Penderecki’s chamber music is mostly of recent vintage. 
    There were some earlier chamber works, such as the first two string quartets, 
    but the second of those was in 1968, and a third was added only in 2008. On 
    this disc, only the three miniatures for clarinet and piano are early works, 
    written while the composer was still studying in 1956. The other items are 
    four short solos for clarinet, horn, cello, and violin, a duo for violin and 
    viola, and one substantial piece, a Sextet which brings all those instruments 
    together with a piano.
    
    The solos were written for musician colleagues, all of whom are clearly virtuosi 
    – 
Per Slava was written for Rostropovich for instance. Each 
    is impressive on a first hearing, and very impressively performed by a group 
    of superb Polish musicians but they are more likely to be enjoyed live as 
    brilliant encores perhaps than played very much on a disc at home. That is 
    less true though of the Chaconne (
Ciaconna), the last movement of 
    Penderecki’s 
Polish Requiem commemorating tragic events in 
    the modern history of Poland. The Chaconne was added to the score of the 
Requiem 
    when Penderecki learned of the passing of Pope John Paul II. It is heard here 
    in the composer’s own arrangement for violin and viola, which is very 
    effective. It is the most haunting and immediately engaging piece on the disc.
    
    The Sextet has two movements, the second of them playing for twenty of the 
    piece’s thirty minutes. For those unfamiliar with any Penderecki, it 
    might be worth noting that the idiom is modernist, and should present no difficulty 
    to admirers of Bartók or Prokofiev, although it is Shostakovich in his ‘
grotesque’ 
    vein who is recalled at times in this Sextet. It is true chamber music, in 
    which the instruments are mostly treated independently, and which fully exploits 
    the range of colours they present, but makes no attempt to use them together 
    to produce a quasi-orchestral sound. The work does not yield up its secrets 
    at once, but repays several hearings and is the main reason for the general 
    collector to hear this CD. The writer of the booklet notes Marcin Krajewski 
    considers the Sextet to be Penderecki’s most important chamber work. 
    Those notes are generally very helpful, if at times ill-translated.
    
    The recorded sound is very good, in a suitably sized-acoustic for the small 
    forces, and with the instruments positioned fairly closely, but not so close 
    as to tire the ear. The disc is labelled “Chamber works, Vol. 1” 
    and we should hope the next volume will follow soon.
    
    
Roy Westbrook