Eugeniusz Knapik

Eugeniusz Knapik (born July 9, 1951 in Ruda Śląska) is a Polish pianist and composer of classical music best known for his 1980 chamber piece String Quartet No. 1.[1] Knapik studied composition and piano with Henryk Górecki (19332010) [2][3] and Czesław Stańczyk at the University of Music in Katowice. Later, he studied composition under Olivier Messiaen in Paris[4] under a French government scholarship. As a pianist he has recorded widely, specialising mainly in 20th-century music. He has won numerous prizes for his compositions, including at the Festival of Polish Piano Interpretation in Słupsk, and the International Chamber Music Competition in Vienna.[5]

Along with Andrzej Krzanowski and Aleksander Lasoń, Knapik is generally seen as a leading member of the composers who emerged in Poland during the mid-1970s. This group was collectively named Stalowa Wola after the city at which they stated their manifesto at a 1975 festival of music which was sub-titled "From young composers to a young City". Their statement read, "The work of the composers who entered their artistic lives at the fesivals in Stalowa Wola was a kind of opposition to the 1950s and 60s avant-garde: opposition towards novelty for novelty's sake, and towards total destruction. This opposition was a spontaneous, intuitive, deep-rooted reaction, which we only later became fully aware of."[5]

Knapik is often seem as a composer out of his time, in that his music is heavily influenced by the musical idioms of the late Romantic era, in particular by the work of Gustav Mahler (1860-1911). More recent influences include Górecki, Krzysztof Penderecki (b. 1933) and Witold Lutosławski (1913-1994).[6] He has borrowed from 19th and 20th century English language poetry for both libretto and inspiration, a fact which sets him apart from most of his Polish contemporaries.[7]

Today, Knapik teaches at the Katowice Academy of Music, where he is professor and director of composition.[8]

Selected works

Notes

  1. "String Quartet No. 1". Allmusic. Retrieved on June 1, 2009.
  2. Significantly at the point when Górecki was moving from modal to melodic composition
  3. Thomas, 290
  4. "Eugeniusz Knapik". Adam Mickiewicz Institute. Retrieved on June 1, 2009.
  5. 1 2 "Eugeniusz Knapik". Polskie Centrum Informacji Muzycznej. Retrieved on June 1, 2009.
  6. Thomas, 292
  7. 1 2 Thomas, 292
  8. "Eugeniusz Knapik". Warsaw Autumn Festival, 2003. Retrieved on June 1, 2009.

References

External links

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