˿

Dates: b. 1909 / d. 1969

Nationality: Polish

Period: 20th Century

Genre: Overture

Key Musical Elements:

  • Duration
Image caption,
Grażyna Bacewicz

Why is she a Trailblazer?

In 1943 it was very unusual for women to be composers.

Trailblazer Grażyna Bacewicz not only broke new ground as a female composer in Poland, she continued to write music while war threatened to destroy her country.

Listen out for:

There is a musical cipher within the piece using Morse code. The Victory code is dot dot dot dash and is heard played on the timpani such as a 4’20”. Can you hear this rhythm repeated in different ways all through the piece?

Naomi Wilkinson explores Morse code motifs in Grażyna Bacewicz’s triumphant Overture, teaching us how her hope for victory got her through a time of fear and terror during WWII.

Fast Facts

  • Grażyna Bacewicz learnt the violin and the piano as a child – and, throughout her life, she enjoyed composing music for both instruments, including piano sonatas and seven violin concertos.

  • In the early 1930s Bacewicz studied composition in Paris with another pioneering female musician, Nadia Boulanger, who taught many other great 20th century composers, including Leonard Bernstein and Aaron Copland (both also featured in Ten Pieces).

  • Despite nursing a wounded sister and looking after her own family, Bacewicz kept composing and premiering her new music at private concerts in Nazi-occupied Warsaw during the Second World War.

  • Bacewicz’s Overture was played for the first time at the end of the war in Krakow at a festival of contemporary Polish music and helped to establish her reputation in Poland and beyond.

Watch the orchestral performance of Bacewicz’s piece Overture by the ˿ Scottish Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Roderick Cox.

Overture

It’s hard to believe Grażyna Bacewicz’s Overture was written in 1943 in the depths of world war.

The sense of struggle and combat is never far away – with the snare drum striking up and the brass playing fanfares – but Bacewicz’s optimistic music seems full of courage and strength.

The work itself contains a musical message of hope, with the Morse code for ‘V’, symbolising victory, (dot dot dot dash) beaten out on the timpani during the piece.

That sense of victory drives the music forward, like a pounding heartbeat. Composed in a time of darkness, this is music blazing with light.

Resources

KS2 Lesson Plans

Explore and download lesson plans for six weeks of learning and activities for Overture by Grażyna Bacewicz.

KS2 Lesson Plans

Explore and download power point slides for six weeks of learning and activities for Overture by Grażyna Bacewicz

KS2 Powerpoint Slides

Download the audio version.

Downloadable mp3

Downloadable .zip file containing arrangement and Bacewicz files. This arrangement is for Grade 4/5 only, owing to the complexity of the piece.

Multi-ability instrumental arrangements

Where next?

  • Why not listen to Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5? Bacewicz’s ‘victory’ timpani motif was itself inspired by the famous four-note opening of this piece. The similarity of Beethoven’s motif to the rhythm of the letter v (symbolising victory) in Morse code meant it was often played on the timpani in ˿ wartime broadcasts to inspire the Allies.
  • You could also explore Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 10 and hear the story of another composer working at a time of great danger.
  • Get creative and upload your responses using the Ten Pieces Uploader!

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