A life that deserves a movie: Andrzej Bieńkowski & Muzyka Odnaleziona

Have you ever listened to music so captivating, so crazy and so different from anything else that you wondered ‘For God’s sake, what do these people have inside them to make that music?’ Sometimes, I even want to sneak into their minds to understand the source of that beauty…

This is just the start of a report written by Araceli Tzigane and that has been recently published in Culture.pl, the outstanding communicative project by the Instytut Adama Mickiewicza. It includes a brief bio of Andrzej Bieńkowski and his partner Malgorzata, as well as an interview, translated from Polish to English by Ewa Gomółka.

Andrzej’s life is one of those that make a change in the world. Andrzej, a painter and a teacher at the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw, was widely disdained at the time by his colleagues because of his obsession with rural musicians from around Radom: he would constantly play their music at his house and they were practically the only motif in Andrzej’s paintings over the last few years. He had opted out of a promising career as a painter, even though he was demanded and valued in Switzerland and Italy, so that he did not to have to leave his rural Poland. For years, he recorded without respite those old forsaken musicians from the Radom region, one of the poorest and most isolated in Poland.

Read all the thrilling report here: https://culture.pl/en/article/music-lost-refound-an-interview-with-andrzej-bienkowski You’ll understand how this demanding obsession developed to be one of the most relevant shapers of the current escene of folk music in Poland. 

Małgorzata Bieńkowska & Andrzej Bieńkowski with musicians, photo: Muzyka Odnaleziona archive
Małgorzata Bieńkowska & Andrzej Bieńkowski with musicians, photo: Muzyka Odnaleziona archive

Bringing the village masters back to life: In the Net of Mazurek, by Janusz Prusinowski. Series of online workshops.

It is not easy to catch Janusz Prusinowski in the same place for several days. Apart from his activities as a cultural promoter, leading the All the Mazurkas of the World Festival, with its several editions every year, he and his Kompania are one of the most demanded artists in Europe in the field of heritage music and dance.

It had to come a global pandemic to make him stay in his native land of Mława enough time, in this exceptional situation, to record a series of 13 video workshops, dedicated to several village masters. In the videos, Janusz explains the basics about their playing, also supported by historic recordings made by Andrzej Bieńkowski, for the archive of the foundation Muzyka Odnaleziona.

“In the Net of Mazurek” starts on Friday 17th of July, in this strange Summer of 2020. The videos will be published at 19h at this Youtube Channel. Each of the recorded videos will have a in real time online meeting some days after, with the registered pupils.

Janusz has devoted his life to learn and disseminate the work of those masters. He incarnates with his music all that knowledge, nuances, expresivity, unique to the rawest Polish peasant music. The result is a mind-blowing music, very distinctive and of a unbridled beauty, made with fiddle and with some local versions of other instruments, like the harmonia polska (accordion), cymbałe (psaltery), the drum baraban, the frame drum bębenek, a kind of “cello” used for rhythm and drone called basy. And, of course, the human voice.

Let’s let Janusz explain what is all this about:

The first video will be released on Friday 17th and the protagonist will be the fiddler Jan Lewandowski and his mazurek. On Mondays and Fridays there will be an online meeting in real time, at 19h, with the registered pupils. The details for the registrations are in the FB page and for any question, the person in charge is Ms. Joanna and her email is wsiecimazurka@gmail.com.

The materials produced for this project will stay available in Youtube after. The project is funded by the National Centre for Culture under the programme Kultura w sieci.