- Andrzej Wasowski
Andrzej Wasowski (b.
January 24 1919 inUkraine ; d.May 27 1993 inWashington DC ) was a Polish classical pianist.Life
Born in
Lwow (nowLviv ,Ukraine ) of an aristocratic family (his father was a baron and his mother a princess) ["Andrzej Wasowski, a Star at 60," by F. Warren O'Reilly, Washington Times, February 20, 1984] . His father's family owned estates inPodolia and sugar refineries and mining interests inSilesia . His mother, Princess Maria Glinska Wasowska was Professor of Piano at theWarsaw Conservatory. She, in her turn, had studied piano withRichard Baumeister , a pupil ofFranz Liszt .Andrzej began his piano studies with his mother at the age of four. In 1931 her was admitted to the Warsaw Conservatory where he studied with
Margerita Trombini-Kazuro , who had studied with one of Liszt's disciples,Giovanni Sgambati . He graduated from the conservatory in 1939 with one of its highest awards, the Grand Prix d'Interpretation.Lwow , where he was living, was overrun by the Russian army in 1939. On hearing him play, they packed him off to give concerts in theSoviet Union where he performed 186 times, giving up to nine concerts in a three day period [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,852947,00.html "War Prodigy" (Time Magazine 1946)] . While in the Soviet Union, he studied withKonstantin Igumnov inMoscow .He returned to his native city just before the Germans captured it. He was permitted to give concerts to benefit war relief organisations, but was not permitted to play Polish music. Since the Nazis forbade performance of Polish music, Wasowski played clandestinely in basements for handfuls of Poles who risked their lives to hear Chopin [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,852947,00.html "War Prodigy" (Time Magazine 1946)] . When he refused to play concerts for the Nazis, he was put to work in a slave battalion.
After the
Second World War , all of his family's possessions were seized by the communists, and the 22-year-old Wasowski became a stateless refugee. He was the winner of the 1951Marguerite Long International Piano Competition inParis and the 1952 International Competition inBolzano . In 1956 he married CountessMaria Grocholska He toured extensively in Europe, North and South America, and became a Venezuelan citizen.In 1965 he and his family moved to the
USA , but found it difficult to secure work as a concert pianist and instead took up a teaching post atOral Roberts University inTulsa ,Oklahoma .We would know nothing of his playing were it not for the enterprise of a small US record company,
Concord Records , who recorded Wasowski playingChopin 's completemazurka s in 1980 and completenocturne s in 1989. These recordings were hailed by critics. Bernard Sherman, reviewing the mazurkas for the New York Times [New York Times (Sunday, June 29, 1997)] described Wasowski as "one of those artists the broad international public neglects but critics and colleagues rave about". Another critic, Charles Michener [(The New York Observer, July 29, 1996)] praised the Mazurkas as "full-blooded and intoxicating, almost shocking in their use of rubato, the freedom with which they shake the pieces' rhythmic structures".Critical acclaim for the nocturnes (recorded in just two days, 30th September and 1st October 1989) was equally marked. The recording received the 1997 Critics Choice Award from
National Public Radio , and the criticJessica Duchen writing in BBC Music Magazine (May 1997) said "These performances of the Chopin Nocturnes, recorded in 1989, are really rather extraordinary… a glorious singing tone of great clarity, eloquence and purity, with beautifully balanced accompaniment and inner voices… they moved me to tears".Wasowski's recordings show a fascinating approach to rhythm, especially in the mazurkas. Being familiar with the dances themselves, his readings are informed by the rhythmic conventions of Polish music, resulting in interpretations that differ markedly from the literal notation, but which are perhaps more in keeping with Chopin's own performance (see an extensive discussion in Sherman's review in the external links section).
Of his own playing, he said "In my conviction, Chopin is not a sentimentalist. On the contrary when I am at the piano I feel his power and anguished revolutionary might." [ [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,852947,00.html War Prodigy - TIME ] ]
ee also
*List of Poles
References
All other biographical material from a biography which was included with his recordings of the Chopin Mazurkas.
External links
* [http://homepages.kdsi.net/~sherman/wasowski.html "Putting the Dance Back Into Mazurka" By Bernard D. Sherman]
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B00E0D91E39F933A25752C1A967948260 New York Times review by Theodore Libby Jr]
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,852947,00.html A Time Magazine article on Wasowski's wartime experiences]
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