Krzysztof Penderecki - Seven Gates of Jerusalem, Symphony No. 7 for five soloists, speaker, three mixed choirs and orchestra
First recording of the original version
CD and 76-page booklet
booklet writer: Schwinger, Wolfram
choir: National Philharmonic Choir Warsaw
chorus master: Wojnarowski, Henryk
conductor: Kord, Kazimierz
narrator: Carmeli, Boris
interpreter:
-Rappé, Jadwiga
-Ochman, Wieslaw
-Tesarowicz, Romuald
- Klosinska, Izabella
-Harasimowicz-Haas, Bozena
composer: Penderecki, Krzysztof
orchestra/ensemble: National Philharmonic Orchestra Warsaw
Éditeur: Wergo
Penderecki, who had already composed five symphonies and planned out his sixth in concept, decided in favor of a new vocal work and chose for its theme and title "Seven Gates of Jerusalem", which was premièred on 9 January 1997 in Jerusalem - and called it his Seventh Symphony.
The number seven has long fascinated Penderecki. For "The Seven Gates" he wrote seven movements. The main theme of each of the respective moments II and IV has seven different notes that serve as the starting material for the passacaglia-like structures of these movements. Again and again, one finds in the score distinctly emphasized groups of seven quarter notes that are repeated on a single pitch. Finally, there are the seven powerful fortissimo chords that end the seventh and final movement of the work.
This CD which is accompanied by extensive liner notes (essays by Wolfram Schwinger and biographies of the performers in German, English and French / libretto in the original version of Latin and Hebrew with translations in German, English and French) presents, with Part VI of the moving oratory (a reading from chapter 37 of the book of Ezekiel) recited in Hebrew, the first recording of the original version - a live recording of a concert which took place in Vienna on 16 November 1999.