Aleksander Michałowski
{{Short description|Polish pianist, pedagogue and composer (1851 - 1938)}}
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File:Aleksander Michałowski (pianista).jpg
Aleksander Michałowski ({{OldStyleDate|17 May|1851|5 May}}{{spaced ndash}}17 October 1938) was a Polish pianist, pedagogue, and composer.{{Cite book |last1=Filar |first1=Marian |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uALGJ4DG8mwC&dq=Aleksander+Micha%C5%82owski&pg=PA7 |title=From Buchenwald to Carnegie Hall |last2=Patterson |first2=Charles |date=2009-09-28 |publisher=Univ. Press of Mississippi |isbn=978-1-60473-623-6 |pages=7 |language=en}} He influenced the teaching of piano technique, especially via studying the works of Chopin and Bach.The text of this article is derived mainly from Eaglefield-Hull and Methuen-Campbell, the cited sources, with notes for specific citations.
Early life and training
Michałowski was born in 1851 at Kamianets-Podilskyi in Ukraine, which was then part of the Russian Empire. From 1867, at age 16, he studied at the Leipzig Conservatory as a pupil of Ignaz Moscheles, Carl Reinecke and Theodor Coccius; Coccius was his greatest influence. In 1869, he traveled to Berlin and studied under Carl Tausig, but his technique was nearly ruined when Tausig forced him to adopt a high finger position.Methuen-Campbell, 48. In 1870, he moved to Warsaw, where he settled permanently.
Around this time, Michałowski befriended and studied with Karol Mikuli, who had received lessons from Chopin between 1844 and 1848 and was head of the Lviv Conservatory.{{Cite book |last=Rink |first=John |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h0MHEAAAQBAJ&dq=Aleksander+Micha%C5%82owski+mikuli&pg=PT321 |title=Chopin |date=2020-07-26 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-000-15204-3 |language=en}} Mikuli passed on many of Chopin's ideas and traditions about the performance of his works to Michałowski. Michałowski also met Chopin's pupil, Princess Marcelina Czartoryska, who played some mazurkas for him. As his teacher, Moscheles had also been a friend of Chopin's. Thus, Michałowski obtained a rich understanding of Chopin's thought and performance through three living connections to the composer-performer.
Artistic style
Michałowski was familiar with all of Chopin's works and devoted a lifetime to their study. In performance, he occasionally altered the music and transcribed it in the manner of Moriz Rosenthal.Methuen-Campbell, 63-4. In 1878, he visited Franz Liszt at Weimar, and at first was not welcomed due to his connections with the Leipzig Conservatory. However, his performance made such an impression that Liszt acknowledged his authenticity of performance and approved the variants he introduced.
A later successor of Michałowski's at Warsaw, Zbigniew Drzewiecki, wrote:
As an interpreter of Chopin, he created a certain style of rendering the composer's works which found many imitators. It consisted of the chiselling of swift passages and stressing their elegance in smoothing the edges of sharper expressive climaxes, in lending Chopin's works the air of almost drawing-room sentimentality. And yet, this slight sentimentality was always under the strict control of moderation, instrumental purity, and good taste.(Quoted by Methuen-Campbell, 73-4, from article by Drzewiecki accompanying Muza LP records XL 0157-60.)
Teaching principles
In 1874, Michałowski took up teaching, though initially privately. In 1891'Warsaw Conservatory': Eaglefield-Hull says 1891, but Methuen-Campbell has the year 1898. he became professor of the concert pianists' class at the Warsaw Institute of Music, at that time under the direction of Apolinary Katski. He continued there until 1918, after which he taught at the Fryderyk Chopin Music School of the Warsaw Music Society.Prof Karol Radziwonowicz (see external links). He particularly emphasized the importance of contrapuntal playing, and during the first two years of his students' work with him, he made them study the contrapuntal keyboard music of J.S. Bach. In the case of one of his students, Wanda Landowska, this emphasis on Bach's music turned into a career dedicated to Bach and baroque music. Chopin himself had sympathy for Bach, and Michałowski understood that the contrapuntal principles were crucial to understanding Chopin's work.{{non sequitur|date=March 2025|reason=these lines on chopin/back do not flow at all with the lines around them}} He also encouraged developing the imaginative and bravura aspects of his students' playing. He often demonstrated technique and style in his lessons, further encouraging students to imitate aspects of his performance.Methuen-Campbell, 60.
Students and successors
Some of his students had their careers interrupted by the two World Wars, which in some cases terminated their work. Among them was Jerzy Żurawlew, who founded the International Chopin Piano Competitions in 1927.See J. Methuen-Campbell 1981, 72-73; 113; 223. A Photo of the First Organizational Committee, Warsaw 1927, including Żurawlew, Aleksander Michałowski, Dmitri Shostakovich, Lev Oborin and Henryk Sztompka appears in J. Methuen-Campbell 1981, plate facing p. 67. See also the official website of the Competition, which makes the same attribution {{cite web |title=Międzynarodowy Konkurs im. Fryderyka Chopina |url=http://www.konkurs.chopin.pl/o_konkursie.php |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080209225918/http://www.konkurs.chopin.pl/o_konkursie.php |archivedate=2008-02-09 |accessdate=2008-02-05}} Wanda Landowska, Vladimir Sofronitsky, and Mischa Levitzki were some of his most famous pupils; Landowska was not only forced to flee the Nazis but also had her musical collection confiscated.{{Cite web |title=The Nazi Confiscation of Wanda Landowska's Musical Collection and Its Aftermath |url=https://www.lootedart.com/U3L5WH138901 |access-date=2025-02-20 |website=www.lootedart.com}} Róża Etkin-Moszkowska was killed in the German retreat from Warsaw in 1944.
Henryk Pachulski and Piotr Maszyński were among his earlier pupils, and later ones included Stanislaw Urstein, Edwarda Chojnacka, Wiktor Chapowicki, Józef Śmidowicz, Vladimir Sofronitsky, Jadwiga Sarnecka, and Bolesław Woytowicz. Heinrich Neuhaus, a renowned teacher whose own pupils included Sviatoslav Richter, Emil Gilels, Yakov Zak, and Ryszard Bakst, received lessons from Michałowski. Professor Karol Radziwonowicz also lists Stefania Allina, Zofia Buckiewiczowa, Janina Familier Hepner, Zofia Frankiewicz, Stefania Niekrasz, Stanislaw Nawrocki, Ludomir Różycki, Piotr Rytel, Henryk Schulz-Evler, Władysław Szpilman, Juliusz Wolfsohn, and Alexander Zakin as Michałowski pupils.{{Cite web |last=Radziwonowicz |first=Karol |date=October 3, 2007 |title=THE GREATEST POLISCH PIANISTS IN THE HISTORY OF CHOPIN'S TIME TILL TODAY |url=http://www.chopin-goldenring.si/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=19&Itemid=18&lang=8859-1 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071228231852/http://www.chopin-goldenring.si/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=19&Itemid=18&lang=8859-1 |archive-date=December 28, 2007 |website=Chopin Goldenring}}
Bolesław Kon was a pupil who also studied with Konstantin Igumnov. Jerzy Lefeld became Michałowski's amanuensis, transcribing for him.
Józef Turczyński, his immediate successor at Warsaw, and Zbigniew Drzewiecki were not his students, but continued the tradition of his work as leading teachers of the Polish school.
Later career
Michałowski was also a chamber musician, performing duos with the violinist Stanisław Barcewicz and trios with Barcewicz and the cellist Aleksandr Verzhbilovich.See article by Prof. Karol Radziwonowicz (Polish and English texts) [http://www.chopin-goldenring.si/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=19&Itemid=18&lang=8859-1] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071228231852/http://www.chopin-goldenring.si/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=19&Itemid=18&lang=8859-1|date=2007-12-28}}.
He wrote 35 piano works (mostly short pieces) and produced an instructive edition of the works of Chopin.Eaglefield-Hull, 1924. He made a substantial number of gramophone records, made in three different periods; the first around 1906, the second around 1918, and the last in the 1930s.Methuen-Campbell, 73 Harold C. Schonberg considered them to have revealed a "heroic voice." Although he had been a successful concert performer, he increasingly turned to teaching, particularly when his sight failed rapidly after 1912. However, he was persuaded back to the platform by a colleague, Mme Ruszczycówna. He gave many concerts in the following years, in 1919 celebrating a half-century since his debut. In 1929, he performed both Chopin concerti in a single concert.Methuen-Campbell, 72.
He died in Warsaw, aged 87, on 17 October 1938, the anniversary of Chopin's death.
Discography
- 2016: Acte Préalable AP0365 – Aleksander Michałowski - Piano Works 1 (Artur Cimirro) [http://www.acteprealable.com/albums/ap0365.html]
See also
Notes
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Sources
- Arthur Eaglefield Hull, A Dictionary of Modern Music and Musicians (Dent, London 1924).
- J. Methuen-Campbell, Chopin Playing from the Composer to the Present Day (Gollancz, London 1981).
- H.C. Schonberg, The Great Pianists (Gollancz, London 1964).
External links
- {{IMSLP|id=Michalowski, Aleksander}}
- [https://polona.pl/search/?query=Aleksander_Micha%C5%82owski&filters=creator:%22Micha%C5%82owski,_Aleksander_(1851--1938)%22,creator:%22Micha%C5%82owski,_Aleksander_(1851--1938)_Kompozytor%22,public:1,hasTextContent:0 Scores by Aleksander Michałowski] in digital library Polona
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Category:People from Kamianets-Podilskyi
Category:People from Kamenets-Podolsky Uyezd
Category:Polish classical pianists
Category:Polish male classical pianists
Category:Lviv Conservatory alumni
Category:Academic staff of the Chopin University of Music
Category:Officers of the Order of Polonia Restituta