Kraków Philharmonic Orchestra
The Kraków Philharmonic Orchestra or the Symphony Orchestra of the Karol Szymanowski Philharmonic (Polish: Orkiestra Symfoniczna Filharmonii im. Karola Szymanowskiego) is a professional symphony orchestra based in Kraków, Poland. The national status of the orchestra is reflected in its program of events, including weekly symphonic concerts in the Wawel Royal Castle, or at the Jagiellonian University famous Collegium Novum, and prominent Kraków churches. The company is more active professionally than any other philharmonic orchestra in the country.
Kraków Philharmonic Orchestra | |
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Orchestra | |
Official logo | |
Founded | 1909 |
Concert hall | Kraków Philharmonic Concert Hall |
Principal conductor | Michał Dworzyński |
Website | www |
The Symphony Orchestra, presently residing in the Kraków Philharmonic, came into being in 1945. It was the first professional symphony orchestra in postwar Poland, formed at the local concert hall during the Soviet offensive. The first postwar director as well as the conductor of the historic first performance held on February 3, 1945 (three months before the end of World War II in Europe), was Professor Zygmunt Latoszewski, survivor of the Warsaw Uprising.