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Witold Szalonek,

composer and educator; b. 2nd March 1927 in Czechowice-Dziedzice, d. 12th October 2001 in Berlin. In 1949-56 he studied the piano with Wanda Chmielowska and composition with Bolesław Woytowicz at the State Higher Music School in Katowice. He continued his studies with Nadia Boulanger in Paris (1962–63). From 1967 he taught composition at the State Higher Music School in Katowice, and in 1970–74 he headed the Department of Composition and Theory. A DAAD scholarship in Berlin (1970–71) resulted in an engagement at the Hochschule der Künste in Berlin in 1973, where Szalonek succeeded Boris Blacher as professor of composition.

One of his achievements was to discover “combined sounds”, multiphonics of a particular timbre, which can be obtained on woodwind instruments. From 1970 he conducted courses and seminars on his own compositional techniques at music academies and universities in various countries, including Denmark, Germany, Finland, Poland, and Slovakia. His works were performed at many festivals of contemporary music, such as the Summer Courses of New Music in Darmstadt, the ISCM World Music Days, the "Warsaw Autumn", "Time of Music" in Viitasaari (Finland), Gulbenkian Música in Lisbon, "Inventionen" in Berlin, "Alternatives" in Moscow, and "Contrasts" in Lviv.

Witold Szalonek received the 2nd prize in the Polish Composers’ Union's Competition in 1952 for Pastorale for oboe and piano (1952), 3rd prize in the Artur Malawski Competition in 1966 for Quattro monologhi per oboe solo (1966) and 2nd and 3rd prizes in the Malawski Competition in 1968 for Mutazioni for chamber orchestra (1966) and Proporzioni I for flute, viola and harp (1967). In 1964 he was awarded the Music Prize of the City of Katowice, and in 1967 the Minister of Culture and Arts Award. In 1990 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Münster, and in 1994 he won the annual award of the Polish Composers’ Union.

works

Witold Szalonek is part of a group of 20th-century composers who are known for their pursuit of new sound material through experimentation with traditional instruments, obtaining unusual sounds. Szalonek was inspired to conduct such exploration when in the 1960s he encountered non-European music which used sounds completely different from those generated by European instruments. The instruments of the Old Continent have a fixed structure and a foreseeable form. Non-European instruments are unstable, undefined and to a great extent unpredictable. Such sound material was brought to European composers by electronic music or even more so – by musique concrète. However the great expectations that came along with these types of music were not fulfilled. It seems that the most important reason was that there were no living performers present whilst playing the recordings from tape. Music may be the art of sound and one can listen to it with one’s eyes closed, but for its proper functioning an interaction between the performer and listener is needed. Such an assumption can be confirmed by live electronic music, which humanised the electronic sounds by introducing a person who operates the equipment 'live' on stage. 

Today one can encounter such elements of electronic technology implemented in live performances rather than an empty stage filled with speakers playing music recorded on tape. Electronics often appears alongside traditional sounds, where the electronic device is one of the instruments in a bigger ensemble. But also traditional instruments discovered their new, unforeseen sound capabilities in the second part of the 20th century.

The composer once said: 

“Back in my student days my attention was drawn to ‘accidental’ sounds of a strange timbre, wooden ‘rooster’ pipes, produced for the joy of listeners by unskilled craftsmen. When composing the Concertino for Flute and Chamber Orchestra in 1960 I intended to use them to construct certain sound layers in the second movement, but as I did not know their qualities well enough, I had to abandon that plan and I eventually used sounds produced on brass and woodwind reeds and mouthpieces instead.

The composer did not give up the idea of studying the nature of these roosters’ and started a systematic study of all strange sounds of woodwind instruments. The result was a list of 'combined tones', as Witold Szalonek called those curious sounds, together with methods of producing them. It turned out that by using special fingering and unusual blowing techniques one could obtain not only one but even two, three or four tones at a time from a flute, oboe, clarinet or bassoon. During one of the experiments an oboe produced over 160 combined tones! The composer described all this in an article published in the magazine Res Facta in 1973 and used his discoveries abundantly in his own compositions, beginning with the breakthrough piece Les Sons written in 1965. It gave him the reputation of the most radical and controversial representative of sonorism.

This opinion was confirmed by his later works: Quattro Monologhi for oboe solo (1966), Mutazioni for chamber orchestra, Proporzioni I for flute, viola and harp (1967), Dear Earth - cantata for voice and symphony orchestra words by Antoni Gołubiew (1969), and Aarhus Music for wind quartet (1970). The priority of sound over other elements of the work and the form-creating role of timbre would from then on be present in all of Szalonek’s work. Although the proportions of 'combined tones' and classic sounds would differ, Szalonek's music remains especially sensitive to colour and mood.

kompozycje

Pastorale [version I] for oboe and piano * (1952)
Trio for flute, clarinet and bassoon * (1952)
Pastorale [version II] for oboe and orchestra (1952-65)
Nocturne for baritone, string orchestra and harp to words by L. Staff (1953)
The Bell, ballad for 2 boys' or mixed choirs * (1953)
Silesian Folk Ballad for soprano and mixed choir (1953)
Two Folk Songs for voice and piano (1953)
Work-Roughened Hands for piano and mixed choir to words by W. Broniewski (1953)
Lullaby for soprano and piano (1953/2001)
Toccata polyphonica for string orchestra * (1954)
Kurpie Suite for alto and 9 instruments * (1955)
Polyphonic Suite for string orchestra (1955)
Symphonic Satire for orchestra (1956)
Sonata for cello and piano * (1958)
Confessions – triptych for narrator, mixed choir and chamber orchestra to words by K. Iłłakowiczówna * (1959)
Arabesques for violin and piano * (1964)
Greetings for men's choir to words by K. Przerwa-Tetmajer (1964)
Katowice Ballad for soprano and mixed choir to words by A. Baumgardten (1964)
Mutazioni for chamber orchestra * (1966)
Quattro monologhi per oboe solo * (1966)
Proporzioni I for flute, viola and harp * (1967)
Songs about Silesia for mixed choir a cappella to words by A. Baumgardten * (1967)
Proporzioni II for flute, cello and piano (harp) * (1967-70)
Mutanza for piano * (1968)
Improvisations sonoristiques for clarinet, trombone, cello and piano * (1968)
Canzonetta for guitar (1968)
1 + 1 + 1 + 1 for 1-4 string instruments * (1969)
Dear Earth..., cantata for voice and orchestra to words by A. Gołubiew *  (1969)
Aarhus music for wind quintet * (1970)
Concerto for Strings (1971-75)
Three Sketches for harp * (1972)
Connections for chamber ensemble * (1972)
Proporzioni III for violin, cello and piano (harp) (1977)
Musica concertante per violbasso e orchestra * (1977)
Piernikiana per tuba * (1977)
Trio per oboe, clarinetto e fagotto (1978)
Little Symphony B-A-C-H for piano and symphony orchestra * (1979-81)
Take the Game... for 6 percussionists (1981)
Alice’s Unknown Adventures in the Fairy Land of Percussion for 1 percussionist (1981)
D. P’s Five Ghoulish Dreams for alto saxophone solo * (1985)
Inside? - Outside? for bass clarinet and string quartet (1987)
Toccata e corale Bolesław Woytowicz in memoriam [version I] for organ * (1988)
Dialogues for 2 Hands and 2 Legs for piano four hands (1988)
Invocationi for 2 guitars (1992)
Medusa's Head II for 1-3 flutes in C (1993)
Diptych I for mixed choir * (1993)
Diptych II for 16 saxophones (1993)
Gerard Hoffnung's Six Unpublished Drawings for saxophone quartet * (1994)
Fanfares for flute, clarinet, violin, viola, cello and piano (1994)
Signals for 4 trumpets and 4 timpani (1994)
Towards the Little Prince for flute and guitar (1995)
Three Preludes for piano * (1996)
Zakopane Suite for reed mouthpiece * (1996)
Medusa’s Dream of Pegasus I for horn and recorder (1997)
Miserere for 12-voice mixed choir (1997)
Chaconne-Fantaisie for violin solo * (1997)
Bagattellae di Dahlem II for flute and piano * (1998)
Oberek No. 1 for guitar * (1998)
Drei Liebeslieder for baritone and piano * (1998)
Oberek No. 2 for guitar (1998)
Oberek No. 3 for guitar (1998)
Hautbois mon amour for oboe solo, 2 harps, timpani and string orchestra * (1999)
Petite suite for organ (2000)
Gloria for 3 sopranos and 3 altos (2000)
Agnesissimo africanissimo for marimba  (2001)

literatura wybrana

Humphries Carl Sonoryzm i sonorystyka w muzyce Witolda Szalonka. Zagadnienia analizy i interpretacji [Sonorism and Sonoristic Qualities in the Music of Witold Szalonek. Issues of Analysis and Interpretation], "Muzyka" 2008 nr 1, s.93-105
Humphries Carl Szalonek Witold In: The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Second Edition (ed. Stanley Sadie), vol. 24, Macmillan Publishers Limited, London 2001
Rottermund Krzysztof Witold Szalonek in memoriam, "Ruch Muzyczny" 2007 nr 7, s.22
Sonntag Brunhilda Przyczynek do twórczości kompozytorskiej Witolda Szalonka [Toward an Analysis of Witold Szalonek’s Music], "Opcje" 1994 nr 2, s. 86-89.

publikacje

dissertations

Szalonek Witold Claude Debussy 1862-1918. W setną rocznicę urodzin [Claude Debussy 1862-1918. For the Centenary of the Composer’s Birth], Biblioteka PWSM w Katowicach, Katowice 1962
articles

Gojowy Detlef Drugie średniowiecze. Laudatio na cześć Witolda Szalonka [The Second Middle Ages. Laudatory Speech in Honour of Witold Szalonek], "Opcje" 1994 nr 2, s. 79-85.,