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Music
- Nokturn na strunê g (1940)
- Tryptyk symfoniczny (1940/41)
- Polska msza (1942)
- Sonata na skrzypce i fortepian (1942)
- 2 Suity fortepianowetani (1943)
- Trio fortepianowe (1943)
- Kwartet fortepianowy (1943)
- Trio fortepianowe (1943)
- Poemat symfoniczny "Na rozstajach" (1944)
- I Symfonia (1944)
- 4 poematy na tenor solo i orkiestrê d/s Iona Minulescu (1944)
- Uwertura (1945)
- Taniec zbójnicki (1945) (nagroda II Festiwalu Muzyki Polskiej w 1955 roku)
- Koncert na fortepian i orkiestrê (1948) (nagroda II Festiwalu Muzyki Polskiej w 1955 roku)
- Symfonia o tañcu (1951)
- Nokturn symfoniczny (1952)
- Ballada symfoniczna (1952)
- opracowania muzyki dawnej (Symfonia F. Cigalskiego),
- muzyka filmowa i teatralna
Life
Stanislaw Wislocki, born in Rzeszów (Poland), studied music which Seweryn Barbag, Professor of Lvov Conservatory, and later composition and conducting under George Simonis and piano with Emil Michail in the Music Academy of Timisoara (Romania). In 1942-45 he received artistic guidance from George Enescu. On December 6, 1944, Stanislaw Wislocki organised a special concert of the Romanian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the proceeds of which he allocated for the reconstruction of Warsaw. It was one of the first such concerts of the world. After six years abroad as a refugee, he returned to Poland to organise, in 1945, the Polish Chamber Orchestra, made up of pre-war musicians of the Warsaw Philharmonic. Two years later he founded the Poznañ Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra and remained its music director and first conductor for 11 years. Simultaneously he conducted at numerous concerts at home and abroad, which everywhere received laudatory reviews. For two years he collaborated with Grzegorz Fitelberg in directing the Polish Radio National Symphony Orchestra in Katowice. Since 1961 he was conductor of the National Philharmonic, then in 1978-1982 general and music director of the Polish Radio and TV National Symphony Orchestra, with which he made many records and archive recordings for the radio. He received many prestigious record awards, including Grand Prix du Disque for Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto No.2 with Sviatoslav Richter and the National Philharmonic Orchestra on Deutsche Grammophon. He was conducted the most eminent European and American orchestras and given concerts with well-known soloists, such as Argerich, Arrau, Askenase, Berman, Boulanger, Cattel, Drzewiecki, Ekier, Fischer, Forrester, Francescatti, Gitlis, Grychto





