Showing posts with label piano music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label piano music. Show all posts

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Chopin Monuments Around the World II - Poland, Ukraine, France and England (Vol. 6, No. 10)

In a continued Tour of Chopin Monuments Around the World that started in Warsaw a month ago, we visit other Polish cities and locations where Chopin monuments may be found. 

From Warsaw we go to Chopin's birthplace in Zelazowa Wola, to Szafarnia Manor and Park, where he spend his summer vacations, and to a Wroclaw, where he stopped on the way somewhere else.  Then, we go to Paris, England, and Ukraine...

ZELAZOWA WOLA, CHOPIN'S BIRTHPLACE, POLAND



The small manor, with a typical Polish sloping roof, six-paned  window, and entrance way framed by white columns, is a well known Chopin landmark. This is where Fryderyk Franciszek Chopin was born on March 1, 1810 (as celebrated by the composer and his family), though the birth was recorded in the parish registry as having happened on February 22, 1810 (this date was favored by some of Chopin aficionados from around the world)... His father, Nicolas Chopin, born in the area of Lorraine, France, came to Poland and since 1802 worked as a tutor for the four children of Count Skarbek. The eldest son, Fryderyk Skarbek was to be the God-father to the child, named after him... Now, we only hear about the younger or the older Counts Skarbek because of their connection to Chopin, not the other way around. The mother, Justyna Krzyzanowska was a poor relation and housekeeper for the Skarbek family, and, no doubt, cherished the moment of moving out of their manor to the new family's cottage after the wedding of 1806. 

Today, Chopin recitals are held outdoors all summer and tour buses stop by regularly.  There are portraits, pianos, and furnishings indoors, and a beautiful park to walk through... Not everyone is aware that that park features a Chopin Monument. After visiting it numerous times and attending many concerts, I have never noticed its presence and only discovered this monument on the Internet! 

Chopin Monument in Zelazowa Wola. Photo from Wikipedia.

Sculpted by Józef Gosławski in 1955,  the monument was unveiled in 1969  in Żelazowa Wola, Poland. The mature pianist, dressed in a coat and an evening suit with a huge bowtie seems ready to leave his homeland forever. The pianist's beautiful hands are featured prominently holding the folds of the coat. Chopin looks away, is turned inward, lost in reflection and sorrow. The last step before leaving forever...  Hidden among trees and bushes of  the park, this sculpture deserves to be better known.



Another view of the monument in its park setting. Photo from Wikipedia, by Adam Rudzki

SZAFARNIA PALACE NEAR TORUN

There is a monument to Chopin at the Szafarnia Palace where he stayed for holidays with a school friend in 1824 and 1825. Then, owned by Julian Dziewanowski, the father of Chopin's friend Dominik ("Domus"), and located near Torun in central Poland, the house and grounds provided the young composer with healthy diversions and many opportunities to encounter Polish folk dances and music. The Chopin bust is placed at the entrance to the Szafarnia Palace, now a Center of Chopin Studies. The setting is very interesting, with the sidewalk paved to represent a curved keyboard. 

Chopin Monument in Szafarnia. Photo from Google Maps, 2014.

Chopin Monument in Szafarnia. Photo from NIFC website.

The romantic portrait of a "genius composer" with windswept hair requires no further comments. . . But we are delighted to note the presence of a large "basetla" - a string bass string used in folk ensembles, "kapela" that played the obereks, mazurkas, and kujawiaks that so impressed the young composer. During the summer of 1825, he actually had a chance to play the instrument during the Harvest Festival held at Szafarnia, after the procession of the villagers reached the manor, and other elements of the festival have concluded, with singing, dancing, gift presentation and games... This is how Chopin described this monumental occasion in a letter to his parents in Warsaw, dated August 26, 1825:

Już była prawie 11-nasta, gdy Frycowa basetlę przynosi, gorszą od skrzypcy, o jednej tylko stronie. Dorwawszy się zakurzonego smyka jak zacznę bassować, takiem tęgo dudlił, że się wszyscy zlecieli patrzeć na dwóch Fryców, jednego śpiący na skrzypkach, drugiego na jednostronnej, monokordycznej, zakurzonej [...] rzępolącego basetli,

"It was almost elevent when the wife of Fryc brings a basetla (string bass) worse than the violin (fiddle), and with only one string. After grabbing the dusty bow, I started playing the bass with such fervor, I made noise with such intensity that everyone came up to see the two Fryces (Fryderyk's nickname), one sleeping on the violin, the other on the one-stringed, monochordial, dusty and noisy basetla..."

Sculpture from Szafarnia Park. Photo from Google Maps. October 2013.


WROCLAW, POLAND


Chopin did not stay in the City of Wroclaw for an extended period, but traveled through it four times when going to the cure in the spa of Duszniki (then: Reinhert).  In a letter from the summer of 1826, to his friend Wilhelm Kolberg, he described the route in the following words:
Kochany Wilusiu! Przejechawszy Błonie, Sochaczew, Łowicz, Kutno, Kłodawę, Koło, Turek, Kalisz, Ostrów, Międzybórz, Oleśnicę, Wrocław, Nimsch, Frankenstein, Wartę i Glatz, stanęliśmy w Reinertz, gdzie dotąd stojemy. — Dwa tygodnie już piję serwatkę i wody tutejsze; i niby, jak mówią, mam trochę lepiej wyglądać, mam niby tyć, a tym samym lenieć...
"My dear Wilus! After having traveled through   Błonie, Sochaczew, Łowicz, Kutno, Kłodawa, Koło, Turek, Kalisz, Ostrów, Międzybórz, Oleśnica, Wrocław (then: Breslau), Nimsch, Frankenstein, Warta and Glatz, we stopped in Reintertz, where we are staying now.  For two weeks already I have been drinking whey and the local waters, and as they say, I am supposed to look better, and I'm supposed to gain weight, and at the same time become more lazy..."

Chopin Monument in Southern Park in Wrocław, Poland. Wikipedia.

Four years later, we find Chopin in Wroclaw again, this time visiting the city itself, staying in an inn, attending a performance (as described on the NIFC website): "Only in November 1830 did he stay in the city for a longer time. On that occasion, he and Tytus Woyciechowski stayed at the Zur Goldenen Gans [The golden goose] inn on Junkernstrasse (now Ofiar Oświęcimskich street). In the evening of their arrival they went to the Municipal Theatre on Taschenstrasse (now at the junction of Oławska and Piotra Skargi street) for a performance of Raimund's Der Alpenkönig und der Menschenfeind."

The composer described his impromptu performance Wrocław in a letter written on 9 November 1830:

"I found there a small, as usual, orchestra that had turned up for the rehearsal, a piano and some referendary, an amateur, by the name of Hellwig, preparing to play the First Concerto in E flat major by Moscheles. Before he sat down at the instrument, Schnabel, who had not heard me for four years, asked me to try out the piano. It was difficult to refuse, so I sat down and played a couple of variations. Schnabel was infinitely pleased, Mr Hellwig got cold feet, and others began to request that I perform in the evening. More particularly, Schnabel so kindly insisted that I couldn't dare refuse the old gentleman. He's a great friend of Mr Elsner's; but I told him that I'd do it just for him, since neither had I played for a couple of weeks, nor was I intending to show off in Wrocław. To that the old man said that he knew all of this and that he had wanted to ask me yesterday in the church, but was too embarrassed. Then I went with his son to get some music and played them the Romance and Rondo from the Second Concerto."

The monument captures the composer resting in an armchair, with eyes closed, listening to the music, maybe, during that rehearsal... As elegant as every, he seems much taller and more imposing than in real life. That's what monuments do: monumentalize their subjects! 
Photo from NIFC website.

KIEV, UKRAINE 

It is perhaps due to the unwillingness of sculptors to compete with the epic monument by Szymanowski, located in the Lazienki Park in Warsaw, that so many Polish sculptures in Poland are of his head, or bust, or, if full-scale figures present the piano-less composer ready to leave his country, or resting, listening to music....

The new Chopin monument in Kiev, Ukraine, follows another path: it is a "Chopin-less" white piano, filled with flowers, and standing on a sidewalk with one leg planted in the grass. I am not sure whether this moument is a permanent sculpture or a temporary installation. But I'm sure it is quite cute and does attract the attention of passers-by...  There were no Chopin visits, letters, or historical occasions to commemorate. There was and is only music...

This photo of Chopin Monument is courtesy of TripAdvisor
Kyiv: "A Piano in the Bush" - Chopin Monument (Cora_v, Jun 2014)

PARIS, FRANCE




Chopin's tombstone in the Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris, featuring the muse of music, Euterpe, weeping over a broken lyre, was designed and sculpted by Auguste Clésinger, the husband of Solange Dudevant, daughter of George Sand (Baroness Aurore Dudevant), Chopin's lover.  Visitors keep leaving mementos and the tomb is among the four most often visited tombs in the entire cemetery, sharing the honors with Jim Morrison, Oskar Wilde, and Edith Piaf.... Bellini or Rossini, in contrast, are forgotten. Such is the power of the personal, intimate language of Chopin's music that speaks directly to the heart...


There is no end to the supply of fresh flowers, mementos and gifts, that include piano keys, candles, poems, and books... The tombstone features a portrait of Chopin seen from the side; this cameo-like profile places Chopin in the domain of the "immortals." Yet, the bouquets of roses, carnations and other flowers are checked and changed daily. The vases are provided by a local Polish committee and the tombstone is appropriately decorated with red-and-white Polish colored ribbons and flags. 

I leave a copy of Chopin with Cherries at the Chopin Tombstone in Paris.

Here is a selection of poems from Chopin with Cherries, reprinted by the Cosmopolitan Review.  Elizabeth Murawski wrote about visiting Chopin museum and seeing the memorabilia kept there, so let us cite her poem:

Polonaise
By Elisabeth Murawski


In the museum, along
with first editions,
the death mask, the chair

whose arms he gripped
in coughing fits,
a lock of yellow hair.

Was it Sand who clipped it
for a keepsake? She
who whispered

Let me be your lightning rod
as Chopin played
for her ears only,

courting the angels,
stealing the shine
from the Seine. Think

of his wish (a drastic
death certificate)
to have his body opened

that I not be buried alive,
of his heart taken home
to a Warsaw church,

of the grave in Père Lachaise
brilliant with roses
and candles, baskets

laden with fruit, of notes
plucked from his roots

that go on singing.

(c) 2010 by Elizabeth Murawski

For those who would like to read more Chopin poems, the entire anthology is recommended.  

Fifty years later, at the height of fin-de-siecle expressive and decorative style of art nouveau, another portrait of Chopin was made and built in Paris in 1906. Jacques Froment-Meurice designed a scene with the elegant Chopin at the piano. The sculpture brings music to life, with an angel floating above the keyboard, and a female figure reclining at the feet of the pianist, lost to the world in rapture... This fascinating sculpture, an essay about the meaning of the music may be found at Parc Monceau - in the 8th arrondissement, at the junction of Boulevard de Courcelles, Rue de Prony and Rue Georges Berger (35 Boulevard de Courcelles, 75008 Paris).


LONDON, U.K.

While the images of Chopin in France are either romantic or post-romantic, and very expressive in their flowing lines, sorrow, and intensity of music-induced ecstasy, the two sculptures found in the United Kingdom are stark and modern. In one, Chopin is sliced into an abstract figure of many layers, in another, his piano is transformed into a sled, taking off on a cosmic flight...


According to information I found on the website of the Polish Heritage Society in London, "The statue, a gift of the Polish people to the British nation for its help in fighting Nazi tyranny and originally erected on this site in 1975, was restored by the Polish Heritage Society and unveiled on 18th May 2011 by HRH the Duke of Gloucester in the presence of The Ambassador of the Republic of Poland to the United Kingdom, Her Excellency Ms Barbara Tuge-Erecińska."

Furthermore, the report continues: "Chinese pianist Lang Lang laid flowers at the newly-unveiled statue of Fryderyk Chopin, on Sunday 22nd May, outside London’s Royal Festival Hall at the Southbank Centre to pay his respects to the Polish composer he describes as the 'perfect balance between romantic and classic'."

Nice, very nice...

MANCHESTER, U.K.


The top prize for the strangest Chopin monument visited so far goes to... the Sobocinski's sculpture built in 2011 in Manchester, U.K. According to a report in the Pianist Magazine

"Commissioned by The Chopin Memorial Monument Committee and The Polish Consulate, with Bruntwood as principal sponsor, the impressive monument marks the culmination of the celebrations of the bicentenary of Chopin’s birth. The creation of Polish sculptor Robert Sobocinski, the sculpture is a fitting tribute to the composer’s genius and marks the occasion when he performed in Manchester in 1848, shortly before his death. The work depicts Chopin at the piano gazing across at his muse Baroness Aurore Lucile Dupon. Carved into the work is an eagle in flight – the symbol of Poland for over one thousand years and a battle scene symbolising the Polish fight for freedom. The monument measures 4 metres high and 2.5 metres wide and is set on a sandstone plinth."

According to a blogger Chrissy Brand, "this recently unveiled monument of Fryderyk Chopin stands in Deansgate at the edge of the city centre's main shopping district.  It marks the occasion when the Polish genius performed in Manchester in August 1848 at the Gentleman's Concert Hall, despite his failing health. Chopin died not long afterwards aged 39."

Well, what can we say after that? The piano as the sled, the muse sitting at one of the ski-like appendages? The flags and national emblems waving on the other side? There is such a thing as an artistic overkill - too much food will make your sick, too much symbolism will make you dizzy.  However, strange, it is better to have this monument up in the streets of Manchester, than not to have one at all.  And even that female figure sitting at the bottom, below the body of the instrument has a historical justification: this is how George Sand loved to listen to Chopin playing the piano in Nohant: by lying down under the instrument, awash in waves of sound...




Monday, April 21, 2014

Maria Szymanowska and Her Times - 2nd International Symposium in Paris, April 28-29, 2014 (Vol. 5, No. 7)

After three years, scholars specializing in early Romantic music of Poland and Europe, are reconvening in Paris, for the 2nd Symposium "Maria Szymanowska and Her Times" - under the patronage of the Président de l’Académie Polonaise des Sciences a Paris.


 The events will take place on April 28-29, 2014 at the  Centre Scientifique de l’APS à Paris (74, rue Lauriston, Paris 16e).  The main organizer of the symposium will host and moderate the proceedings: Elisabeth Zapolska Chapelle, Présidente de la Société Maria Szymanowska, will add to her accomplishment editing the book of research studies that will be the tangible outcome of the presentations and discussions at the symposium.

PROGRAM

MONDAY, 28 APRIL

10:00 am  Meeting of participants and presentations of their work in the cafe.
10:30 am   Opening Address by Professor Zbigniew Kuźnicki – Director of the Centre Scientifique de l’APS  à Paris and by Elisabeth Zapolska Chapelle

11:00 am  Jean-Marc Warszawski – Institut de recherche en Musicologie, Paris
Mutations, mouvements, évolution dans le monde de la musique au temps de Maria Szymanowska

11:30 am Jerzy Miziołek – Université de Varsovie
Artistic culture of Warsaw in the time of Maria Szymanowska and Frederic Chopin

12:00 am Paweł Maciejko - The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
The Wolowskis/Shorrs and the Frankist disputations

12:30 pm – 2:30 pm   Lunch break

2:30 pm Halina Goldberg – Indiana University, Bloomington
The Topos of Memory in the Albums of Maria Szymanowska and Helena Szymanowska-Malewska

3:00 pm Maria Stolarzewicz - Institut für Musikwissenschaft Weimar-Iena
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's connections to Maria Szymanowska and her sister Kazimiera Wołowska

Break 3:30 pm - 4:00 pm

4:00 pm Benjamin Vogel – Swedish Society for Musicology, Lund
Piano – the main atraction of the Polish and Russian drawing rooms during the Maria Szymanowska time

4:30 pm Irena Poniatowska – Institut National Frédéric Chopin, Varsovie
Lumières et décadence de la musique de salon au XIX e siècle



WEDNESDAY, 20 APRIL 2014

10:00 am  Meetings of presenters in the cafe

10:30 am  Hubert Kowalski – Université de Varsovie
Legacy of Thorvaldsen in nineteenth-century Warsaw

11:00 am  Karen Benedicte Busk-Jepsen - Musée Thorvaldsen à Copenhague
A for Amity, Admiration and Attachment. On the Neglected Contact between Maria Szymanowska and Bertel Thorvaldsen

11:30 am Piotr Daszkiewicz - Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris
Humboldt, Cuvier, Jarocki et les autres - les naturalistes et les salons artistiques au temps de Maria Szymanowska

12:00 pm Adam Gałkowski – Université de Varsovie
Femmes de talent, femmes d’action au temps de Maria Szymanowska

2:30 pm – 2:30 pm Lunch break

2:30 pm  «  Madeleine musicale » par Małgorzata Kluźniak – Celińska - piano

Maja Trochimczyk - Moonrise Press, Los Angeles
History in Song: Maria Szymanowska and Julian Ursyn Niemcewicz's Spiewy Historyczne
avec illustrations musicales par Elisabeth Zapolska – chant et Małgorzata Kluźniak – Celińska - piano

3:30 pm  Anna Kijas - University of Connecticut, Storrs
Szymanowska Scholarship: Ideas for Access and Discovery through Collaborative Research

4:00 pm Discussion libre et Mot de la fin du Colloque

4:30 pm - 5:00 p.m  Break

5:00 pm Salon musical et littéraire Maria Szymanowska par les Participants au Colloque

5:30 pm Reception  (Un verre d’amitié)



Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Szymanowska and Chopin at the Bowers Museum, Santa Ana (Vol. 4, No. 7)

On June 30 at 1:30 p.m. at the Norma Kershaw Auditorium of the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana (2002 N Main St, Santa Ana, CA 92706; tel. 714 567 3600) I will present a lecture about "Maria Szymanowska - Court Pianist to the Tsarinas" and pianist Wojciech Kocyan will play piano music by Szymanowska and Chopin. This lecture performance is one of the events associated with an exhibit The Tsar's Cabinet: Two Hundred Years of Decorative Arts Under the Romanovs on display at the Bowers Museum through the summer. The event will be sponsored by the Helena Modjeska Arts and Culture Club, with a small reception to follow. Books about Szymanowska by Slawomir Dobrzanski and a CD set with all of her piano music recorded by Dobrzanski in Poland will be available for purchase at the event.

The lecture will be richly illustrated with portraits of Szymanowska and European nobility, while the musical performance will bring her sound world to life, under the masterful fingers of Prof. Kocyan.  He will juxtapose Szymanowska's nocturnes and etudes with smaller works by Chopin, especially his waltzes - created for the same world of aristocratic salons that were inhabited by Szymanowska. The presentation is loosely based on my paper, read at the International Szymanowska Symposium in Paris, and published in the Annales de Centre de Academie Scientifique Polonaise a Paris, in 2012.

Fee: $7 Member/ $10 Non-member. Advance reservations: Visitor Services Desk, Tuesday – Sunday, 10 AM – 4 PM; bowers.org/tickets or bowers.org/calendar and fill out the reservation form or e-mail education@bowers.org. The event will begin promptly, please leave sufficient travel time.



Szymanowska's portrait by Walenty Wankowicz.
Collection of the Polish Library, Paris 

On Fashion, Portraits, and the Professional Image of Maria Szymanowska (1789-1831)


Fashion choices of classical musicians have recently attracted the interest of Mary E. Davis (Classic Chic, 2006). I bring this topic to the biography of Maria Szymanowska (1789-1831), a Polish pianist-composer who after her 1810 Parisian debut toured Europe in 1822-1826 before settling in St. Petersburg for the rest of her short life. A daughter of a Warsaw brewer, and a divorced mother of three (daughters Celina and Helena, and son Romuald), Szymanowska was able to ascend to an elevated position of the Court Pianist of the Tsarinas, and support her extended family with her music (i.e., concertizing and teaching children from aristocratic families). The pianist’s career benefited from ability to shape her “professional image” as a high-society lady of elegance and multiple talents. My project builds on the research of Anne Schwartz (2009), Sławomir Dobrzański (2007), and Benjamin Vogel (2012) that focused on Szymanowska’s talents as a savvy businesswoman and a musician with a love for English pianos. Through an analysis of her portraits by French and Polish artists (Henri Benner, Nicolas Jacques, Aleksander Chodkiewicz, Józef Oleszkiewicz, Aleksander Kokular, and Walenty Wańkowicz) revealing Szymanowska’s personal image and her fashion choices, I demonstrate that in this pianist we encounter one of the earliest instances of “professional image-making” (term from Laura Morgan Roberts, 2005).

Szymanowska's litograph based on Oleszkiewicz portrait
Collection of the Polish Library, Paris

Szymanowska created her positive image through “impression management” and “social re-categorization”- shifting the attention away from her humble roots to her preferred aristocratic milieu. The means for this transformation included appearance (clothing, hairstyles, and jewelry), carefully cultivated social networks, and virtuous conduct befitting a single mother of three, a teacher of princesses and nobles. The pianist was exposed to the attire of the nobility as a performer in aristocratic salons in Warsaw (in 1805-1806; 1812, 1823, 1827, and 1828), Paris (in 1810, 1824, 1825, and 1826), London (in 1818, 1824, 1825, and 1926), and St. Petersburg (in 1820, 1822, 1827, and 1828-31). The portraits provide an opportunity to compare her white muslin gowns, shawls, turbans, double sleeves, and jeweled belts with the predominant and changing French, Polish, English and Russian fashions of her time, including those of her mentors – Countess Zofia Zamojska, Duchess Maria Czartoryska Wirtemberg, and Empress Alexandra Feodorovna – as well as Queen Hortense, Duchess Laura Junot d’Abrantes, and Madame de Stael, among others.

The striking features of portraits by Kokular and Wańkowicz, both painted in Italy in 1825, point to a possible artistic “Agon” of the two artists who envisioned the pianist as a Queen of Tones in Rome (Kokular, the phrase was coined by Adam Mickiewicz) and a mythological goddess in Naples (Wańkowicz), thus furthering her elevated professional and social status. The ramifications of Szymanowska’s image creation that helped her to become a teacher and a role model for daughters of Russian aristocracy touch upon the concepts of “female genius” and “modesty” (the preferred virtue of society women in the early 19th century). The research for this paper, conducted at the Muzeum Literatury in Warsaw, Poland and Bibliothèque Polonaise in Paris was supported by Maria Szymanowska Society in Paris.

WOJCIECH KOCYAN

Wojciech Kocyan and Maja Trochimczyk after
a Chopin with Cherries Concert, Ruskin Art Club, May 2010

Wojciech Kocyan was praised for his “highly distinctive performances (…) superb, intelligent artistry (…)” (ClassicsToday.com) and “incisive temperament, impeccable technique and sumptuous tone” (Le Monde de la Musique.). He was born in Poland. He studied with two of the world’s most esteemed piano pedagogues: Andrzej Jasinski in Poland, where he received his Masters Degree and with John Perry at the University of Southern California, where he received a Doctor of Musical Arts Degree.

He is a laureate of several international piano competitions, including F.Busoni and Viotti, as well as a special prizes winner of the XI International Chopin Competition and the First Prize winner of the Paderewski Piano Competition. He performed in Europe, America, Australia and Japan, participating in music festivals such as Musica Antiqua Europae Orientalis, Capri Festival, Bydgoszcz International Music Festival, H.M.Gorecki Festival, Beethovenfest, Paderewski Festival, Liszt Festival in Vienna, San Francisco Liszt Festival, Cervantino International Music Festival, Morelia International Music Festival and the Chopin Festival in Paris. He has recorded for television, radio and film and his performances were broadcast in Europe, United States and Australia. His solo and chamber music recordings can also be found on DUX label. He was a subject of press articles in Poland, France, Italy, Germany, Mexico, United States and Japan.

In September 2007 the Gramophone magazine, published in London and considered the world’s most prestigious classical music journal, chose Mr. Kocyan’s recording of Prokofiev, Scriabin and Rachmaninoff as one of 50 best classical recordings ever made, alongside recordings of such luminaries as Leonard Bernstein, Dietrich Fisher-Dieskau, Nicolaus Harnoncourt and Arthur Rubinstein. It also featured the cover headline “The genius of Wojciech Kocyan”. His latest CD, of music by Robert Schumann was released in June 2012.

Dr. Kocyan is much in demand as an adjudicator and lecturer. He has been invited to give masterclasses in France, Hungary, Austria, Poland, Mexico and the United States, including such prestigious venues as the Colburn School. He is the Artistic Director of the Paderewski Music Society in Los Angeles and the Artistic Director of the American Paderewski Piano Competition in Los Angeles.

Maja Trochimczyk, Jane Kaczmarek and Wojciech Kocyan,
First American Paderewski Piano Competition, 2010




Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Chopin's Birthday Parties After 200 Years (Vol. 4, No. 3)


Sculpture of a transparent piano, Chopin's Birthday Concert,
March 1, 2010,  Grand Theater, Warsaw, Poland

Was Chopin born on February 22nd, 1810 or on March 1st? By now, the March date is generally accepted. Why the confusion, then? Because of Chopin's birth record in the church books in Brochow, where he was baptized on April 23, 1810, with Fryderyk Skarbek (1792-1866), the son of the employer of his father, Count Skarbek, as his godfather. The record, discovered in 1892, gives February 22 as the birth date, but Chopin's family has always celebrated his birthday in March. The future composer's names are listed in Latin: Fredericus Franciscus.

The Brochow church was the parish for the estate of Zelazowa Wola, owned by Count Skarbek and now celebrated as the birthplace of Chopin. The pianist's father, Nicolas Chopin (1771-1844) was a son of a French wheelwright, Francois, and was born in a village in the district of Lorraine, France.  The Chopin family, in turn, had roots leading back to an impoverished Swiss village in the Alps. The 16-year old Nicolas came to Poland in 1787 with Adam Weydlich, an estate manager for another Polish aristocrat, Count Michal Jan Pac. After the estate was sold, Weydlich and Chopin traveled to Poland, where the composer's future father spent five years working in Weydlich's tobacco factory in Warsaw. He changed his first name to Polish - Mikolaj and became a Polish patriot.  A participant in the Kosciuszko Insurrection of 1794 - the last failed attempt at defending Poland's independence - Mikolaj Chopin was injured in the fighting and left Warsaw to work as a tutor for sons of landed gentry. 

In June 1806 Mikolaj Chopin married Justyna Tekla Krzyzanowska, a poor relation of Count Skarbek in the same Brochow church where his son was later baptized. The Count and Countess Ludwika Skarbek had four children; the Chopins first, Ludwika, was named after the Countess. However, soon after Fryderyk's birth, the quiet estate life ended. When the Count left the country due to his unpaid debts and the Skarbek children grew up, the abandoned wife could not afford a tutor. The Chopins had to move elsewhere.  The family packed their bags in July; Nicolas became a French teacher at the Warsaw Lyceum and the young Fryderyk's (or "Frycek" as he was nicknamed at home) urban childhood began. 

Did Chopin celebrate his birthday? Apparently not. There are only seven mentions of this word ("urodziny") in his letters, and only two of these relate to his own birthday and name-day - in letters from his mother (1842 and 1848).  The other "birthdays" are celebrations of the Parisian society to which Chopin was invited. There are, however, twenty four mentions of the name-day - "imieniny" - the celebration of the patron saint after whom an individual is named and who serves as the individual's holy protector and benefactor.  Some of the earliest documents in the Chopin Museum in Warsaw are beautiful cards he made and painted for the name-days of his father and mother.

In fact, the very first letter by Chopin, at the age of sixteen, is such a card for Dear Papa, written on December 6, 1816, the feast of St. Nicolas, the traditional patron of gift-giving. 

Gdy świat Imienin uroczystość głosi /
Twoich, mój Papo, wszak i mnie przynosi
Radość, z powodem uczuciów złożenia,
Byś żył szczęśliwie, nie znał przykrych ciosów,
Być zawsze sprzyjał Bóg pomyślnych losów,

Te Ci z pragnieniem ogłaszam życzenia.

When the world announces this celebration of thine 
Name day, my Papa, it brings joy also to me,
Because of the confluence of my feelings. 
May thou live happily, not knowing harm or strife,
May God always bring thee a prosperous fate,
These are the wishes I desire for thee.


Actors in 19th Century costumes mingled with the audience,
Grand Theater, Warsaw, March 1, 2010.

Six months later, on 16 June 1817, Fryderyk wrote a name day wish for his mother:

Imienin Twoich, Mamo, Ci winszuję!
Niech ziszczą nieba, co w mym sercu czuję:
Obyś zawsze zdrową wraz szczęśliwą była,
Jak najdłuższe życie pomyślnie spędziła.

I congratulate thee, Mama, on thine name day
Let heaven bring about what I feel in my heart
May thee be always healthy and happy
May thee live the longest life in prosperity.


Indeed, there are abundant references to name-days in the entire family correspondence, including Fryderyk's annual "name-day" letters to his father and mother. They send their wishes in return. His mother, Justyna, wrote in March 1842, with some motherly advice about trusting God and thankfulness for divine blessings, which alone help being "happy and peaceful." As she explained: "I thought much about you here, my dear child, on your birthday and name day I'm sending to you in my spirit my blessings, while praying for your prosperity. Let God bless you and always keep you in his care." 

One of the last letters of Chopin to his family, written on June 25, 1849, four months before his death, in the throes of last illness, mentions a name-day letter to his Mother as a means of being there at her celebration, if not in body, at least in spirit and thought.

_________________________



Poster of Chopin's Birthday Concert, Warsaw, Poland, March 1, 2013

The music world celebrated Chopin's 200 birthday in a multitude of ways back in 2010. I attended an amazing birthday concert at the Grand Theater of Opera and Ballet in Warsaw on March 1, 2010, as a part of the Third International Chopin Congress.  

We heard the Piano Concerto  in E Minor twice the same evening, in two completely different interpretations, of which the modern and Olympian Garrick Ohlson's remains in mind.


Maja Trochimczyk with Garrick Ohlson after Warsaw Chopin concert, March 2010.

Maja Trochimczyk with actress Alina Janowska at the
Chopin Birthday Concert, Warsaw, March 1, 2010.

________________________________


Three years later, on March 5, 2013, the Ignacy Jan Paderewski Society of Los Angeles decided to celebrate Chopin's Birthday with a bash involving actors and pianists at the Colburn School of Music. The event, grandly entitled "An Evening of Piano and Drama Featuring Internationally Renowned Artists" featured two phenomenal pianists - Gloria Campaner - an Italian pianist who won the previous edition of the American Paderewski Piano Competition, and John Perry - Professor of Piano at USC Thornton School of Music, Kocyan's mentor and teacher, and one of the most important piano pedagogues of this century.

Their interpretations of Chopin, Schubert, and Debussy left the audience breathless. John Perry's profound and inspired interpretation of two Impromptus by Franz Schubert was especially fascinating - as he celebrated Chopin's genius by not playing his music, but by "channeling" his spirit of sublime artistry and emotional maturity. Gloria Campaner, a rising star of the classical music world, has played a half-recital, with German and French music enveloping the "core" of Chopin.

Chopin Birthday Concert of the Paderewski Society - R to L: Jane Kaczmarek,
Marek Probosz, Ms. Pawlicki, Wojciech Kocyan, Gloria Campaner, John Perry,
Dmitry Rachmanov, and Mr. Pawlicki, March 5, 2013, Colburn School of M usic.
Excellent quality and talent were also apparent in the performances by Wojciech Kocyan, Artistic Director of the Paderewski Society and Professor of Piano at Loyola Marymount University, and Dmitry Rachmanov, Professor of Piano at the California State University, Northridge. The talents of these pianists were well matched by the acting ability of Jane Kaczmarek and Marek Probosz who narrated the Birthday Bash and turned from a concert into a party, with some goofy fooling around.

The comedic element was especially strong in a staged performance of a scene from Paderewski Memoirs, with Kocyan standing in for Paderewski and noodling at the piano, and Kaczmarek performing his impetuous "know-it-all" hostess, a student of Chopin convinced she knew better how to play a particular etude. Their act, complete with a grandfather clock - the ringing of which was to be a part of the music - as well as costumes and stage setting was quite entertaining. Coupled with an incredibly high level of artistic performances by the pianists, it would have left us with a delighful feeling of an evening well spent.

Gloria Campaner talks with John Perry, Chopin Birthday Concert, March 5, 2013.
All is well that ends well, one should say, though, and this concert did not end well at all. Instead of just singing "Sto Lat" to Chopin with Kocyan's improvised accompaniment at the end of this Birthday Concert, we were explosed to a transcription of "Happy Birthday" for two pianos in Chopin's style. Worse still was the fact that this piece came right after the last notes of l'Isle joyeuse by Debussy played by Gloria Campaner with such sublime inspiration that the listeners were still on the "seventh cloud" of artistic delight... Thanks to Kocyan who decided to call for a Polish "Sto Lat" right afterwards, we ended the concert on a high note and left this tribute to Monsieur Chopin with a song...



Gloria Kampaner, Wojciech Kocyan, and John Perry after the Chopin Birthday concert.


Lesson for the future: if you have engaged the talents of the stature of Kocyan, Campaner, Perry and Rachmanow, do not put a Mr. and Mrs. Pawlicki in this exalted company, where they clearly do not belong. Nuff said.   

At the end, I went to say hello to Jane Kaczmarek, whose cordial stage presence and lovely voice and laughter have enlivened this birthday concert. She had the same magical effect during the first Chopin's Birthday Bash organized by the Paderewski Society in February 2010. I was thrilled then to hear that she read several poems from the Chopin with Cherries anthology - including some of mine.  But I was not there to hear her, since I was in Warsaw, at the Chopin Birthday Concert...

Maja Trochimczyk, Jane Kaczmarek with Paul Tensor and friend, after the concert.
__________________________________________

Photos from Warsaw Chopin's Birthday Concert, (c) 2010 by Maja Trochimczyk
Photos from Los Angeles Chopin's Birthday Concert, (c) 2013 by Krzysztof Onzol.