Konrad Józef Pałubicki | |
Native Name Lang: | pl |
Birth Date: | 10 March 1910 |
Birth Place: | Dziembówko, |
Death Place: | Gdańsk, Poland |
Resting Place: | Nowofarny cemetery Bydgoszcz |
Occupation: | Musicologist, pedagogue, composer |
Known For: | Bydgoszcz hymn |
Credits: | , which produces label "Notable credit(s)"; or by |
Works: | , which produces label "Works"; or by |
Label Name: | , which produces label "Label(s)" --> |
Office: | may be used as an alternative when the label is better rendered as "Office" (e.g. public office or appointments) --> |
Konrad Józef Pałubicki (1910–1992) was a Polish composer, a musicologist, a teacher, a cultural activist and animator of musical life in Gdańsk and Bydgoszcz. He created the hymn of Bydgoszcz. He taught at the Academy of Music in Gdańsk and the Institute of Music Education of the Higher Pedagogical School in Bydgoszcz (today's Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz).
Konrad was born on 16 March 1910, in Dziembówko near Chodzież (then called Kolmar in Posen). He was the son of Wanda née Wyrwicka and Franciszek, a railway official. Her mother was a teacher and played the piano: it seems she instilled in her son humanistic values and a love of music, literature and theater.[1]
By the end of World War I, he moved with his parents to live in Bydgoszcz.[2] He attended there the State High School of Humanities,[3] today the ancient building of the High Seminary of Bydgoszcz Diocese at 18 Grodzka Street. At the age of 17, he became interested in music and started taking private piano lessons from, a pianist from Lviv who settled in Bydgoszcz in 1923[4] to teach at the Conservatory of Music.
Thanks to a scholarship holder from the Directorate of Railways in Gdańsk, Pałubicki then studied music at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań. In June 1937, he received a master's degree in philosophy of musicology.[5] Concurrently, he graduated from 's (1867–1943) piano class at the Wielkopolska Music School,[5] while as a private he was learning theory and composition with Stanisław Bolesław Paradowski at the Academy of Music. Ignacy Jan Paderewski in Poznań.[5]
From 10 September 1937 to 1 September 1939, he taught singing at the State Junior High School and Secondary School. in Jarocin. He had been leading the orchestra and the choir in this city until the outbreak of World War II.[1]
Fortunately, he could avoid Nazi repressions aimed at the eradication of the Polish intelligentsia in Pomerania, as he was not listed as a teacher in Bydgoszcz school boards but in Poznań's. He nonetheless left Bydgoszcz in a hurry to reach Kutno region, then Kraków.[1]
During the Occupation of Poland (1939–1945), Konrad survived there by giving lessons (Latin, history, mathematics, physics and piano). In 1942, he moved to Warsaw to receive private lessons with Kazimierz Sikorski (in theory and composition) and with Zbigniew Drzewiecki (piano).[5] During this period (1942–1945), he started to compose and achieved several piano pieces and songs.
Pałubicki returned to Bydgoszcz in 1945: on May 1, he took up the position of clerk and then head of the music department at the Department of Culture and Art (Polish: Wydział Nauk o Kulturze i Sztuce) of the Pomeranian Voivodeship. He actively participated in the rebirth of the musical life of the city.
He was particularly active in the Paderewski Musical Society and co-created the Bydgoszcz Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra (Polish: Orkiestra Symfoniczna Polskiego Radia w Bydgoszczy) as well as the Pomeranian Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra. Additionally, he had been teaching composition and music theory at the Municipal Conservatory of Music; from 1947 to 1961, Konrad worked also at the Secondary Music School. He was known to be a demanding teacher.
Apart from teaching, he was very active in the civil society. In 1946, he participated in the Committee for the Celebration of the 600th anniversary of Bydgoszcz city rights: the event, in addition to a Polish Music Festival, included a plenary meeting of the Musical Education Program Committee at the Ministry of Culture and Art.
For the occasion, the 600th anniversary council of the city of Bydgoszcz organized a competition for a city hymn: out of 26 candidates, the jury chose Pałubicki's composition based on Kashubian motifs. As a result, the Bydgoszcz bugle call would be sounded daily three times from the tower of the Poor Clares Church on Gdańsk Street.
Konrad was much appreciated in the music community of Bydgoszcz. He participated with Felicja Krysiewiczowa in the establishment of the Opera Studio, the predecessor of the Opera Nova.[6] He was a member of the program committee of the international festival Musica Antiqua Europae Orientalis in Bydgoszcz. Finally, he became involved in organizing International Summer Courses in the Lubostroń Palace which ran concurrently with the festival.
In 1950, Konrad Pałubicki started some stints in the Tricity: he worked initially at the State Higher School of Music of Sopot and then at the Academy of Music in Gdańsk.
There, he took different positions:[7]
During this period, he kept cooperating with the Bydgoszcz scientific and musical community, performing lectures at the Kazimierz Wielki University. Together with Andrzej Szwalbe, he joined in 1958 the Bydgoszcz Scientific Society which he co-founded, and served as a chairman of the Faculty of Humanities from 1958 to 1968.[1] As a scientific editor, he also provided advice for some issues of the local paper From the history of Polish music in Pomerania and Kujawy (Polish: Z dziejów muzyki polskiej na Pomorzu i Kujawach).
In 1968, he transferred to Gdańsk while still maintaining some activities in Bydgoszcz (teaching theory and composition at the Institute of Music Education of the university). At the Academy of Music in Gdańsk, he led the Faculty of musical composition and theory.[7]
At that time, he was a member of the Council of Higher Artistic Education at the Ministry of Culture and Art. From 1969 on, Konrad chaired the commission of experts for the reform of higher music schools. He also authored many theoretical works, scripts and articles, especially a 2-volume work Contemporary compositional techniques (Polish: Współczesne techniki kompozytorskie).
He died on 22 October 1992, in Gdańsk. He was buried in Nowofarny Cemetery in Bydgoszcz.
Pałubicki 's compositional work was guided by the logic of the formal course of the piece: he spoke in a contemporary language, avoiding extreme avant-garde.[5] His musical legacy includes primarily symphonic works, concerts, instrumental works, songs and chamber music. He wrote about 50 compositions during the so-called "Bydgoszcz period", including:
At the time of his compositions, Konrad created for specific performers, including: pianists Lucjan Galon, Jerzy Sulikowski or Krystyna Suchecka and cellist Roman Suchecki. Among his major creations performed in Bydgoszcz, one can cite Koncert skrzypcowy (Violin Concerto) (1951) and Concertino na fortepian i orkiestrę (Concerto for piano and orchestra) (1956). In 1992, Pałubicki attended his last composer's concert at the Pomeranian Philharmonic, a few months before his death.
From 1954 onwards, he had been organizing scientific sessions devoted to the works of 20th century composers (1955 Karol Szymanowski, 1963 Claude Debussy, 1965 Béla Bartók, 1973 Tadeusz Szeligowski). This tradition continues to this day.[5]
Several of his works were awarded during national competitions:
Konrad Pałubicki was married to Janina née Bazarnik, a widow. They had no children together, but he adopted his wife's children from her previous marriage: Marian (born 1946) and Jolanta (born 1949).
Konrad was the oldest of five children, including:[1]
In 1957, Konrad was awarded the academic title of docent and in 1967 the title of associate professor.He was an honorary member of the Music Society of Bydgoszcz, a long-time member of the Union of Polish Composers and the president of the Gdańsk union of composers.
In the 1970s and the 1980s, he participated in the Doctoral Study Committee at the Faculty of Composition, Music Theory and Conducting at the Academy of Music in Warsaw.
Konrad Pałubicki was portrayed as Professor Pałuba-Pałubiński in Maciej Dęboróg-Bylczyński's novel Wygnańcy Ewy (Exiles of Eve), published in 2016.[11]