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Sosnowieckie Centrum Sztuki - Zamek Sielecki
pon.-pt. od 8:00 do 19:00
sob. – nd. Od 15:00 do 19:00
Sosnowiec 41-211
ul. Zamkowa 2
 
 
 
 
 
In 1963 he co-founded with Bronisław Gimpel the Warsaw Piano Quintet, whose other members were Tadeusz Wroński (second violin), Stefan Kamasa (alto) and Aleksander Ciechański (cello), and with which by 1986 he gave over 2000 concerts all over the world, including USA. The line-up later also included Krzysztof Jakowicz, Igor Iwanow, Jan Tawroszewicz and many other artists.
E. Markowska, K. Naliwajek-Mazurek, Fates of Musicians Under Occupation, Warszawa 2014, p. 296.
 
 
On March 16, 1945 the official opening of the radio station in Warsaw took place. The programme included a piano recital by Władysław Szpilman. Before the war, the musician’s performance was the last live performance which, on September 23, 1939, closed the era of traditional radio broadcast (transmitter was destroyed then). The pianist also had the honour of performing during a broadcast inaugurating the presence of the Warsaw station on the air. The musician often remembers the moment of the performance which became a symbolic frame for the activity of Polish Radio, interrupted by the war: Major [Stanisław] Nadzin and director [Roman] Jasiński suggested I play half an hour of Chopin, and well, I have to say I was very happy that it was me, who played in September as the last one, now got to play again to reopen, [...] for me this was a very important day in my life.
K. Staśko-Mazur, “<Radio on a Wire>. Megafonisation of the Warsaw Audiosphere in 1945 in the Light of Contemporary Sources”,  [in:] Audiosfera. Koncepcje – Badania – Praktyki, 2017, no 2, p. 75.
 
 


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