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"...obvious virtuosity, ...one could hardly play better." "...strong impact, her playing holds one enthralled demonstrating strong personality and assured technique." "...wondrous forayinto solo virtuso technique, Kurkowicz is fearless." "This is music which demands disciplined virtuosity, such as Joanna Kurkowicz has in spades..." "...a very cultivated artist." "It is necessary to mention brilliant style of the violinist, Joanna Kurkowicz. A rich, clear sound, technical virtuosity, precise phrasing, sense of style and an extraordinary musicality create a unique experience." "Joanna Kurkowicz performs each work with conspicuous ease, ...spectacular release." "...luxury class, elaborate, uncompromising and convincing." "What a great discovery! These chamber works of Polish composer Grazyna Bacewicz should impress most listeners as dense masterpieces of neoclassical and atonal style... With its stunning challenges to virtuosity, this piece should leave you with your jaw hanging open... It could have been written for her (Joanna Kurkowicz), so naturally does she navigate its difficult landscape. This melding of three formidable artists grabbed my attention from the start and wouldn't let go until the last note." "...excellent performer, graceful and techniqually assured..." "...extraordinary violinist with talent and stage presence, ...her performance was stellar! ...in the program that challenged her virtuosity as much as her stamina, ...she shows the effects of European discipline in all her playing." "These are super performances. Kurkowicz produces wonderful sounds..." "...Joanna Kurkowicz, a commanding violinist with superb intonation..." "...Joanna Kurkowicz originally from Lublin, Poland and currently leader of the Boston Philharmonic plays this music on her trusty 1699 Petrus Guarnerius with a passion, authority and sheer elan which suggests a longer familiarity with these scores than can surely have been the case... Kurkowicz appears to have all the answers." "...Kurkowicz performance was splendid, astounding and colorful. She played with intensity and respect for this great music." "...As the soloist in Alfred Schnittke's own orchestration of his nightmerish, brilliantly creepy Violin Sonata No.1, Joanna Kurkowicz excelled with her confident, bravura playing." "...it would be hard to imagine more beautiful performance." "...she gave a scorching performance..." "...crystal clear, ...commited and well played, with good sound to match." "Violinist Joanna Kurkowicz and pianist Gloria Chien play with flair, precision and sensitivity... Kurkowicz is excellent." "...sensitive, honest musicianship, so rare in our young talented generation." "...true artistic temperament and personality supported "Alfred Schnittke's sensational sonata for violin and piano, in the composer's arrangement for soloist, strings, and harpsichord, sounds like a different, but equally sensational, work. Violinist Joanna Kurkowicz flew straight at it with teeth, claws, and soul bared..." "...In each event, (Ms. Kurkowicz) has performed at the highest level, with fluent technique and a very sophisticated sense of musicality... In an extremely competitive arena, she is already among the first rank of her generation." "...Ms. Kurkowicz played with masterful technique and good sense of breath between the notes. A very satisfying performance, indeed." "This recording is an excellent example of the most successful promotion of Polish music... Top-notch violinist, Joanna Kurkowicz posseses a beautiful, refined and penetrating sound, impeccable technique and profound experience as a chamber musician." "...conductor Benjamin Zander opened the program with Saint-Saens' "Danse Macabre." As part of the graveyard revels depicted, the piece has a bit of devilish fiddling that was performed with great flair by the concertmaster Joanna Kurkowicz." "...The piece was played with great passion, including terrific violin playing." "Joanna Kurkowicz sensibly presents all the complexity of Schnittke's music--melancholy, distress, fear, despair, grotesque, humor--as well as it's sophisticated virtuosity." "Leon Kirchner "Music for Twelve" took us a step towards music as expression rather than equation, with a soulful violin--the superb Joanna Kurkowicz--dancing sadly over the instrumental turmoil." "For Shostakovitch's trio, Schepkin, Kurkowicz, and Romanienko summoned the courage and calm needed to abandon themselves... these matchless young artists found a human voice and wisdom far beyond their years." "The ensemble opened with three short works of Szymanowski's, full of color and imagination, performed by excellent violinist Joanna Kurkowicz. It was a truly musical event, with terrific interaction between pianist and fiddler, who conjured many spells from the violin." featured reviews: The new piece, an American premiere, was Shirish Korde's "Svara-Yantra," and a terrific piece it is. In this Indian-influenced concerto for violin, tabla (Indian tuned drums), and orchestra, East and West don't meet halfway: the traditional symphony is instead dropped into the middle of the subcontinent, exploding with color. The Philharmonic's usual concertmistress, Joanna Kurkowicz, commissioned the work from Korde, a native of India who teaches at Holy Cross; Kurkowicz carried the opening movement, spinning out declamatory arabesques, idiomatically sliding and bending tones over a drone that coursed through the orchestra with impressionistic vibrancy. "Kudos to the Boston Philharmonic for performing not just one, but two unfamiliar pieces. The gamble paid off. The crowd warmed immediately to Alberto Ginastera's Variaciones concertantes. But they burned white hot to Shirish Korde's Svara-Yantra. Nothing could have prepared the crowd for Korde's Svara-Yantra, Concerto for Violin and Tabla. You don't get many pieces like this in a given year. Those who heard Yehudi Menuhin and Ravi Shankar's "East Meets West" recordings of the late sixties may have had some point of reference, but most probably didn't. The concerto began with an alap, a non-rhythmic movement with an irregular pulse. From the beginning violinist Joanna Kurkowicz infused it with a keening and probing mood. The second movement plunged the audience into the world of eastern rhythms. Kurkowicz, a musician inherently infused with the soul of modernism, accomodated the piece's harsh angles and--yes, there were some--smooth curves. She deftly led the audience through the winding tempos and corralled the dynamic shadings, effortlessly leaping to other keys and ever higher levels of intensity. Samir Chatterjee played tabla with a deftness that recalled tabla player Zakir Hussain. His style seemed to incorporate a catalog of tabla effects, including bols, which are non-verbal mutterings that approximate the tabla "talking." Kurkowicz and Korde knew they were introducing a new type of music to the Boston audience, a hybrid of western orchestral effects and eastern rhythms, so they filled it with cascades of invention. It deserved every second of its standing ovation." "The concert's apex was the next piece, Shirish Korde's ambitious blend of Indian, Southeast Asian and Western, even jazz, elements. The Philharmonic's usual concertmistress, Joanna Kurkowicz, was the violin soloist and, in fact, Korde, who is a professor of music at Holy Cross, wrote the piece for her. Joining her on tabla, a set of Indian bongo-like hand drums with a single head but double body of truncated cones and electronically amplified, was world-renowned tabla player Samir Chatterjee. The soloists in pale lavender and turquoise satin, respectively, provided a visual and aural feast of mind-boggling impact. Through three movements, two Indian ragas, rhythmic scaled entities developed from the 5th century CE, and third concluding movement titled "Joy" but perhaps more accurately labeled "frenzy," the music spun out filmic, haunting melodies, mournful meditations and wondrous ethereal moments. The standing ovation at the end of the piece continued until Korde himself was forced to come to the front and acknowledge the cheering. "Joanna Kurkowicz is not a new name on the Chandos label: she has already released a CD of music of Grazyna Bacewicz (1909--1969) on CHAN 10250, reviewed to much acclaim by the international press. Kurkowicz's busy schedule is characterised by an impressively enterprising repertoire and she has premiered a host of important new contemporary works. Her Bacewicz recording on Chandos is a prime example of her approach: enterprising repertoire with superb, virtuosic musicianship ('disciplined virtuosity', as Gramophone magazine wrote!) and a dazzling freshness of inspiration. This month sees the release of some remarkable, varied and striking music in the Violin Concerto Svara Yantra of Shirish Korde. This haunting work, richly imbued with Indian colours and musical tradition, offers something unique and powerful, with all manner of exotic and imaginative instrumental textures and detail from both the soloist, Kurkowicz, and the orchestra. By way of contrast, Japan is the inspiration for the second concertante work on this recording, Cranes Dancing. Again, one finds oneself responding to the myriad of haunting and exotic sounds conjured up in this impressive work, which is dedicated to Joanna Kurkowicz and was premiered in 2005 (MISC 1005) " "It's difficult playing Prokofiev at ten o'clock at night! said violinist Joanna Kurkowicz after her stellar rendition of the Sonata No. 1 in F Minor. Yes, probably as difficult as diving into a cold mountain stream. But if you are a good swimmer, you quickly adapt. Portentous piano figures and quivering violin notes open this piece, and the audience instantly senses that they're in for a twentieth century experience different from the jocund pyrotechnics of Prokofiev's Sonata No. 2. Composed before and after World War II, Sonata No. 1 features doleful crossbowing, rapid glissandos and spectacular demisemiquavers. Kurkowicz and Chien both excel at exposing the harsh edges of a piece, and in this one there is perfect synchronicity between the two. It's as if they are one player before us with two sets of arms. In the second movement (Allegro brusco), the descending triplets, shards of melody, are repeated furiously, almost angrily. The Andante is a keening, but not entirely tragic, movement. The musicians' grasp of Prokofiev's faint hope glimmerings is poignant without a trace of sentimentality. The final movement is virtuosic, arch, even playful. The way Chien accompanies Kurkowicz's tasty pizzacatos is amazing, as is the way both lead the piece to its melancholic coda." "One of the most reliably creative chamber groups around, Chameleon Arts Ensemble marked the close of its 10th season with an anniversary concert dedicated to that round number. Two of the works shared Opus 10 designations, and the rest featured at least some decimal reference. Three instruments - Joanna Kurkowicz's violin, Scott Woolweaver's viola, and Rafael Popper-Keizer's cello - made a surprisingly big sound in Ernst von Dohnanyi's Op. 10 Serenade, low and open strings creating a folk-tinged Romanticism, a village band essaying Brahms; the players brought appropriate rustic vigor, but also smoothly varnished their dark sound for a melancholy series of variations. Eight months after the premiere of his final symphony, Robert Schumann composed his Op. 110 Piano Trio, similarly assimilating his aphoristic penchant into a formally grand conception; Kurkowicz, Popper-Keizer, and pianist Gloria Chien ranged from intimate to epic, with a generous dynamic range and a superbly paced sense of drama."
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