there­fore reach for the means employed by con­tem­po­rary musi­cal cul­ture, both the high­brow ‘avant-garde’ kind and the pop­u­lar kind. In the vocal part there are tech­niques such as scream­ing and qua­si-chant­i­ng, which on one hand call up punk-rock expres­sion, and on the oth­er evoke the social protests we expe­ri­enced so recent­ly in every­day life. A sim­i­lar role is played by the rep­e­ti­tions of select­ed lines from Cha­va Rosen­far­b’s poet­ry, which, through man­i­fold, almost mechan­i­cal rep­e­ti­tion, detach them­selves from their orig­i­nal con­text and there­by acquire a new, con­tem­po­rary dimen­sion of meaning.”

Pro­gramme

Artur Zaga­jew­s­ki Drze­wo Życia

Per­form­ers

Patryc­ja Krzes­zows­ka-Kubit voiceArtur Zaga­jew­s­ki elec­tric gui­tar­Ju­lian Paproc­ki con­tra­bass clarinet

and Hash­tag Ensemble:

Krzysztof Kozłows­ki syn­the­siz­er Dominik Pło­cińs­ki cel­loAl­bert Woelke accor­dion (Akademia PRO Hash­tag Ensemble)

Pro­duc­tion:

pro­gramme con­cept and text: Ania Kar­pow­iczvi­su­al iden­ti­ty: Karol Tomo­ki Yamazaki

sound engi­neer­ing: Kos­ma Standera

pro­duc­tion: Alek­san­dra Demowska-Madejska

The Con­tem­po­rary Music Space Hash­tag Lab is co-financed by the Cap­i­tal City of War­saw. The patron of the con­cert is the Muse­um of the His­to­ry of Pol­ish Jews POLIN.

Co-financed from funds of the Min­is­ter of Cul­ture and Nation­al Her­itage drawn from the Cul­ture Pro­mo­tion Fund — a state des­ig­nat­ed fund — under the “Com­posers’ Com­mis­sions” pro­gramme, imple­ment­ed by the Nation­al Insti­tute of Music and Dance.

Tickets

40 PLN

Upcoming