Showing posts with label Dominik Yoder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dominik Yoder. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

"Timeless Dialogues" - American Debut of Paulina Tomczuk with Dominik Yoder (Vol. 16, No. 2)

 


On 20 May 2025 at the Martin Luther King Auditorium of Santa Monica Public Library, the Helena Modjeska Art and Culture Club presented a wonderful concert of two young musicians, Paulina Tomczuk, violin, and Dominik Yoder, piano.  They played a set of pieces for violin and piano, after showing off their talents in solo sections of the well-received concert. 


Born in Zielona Gora, Poland, Paulina Tomczuk is a graduate of Fryderyk Chopin Music University in Warsaw (2024) where she is currently continuing her Masters' studies with Agata Szymczewska. Simultaneously she studies at Hochschule der Künste Bern in Switzerland with Professor Bartłomiej Nizioł. A young soloist's path to fame leads through the thorns of countless competitions, and Ms. Tomczuk has participated in about 70, winning numerous honors.  Three recent ones are: the 4th Prize at the 6th Wanda Wiłkomirska International Polish Music Violin Competition in Częstochowa (Poland, 2024), the 1st Prize at the 1st Miniature Competition in Warsaw (Poland, 2022), the 1st Prize at the Kyoto International Music Competition (Japan, 2021), the Grand Prix at the 2nd Wiłkomirski National Chamber Music Competition in Łódź (Poland, 2021), and the 1st Prize at the ISCART International Music Competition (Switzerland, 2021).  She has performed as a soloist and in chamber ensembles in Poland, Czech Republic, Switzerland, Germany, France, the Netherlands, and Turkey. This concert was her American debut and it truly revealed her talent. 


For the solo violin portion of the concert, she selected three pieces from different time periods - Johann Sebastian Bach's contemplative and polyphonic Andante and Allegro from Sonata for Solo Violin No. 2, BWV 1003, followed by pensive and chromatic first movement, subtitled L'Aurore from Eugène Ysaÿe's Sonata for Solo Violin No. 5, Op. 27 and ending with brilliant and sparkling with vitality Caprice No. 1 by Polish composer Grażyna Bacewicz. I forgot to ask what violin she played, but it sounded exquisite, filling the auditorium with rich, honeyed tones. Being a classical music weirdo, I used to listen to Bach's solo violin sonatas (that I much prefer to those for solo cello) both as "little night music" at home and while driving, to calm myself down amidst the chaos of Los Angeles freeways. Once I got into the mood of the Andante, I found the peace and serenity of pure musical dialogue - a difficult feat to perform on a solo instrument with four strings and one bow.  Yet, Tomczuk was able to bring out the inner voices and maintain apparent continuity of intertwining melodies.  


The Belgian, late Romantic Ysaÿe is violinists' perennial favorite, yet somehow left me lukewarm. We do not have to like all the world's music, even though I'm sure the young violinist performed this dark piece very well. However, Bacewicz's Caprice in stunning interpretation of Paulina Tomczuk aptly made up for this disappointment - it was so vivacious and brilliant that it seemed that sparks were flying from the musician's bow. Bacewicz was a professional, prize-winning violinist and knew the instrument exceptionally well.  This is a gem in contemporary repertoire, with its virtuosic staccatos, spizzatos, flying arpeggios and shifts of register and texture. What a fantastic piece and what an extraordinary performance!  Looking for words, here, to stop repeating adjectives. Oh, I found it, in the magical vocabulary of Mary Poppins: Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!


Unlike Paulina Tomczuk, whom I have seen and heard for the first time, I've had the pleasure of witnessing the artistic growth of Dominik Yoder over many years.  As former Director of USC Polish Music Center I often lent scores from our collection to Roza Kostrzewska Yoder, a Polish music fan who does the most to promote Polish music in California of all musicians and officials that I know. She finds age-appropriate music by Polish composers for all her students, including her three sons, Kacper, Dominik and Lukasz.  It must be hard to be the middle child in any family, let alone a family of two pianist parents and three pianist siblings. The good thing, there is excellent music heard and played in that cultural oasis of a home every hour of every day. . . The challenge is to find one's individuality and personal style amidst such competition. 

Kasper, Dominik, Lukasz Yoder with their parents and the Board of the Modjeska Club
at the Wojciech Kocyan Residence in Baldwin Hills, CA, September 2019.

And Dominik Yoder did exactly that.  As his official bio notes "he directed unusual passion and determination toward music from a very young age, beginning piano studies at the age of two on his own initiative." If his older brother was playing, Dominik wanted to play as well... When he performed for the Modjeska Club in 2019 along with his two brothers, the audience was impressed with their impeccable technique, virtuosity, and musicality. At that time, Dominik stood out because he was not just a pianist, but also a composer. He played one of his pieces - in a somewhat post-romantic, post-Rachmaninoff style that had little to do with the dissonances and complexities of contemporary modernism, but a lot more in common with the spiritual and emotional world of Romanticism. A beautiful and inspired miniature of dense chords and poignant melodies. Well done! That's what I thought then.  


Since that time, Dominik spent hundreds of hours at the keyboard and traveled to numerous competitions, expanding both his impressive technique, the pianistic repertoire, and the expressive range of music he could comfortably interpret and make his won.  To return to the list of his achievements he recently won the Beverly Hills International Auditions and the New York Music Guild Competition. Earlier, "he  received Second Prize in the 2025 Hartford International Chopin Competition, Fourth Prize in the 2025 Fujairah International Piano Competition, Second Prize in the 2024 Los Angeles International Liszt Competition, the Gold Medal in the 2018 Kosciuszko Foundation Competition for Young Pianists in Washington, D.C., and the Grand Prize in the 2018 Redlands Competition, thanks to which he performed with orchestra. He has been awarded First Prize in more than a dozen local, regional, and state competitions. In 2022, Dominik received the Wybitny Polak (“Outstanding Pole”) award from the 'Teraz Polska' Foundation at the Consulate General of the Republic of Poland in Los Angeles."



For the solo piano portion of the concert,  Dominik Yoder selected Franz Liszt's most popular Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in C-sharp minor, followed by Chopin's Nocturne Op. 62 No. 1 in B major, filled with nostalgia and musical filigrees of delicate arpeggios, the dramatic and passionate Étude-Tableau Op. 39 No. 6 in A minor by Sergei Rachmaninoff and concluding with Sergei Prokofiev's virtuosic and boisterous Sonata No. 3 in A Minor. The Hungarian Rhapsody is a very difficult choice - since every classical music listener has heard it countless times, and those into popular music treat it as a soundtrack to a Disney cartoon. Alas, in being ridiculed by cats and mice chasing each other, the timeless music does lose its allure. But, luckily, in Yoder's interpretation it gains back its status of a celebrated masterpiece and more. His pianistic technique is impeccable, with hands flying over the keyboard with astounding velocity and accuracy.  The key to technique is to make all keys, all fingers even - so many pianists who do not practice enough after becoming "professional" lose the ability to even-out the dramatic arpeggios and scales, so suddenly there are holes in them when one finger is slightly too weak and "off." Not so, in Dominik Yoder's interpretation! His hands are a joy to behold and the fruit of their work a joy to hear! Virtuosity and brilliance in a Liszt piece is a given. What impressed me the most while listing to Yoder's interpretation of the "timeless chesnut" was how he brought out the inner voices, the sonorous details, the shifts of tempo, mood and touch... These highlights changed and enriched the music, making it sounds fresh and original. So I completely forgot about the cats and mice that stubbornly invaded my mind at the beginning.... Thank you, Dominik, for saving the music from desecration by popular entertainment! Bravo.


He was no less brave in following the Hungarian Rhapsody by one of Chopin's best known and beloved Nocturnes. At one of his home concert I was not happy because the shift from one, fast and dramatic piece to another, slower one was made too fast. It is one thing to practice, and another to completely enchant and delight the audience.  In the Nocturne, Dominik Yoder displayed the "unbearable lightness of being" - the delicate, ephemeral arpeggios, the sweet, slightly sorrowful melodies - the audience was still, almost holding their breaths, so focused on anticipating and hearing the next note, the next climax of a heavenly ascending phrase. . .  If I continue, I'll end up writing too much purple prose, so let's return to the program. The two Russian works, Rachmaninoff's Etude and Prokofiev's Sonata were written by pianists for pianists, with such overabundance and density of chords, scales, arpeggios, contrasts, forte fortissimo accents, that the audience was completely transfixed by this sonic onslaught.  The pianist fully revealed his serious, intense, dramatic side - as a Romantic virtuoso prima facie. 

Thus, when I read comments from Ewa Solinska and Prof. Adam Wibrowski claiming that Dominik Yoder is ready to compete in the Chopin International Piano Competition in Warsaw, I was not surprised. He said he does not know enough Chopin by heart yet, so he will wait another five years.  Let's wish that in those years, his talent and musicality expand even further, so he reaches the podium of this most important Piano Competition in Poland. 



For the "dialogue" portion of the concert, the willowy young violinist changed into a stunning red dress.  She brought out some technology on stage - a tablet with the music and a pedal to press on to change the pages. How does the world change! Oh my, oh my... At least she does not have to haul a suitcase of paper around the world when going to concert. On the other hand, who could forget the cosmic vision of harpsichord soloist Elizabeth Chojnacka, with a crown of red curls above a tight silver uniform straight from outer space as she threw to the floor gigantic sheets of music glued to purple cardboard. When the music was over - Xenakis, Boulez et al. - the stage was covered with the music. This was one of my most favorite memories from Warsaw Autumn Festivals... 

Our flame-red violinist and somber black-clad pianist first ventured into the classical territory. The Sonata for Violin and Piano in E-flat major, K. 302 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was composed in 1778 in Mannheim and published as the composer's Opus 1, known as one of his "early" sonatas. The work consists of two movements, Allegro and Andante grazioso. The challenge of Mozart lies in the apparent textural simplicity and transparency of his textures. Here's the melody, here's the accompaniment... But the real challenge is the precision of rhythm, phrasing, the delicacy of touch.  And, with two musicians, the challenge is to hear their impeccable coordination. One is the soloist, the other accompanies, then there is a switch and the roles reverse.  Paulina and Dominik met this challenge head on and conquered that mountain! Bravo.  It was a real delight to follow their musical dialogues and interchanges. When I listen to Mozart, it seems the music always dances a minuet in a crinoline and a wig. But it dances in the center of a vast ballroom, so each stumble, each step is clearly seen. Luckily, this time, there were no stumbles. 



I did not remember Claude Debussy's Beau Soir for violin and piano from my music history studies and rightly so - it is an arrangement for violin and piano of a song first published in 1891 and setting a lovely verse by Paul Bourget:

, Lorsque au soleil couchant les rivières sont roses
Et qu'un tiède frisson court sur les champs de blé,
Un conseil d'être heureux semble sortir des choses
Et monter vers le cœur troublé.

Un conseil de goûter le charme d'être au monde
Cependant qu'on est jeune et que le soir est beau,
Car nous nous en allons, comme s'en va cette onde :
Elle à la mer, nous au tombeau.

When at sunset the rivers turn pink / And a warm tremor rustles the wheat fields,/ An advice to be happy seems to arise from the world / and ascend towards the troubled heart.

It is an advice to savor the charm of being in the world / while we are young and the evening is beautiful / For we are leaving, like this wave that goes out / to the sea, so we go out to the tomb.

Debussy was not even 30 years old, and his choice of this melancholy text -  "carpe diem" or else - seems indicative of youthful angst.  Around that age people suddenly realize that they are not immortal, they will not be forever young, and there is a next generation already chasing after them. The music is appropriately sweetly delightful and somewhat nostalgic, even more in the violin-piano version.  When the violin reached the continually ascending while fading notes in pianissimo, the audience was transfixed into silence that was followed with an audible "aaach" afterwards. That's the magic of classical music - to so enchant and entrance the audience, to so take them into cosmic spheres of beauty, that they cannot help but sigh, when the music ends. This was one of my most favorite pieces on the program. 



Sergei Rachmaninoff's Vocalise is the last of his Songs op. 14, written in 1915 without words, and sung in that way by many world-famous sopranos. It was also arranged for many instruments that imitate the voice, in the ebb and flow of its flowing melodies. A charming, romantic piece, allowing the violinist to showcase the emotional versatility.  I must say, having heard it many times before I was struck by the number of repetition of the same melody in the music. If someone is not romantically inclined, is it still as beautiful? Or just repetitive?  The difference between deep romanticism and shallow sentimentality is difficult to maintain. While the musicians gave justice to the music, the piece itself seemed too tedious to me.  But what can I say? Could I even sing or play it? It is easy to criticize and complain while sitting on the sidelines... 

Luckily the fantastic, perfectly structured and played Scherzo by Johannes Brahms from the F A E Sonata brought the listeners back to the highest level of Romantic artistry.  Brahms wrote this movement for a work composed jointly with Robert Schumann and Albert Dietrich in 1853 for the virtuso violinist Joseph Joachim, with the intention of having him play the sonata, but he never did. Instead he premiered Brahms's Violin Concerto.  The work is based on a motive outlining the German phrase that was Schuman's personal motto: "Frei aber einsam" ("free but lonely"). Luckily, the repetitions and recurrences of this phrase in the Scherzo never become as tedious as those of the theme in the Vocalist. Brahms's Scherzo, as interpreted by two astounding virtuosi was truly a perfect ending to this concert. I was grateful to hear classical music so alive and so well under the fingers of these talented young musicians.  

The encore was another treat - Henryk Wieniawski's Romance from Violin Concerto No. 2, Op. 22, with the orchestra reduced to the piano.  Again, the two musicians displayed their artistry, seamless collaboration, musicality and sensitivity in the most expressive phrases... Overall, the audience greatly appreciated their versatility, musicality, technique, and poise. The applause only ended because the guards were urging everyone to leave, as it was way past the Library's closing time! 

It will be great to follow the young virtuosos' careers and see how far they will go. Meanwhile, what the listeners took home was another set of unforgettable memories of high art, high class, high society... The Western civilization has such treasures to share...

Modjeska Club's President Maja Trochimczyk, Treasurer Anna Sadowska, Dominik Yoder, Paulina Tomczuk, and Secretary Beata Czajkowska

Monday, August 1, 2022

A Delightful Concert by Kasper and Dominik Yoder (Vol. 13, No. 2)


I've been so busy with poetry that I stopped having time for music!  So I only listen to classical recordings while driving, and I have developed this indelible association of Chopin's Etudes with going 80 miles per hour on an empty freeway with a full moon above me and black hills contoured ahead. Try it some time, make sure you are alone and sing along, if you can! 

Finally, an invitation came from an old friend, Roza Kostrzewska-Yoder, an amazing piano teacher, whose children, three young men, are all pianist. Her husband is a pianist, too, and they have a private piano school, Chopin Academy in Los Angeles, that turns out one prize winner after another.  On Sunday, July 31, 2022, their two younger sons, Kasper, age 16.5 and Dominik, age 19.5 were to give a recital somewhere else, but the host fell sick so the concert was moved back home to the lovely salon. The interior is very welcoming, in the style of old Polish manor houses, with interesting works of art, antique furniture, and striking old wooden beams in the ceiling.  

I still remember that house when this piano studio did not exist and the house was standing on huge stilts on a very steep slope at the turn of a very curvy, narrow mountain road.  I was shocked by the apparent danger of living in a house that was attached to the ground only just barely, with one side,  while the rest of it was supported by thin metal column of 20 meters or so.  But the danger was more imagined than real, my hosts assured me. Just in case, I did not sign up my daughter for piano lessons with Roza. Ania did not want to practice anyway and now sings in a choir while working as a chemical engineer, researcher with patents to her name... 

Kasper Yoder (L) and Dominik Yoder (R)

At the family concert, the audience included music lovers from the Polish American community and fellow pianists with families.  Dominik played an early Beethoven's Sonata Op. 2 No. 3, and Sergei Rachmaninoff's Sonata No. 2, while Kasper filled in the middle of the dramatic musical sandwich with Chopin - Polonaise in F-sharp minor, Op. 44, and three Etudes (the Revolutionary, Op. 10 No. 12, and two from Op. 25, No. 12 in C minor, and No. 1 in A-flat major) in the first half, and the B-minor Prelude by Sergei Rachmaninoff.  The biographies of both wonderful young pianists are below. 

They both have impeccable technique and long-fingered pianists' hands - that fly above the keyboard with the speed of light, it seems at times.  Dominik's playing is more intellectually robust, bringing out the symphonic colors from Beethoven's early sonata and the the thunderous darkness of virtuosic Rachmaninoff, with the obscure intensity of a Russian soul. He would be great in Liszt's most "diabolical" concoctions; reminded me a bit of the superb young Liszt interpreter, Peter Toth I heard years ago at the Paderewski Festival in Raleigh, N.D.  In contrast, Kasper's interpretations strike me as truly romantic, with a gentle touch and rich timbres even in the most dramatic sections - these versions appealed to my poetic sensibility. Except in the tragic and dark Polonaise in F-sharp minor. To play it with the intensity of trauma that the music calls for, the pianist must live through unbearable pain. I do not wish it upon him, so let him play other Polonaises, with more zest for life and more vivid, brighter emotional colors! 

 The "Ocean" Etude Op. 25, no. 12 was as intensely cobalt-hued in the hands of Kasper Yoder as the music calls, for with its overarching waves of chords and arpeggios.  Nicknamed by American audiences, this etude is also a favorite with music theorists interesting in cognitive psychology and human ability to create large-scale patterns. I'm thinking of  "Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid" by Douglas R. Hofstadter here, but maybe I'm wrong and he does not mention Chopin at all. Alas, I read it so long ago. In another life, perhaps. . . 


I did not buy flowers for the artists, so I grabbed postcards I made as I was leaving house, with new words to the "Hymn of Light" by Sibelius. I thought I'd write poetic thank you notes to both musicians after the concert. This, I did. Then, I read the brief poems to the audience,  and everyone was pleased. When I came back home, I combined the two miniatures into a longer poem with a new ending.  The music was so vivid and intense, it just called for a flight of imagination. Hearing the piano so closely reminded me of what George Sand used to do when Chopin was playing at Nohant. She'd lie down under the piano and luxuriate in the sonic avalanche falling on her from above... We were comfortably seated around the room, but the intensity of real sound, not the tinny little distortion from a loudspeaker, a real sound played by a real person. Magic, indeed. 


 On Hearing Chopin Etudes

~ for Kasper and Dominik Yoder

 

Cobalt waves of thick chords

spread out under charcoal skies.

A sudden ray of gold sunlight

pierces dark clouds into bliss.

 

Under the pianist’s fingers

massive thunderbolts of arpeggios

change into sweet arabesques

and dissipate into the air.

 

A question mark lingers.

Did we really miss it?

Did the door to Paradise

close already?

 

The piano pleads for us

while we remain immobile,

immersed in a sonic avalanche,

transfixed by its beauty.

 

The room resonates with each forte.

Sforzato shakes us to the core.

“Oh, to be a young pianist, again.”

Night falls outside with a sigh.

 

Be still, my heart”- said the poet.

How to be still when the music

floats high above us like magic

rabbit pulled out of the hat?

 



I had my favorite apple and cinnamon cake at the reception afterwards, and great, fruitful conversations, so the concert was a complete success!  We forget how important it is to meet people in person, face to face...  But I also like being alone. 

I like driving with Chopin's music playing just for me. Thinking of Chopin, his Nocturnes are an ideal antidote for road rage: who cares if anyone cut you off, if you are following the rarefied phrase of a pianist soaring into the stratosphere of delight?   Last summer, I listened to the Nocturnes after a beautiful day at the beach that brought resolution to a long-lasting trauma and finally broke the wheel of karma for me. Just one wheel of many, we are so entangled with others in this strange life! 




The 23rd of July



... is the day of clearing karma

untying knots on the thread of fate,

breaking enchantments, reversing curses.


Look at the moon, blood-red and broken

above the hilltop, huge like ancient pain

passed on through generations.

It follows you, as you drive home 

after resting in the silver mist of the ocean,

its waves - turquoise and jade - always

moving, yet always the same - 


Look, the moon hides behind the black ridge

of despair, only a soft spot remains, shimmering 

on alien indigo sky. The road turns, you fly along 

80 miles per hour, singing a Chopin's Nocturne    -    

its lustrous cascade of notes split apart 

by a sudden apparition   -   a majestic, white 

platinum orb, suspended in darkness. 


You remember that rust-red, once-in-the-lifetime 

moon of prophecy, the fox moon that foretold 

disaster as it led you back from Paso Robles, Solvang, 

Santa Rosa, on the way into disillusionment and regret. 

It was hard to understand. Harder to believe

in the existence of such twisted, demonic 

selfishness masquerading as affection. Pitiful. 


Yet the healing was real. 

The lesson's learned.

The karma's cleared.

It is done. 


The moon now floats high above the valley

in its bright halo, distant and indifferent. 

You've discovered the virtue of detachment.

You've seen how desires of the heart 

led you astray. Your life - an illumination.


Like a moonbeam, glowing on cobalt waters 

of the Pacific, your path ahead is straight - clear 

-  dazzling  -  brilliant  - 


A Starchild, born to shine, you are blessed

by the moon's radiance on this magical 

summer evening of July 23rd. You are home. 

The New Age has just begun. 



(c) 2021 by Maja Trochimczyk 

And listen again, Chopin's Nocturne Op. 62 No. 1 in B major, played by Janusz Olejniczak

Dominik Yoder began studying piano at the age of three. He was awarded the Gold Medal in the 2018 Kosciuszko Foundation Competition for Young Pianists in Washington, D.C. Dominik also received: First Prize in the 2017 MTAC State and CAPMT State Competitions and the 2017 Parness Concerto Competition; Honorable Mention and a Special Prize from the jury in the 2015 San Jose International Piano Competition; Second Prize in the 2014 MTAC Pasadena Music Competition; and First Prize at the 2013 CAPMT State Level Honors Auditions, the 2012 Long Beach Mozart Festival, the 2012 Southern California Junior Bach Festival (Gold Medal), the 2009 SYMF Competition, the 2009 CAPMT Sonata Competition, the 2010 CAPMT Honors Auditions, and the 2011 CAPMT State competition. He has also been a prizewinner of the Glendale Piano Competition and Cypress Piano Competition. Dominik has performed in Żelazowa Wola, birthplace of Frederic Chopin, and for Polish radio and television. He has given concerts in the United States, Germany, and Puerto Rico. Dominik has also performed with the Culver City Symphony Orchestra and the Southwest Youth Chamber Music Festival Orchestra. He currently studies under Róża Kostrzewska Yoder. Dominik enjoys surfing and rock climbing.

Kasper Yoder began playing piano at the age of three, and received First Prize in the 2018 International Chopin Competition in Hartford, Connecticut, First Prize at the 2019 MTAC State Piano Concerto Competition, First Prize at the James Ramos International Video Competition, First Prize at the 2017 Pasadena Theme Festival, Second Prize in the 2015 San Jose International Piano Competition and a special jury prize, Golden Cup in the 2012 Junior Festival, Second Prize in the 2012 Lianna Cohen Festival, Gold Medal in the 2013 California Junior Bach Festival, and the First Prize Dance Theme Festival MTAC Pasadena. He has performed for Polish television, and has frequently concertized in Poland and Germany. Kasper also won Liana Cohen Grand Prize this year, 2nd prize at the Hartford International Chopin piano competition 2022, 2nd prize in the prestigious MTAC State finals of Piano Solo Competition, Gold medal for State level Bach SCJBF in 2021.

It seems that Kasper Yoder collects prizes like people used to collect stamps and has a sizable array of awards and trophies to his honor.  He also enjoys photography, soccer, reading, and dancing in a Polish folk-dance ensemble. He studies with Róża Kostrzewska Yoder.

Here he is four years ago playing the same Etude op. 25 no. 1 we heard on Sunday: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7PuUeIVqcQE

And here is Kasper playing Artur Malawski's  Tryptyk Goralski: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_eBfRg8lrU