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Hanna Kulenty
Hanna
Kulenty (b. 18 March 1961 in Białstok, Poland) began her music
education as a pianist in the G. Bacewicz Elementary Music School in
Warsaw. From 1980 to 1986 she studied composition with Włodzimierz
Kotoński at the Chopin Academy of Music in Warsaw. From 1986-1988 she
did her post-graduate work in composition with Louis Andriessen, at the
Royal Conservatory of Music in The Hague. She participated in the
International Courses for Young Composers organized by the Polish
Section of the ISCM, and the International Summer Courses of New Music
at Darmstadt. The year 1985 was very important for her career: her
composition for symphony orchestra, Ad Unum, received second prize at
the European Young Composers’ Competition, organized in Amsterdam by
the European Cultural Fundation to celebrate the continent’s unity. The
theme of her work, a dissonant, dramatic and well-crafted study of
convergence towards musical unity, was eminently suitable for this
occasion. The same piece by the 24-year old composer, performed at the
Warsaw Autumn Festival, elicited an enthusiastic response from Jan
Weber, a very powerful music critic who warned Kulenty’s male
colleagues: “Gentlemen, hear and tremble!”
She has
received numerous awards and commissions, including the DAAD
scholarship to Berlin, Germany (for senior artists in many
disciplines), and composition commissions and scholarships from the
governments of Poland and Holland. Ms. Kulenty has taught composition
at courses and seminars in several European countries; her music has
been featured at festivals in Poland, Denmark, England, Germany and
Holland. Her music is currently available on three CDs and has been
broadcast and recorded in many European countries. In December 1996,
the Hamburg Opera premiered The Mother of Black-Winged Dreams at
the Munich Biennale. The opera explores the difficult subject matter of
“multiple personality syndrome” and touches upon issues of suffering,
child abuse, and gender relations. With the scenario penned by a
Canadian writer who lives in Holland, Paul Goodman, the chamber work is
structured as one huge arch of increasing tension, spanning the
duration of the piece.
Kulenty’s compositional style has
evolved during the years. Her earlier music, consisting of many layers
of simultaneous “arcs” which begin at different points of their
emotional trajectories and proceed at different speeds, often calls for
vast instrumental resources (two symphonies, piano concerto, violin
concerto). Her preferred medium has been the symphony orchestra which
has the richest sound pallette, though recently she has written
numerous chamber works. Commentators have often compared her orchestral
style to Penderecki or Xenakis; she shares their flair for drama,
expressive intensity, and relentless, layered rhythms. Formidable
technical difficulties make One by One for solo marimba a showpiece of
instrumental virtuosity. This work was composed in 1988, published by
PWM, and premiered at the Pascal Zavaro Festival, Paris, Radio France,
in January 1991. Another solo work, Still Life with a Cello was
commissioned by the Schleswig-Holstein Festival in Germany, composed in
1993 and premiered at the Festival by Polish cellist, Andrzej Bauer.
This composition is a counterpart to the earlier Still Life with a
Violin composed for Krzysztof Bąkowski. Both pieces share a rhapsodic
playfulness with time, and a selectiveness of pitch material, though
the cello composition is somewhat more repetitive, with more regular
rhythmic patterns.
The turn towards minimalism in recent
works may be attributed to studying with Andriessen, most of whose
students write “minimalist-oriented” pieces. Kulenty calls this phase
in her works “European trance music” and often structures her
compositions as single, powerful arcs. Good examples of this style are
provided by A Fourth Circle for violin and piano (1994) and A Sixth
Circle for trumpet and piano (1995). The melodic instrument in A Fourth
Circle could be a violin, viola or cello; the work is most frequently
performed in the violin version. It was premiered at the New Music
Festival, Musikhøst, in Odense, Denmark, in 1994; the main theme of the
festival was “Three Polish Women: Bacewicz, Moszumańka-Nazar and
Kulenty.” A Sixth Circle for trumpet and piano, shares the melodic
traits with its predecessor: microtonal inflections and long stretches
of held notes in the trumpet, driving ostinati in the piano. Kulenty
credits her intuition and the subconscious as the sources for the
haunting sonorities and compelling emotional intensity of the music she
creates. Whatever the explanation, the result certainly deserves our
attention.
Maja Trochimczyk 1995