Zygmunt Stojowski
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2 Caprices, Op.162 Caprices-Études, Op.22 Mazurkas, Op.282 Orientales, Op.102 Pensées musicales, Op.12 Piano Pieces, Op.413 Esquisses, Op.303 Études de concert, Op.353 Intermèdes, Op.43 Morceaux, Op.153 Pieces, Op.84 Morceaux, Op.54 Pieces, Op.265 Mélodies, Op.115 Miniatures, Op.19A
Aspirations, Op.39Aus Sturm und Stille, Op.29C
Cello Sonata, Op.17/18D
Danses humoresques, Op.12Dumka, Op.17 No.1E
Euphonies, Op.33F
Fantaisie, Op.38L
Le Printemps, Op.7M
Modlitwa za Polskę, Op.40P
Piano Concerto No.1, Op.3Piano Concerto No.2, Op.32Poème d' Été, Op.36Polish Idylls, Op.24R
Rhapsodie symphonique, Op.23Romantic Pieces, Op.25Romanze for Violin and Orchestra, Op.20S
Suite for Large Orchestra, Op.9Symphony, Op.21V
Variations et fugue sur un thème original, Op.42Variations et Fugue, Op.6Violin Concerto, Op.22Violin Sonata No.1, Op.13Violin Sonata No.2, Op.37WikipediaZygmunt Denis Antoni Jordan de Stojowski (May 4, 1870 – November 5, 1946) was a Polish pianist and composer.
He was born on May 4, 1870 near the city of Kielce. Stojowski began his musical training with his mother, and with Polish composer Władysław Żeleński. In Kraków, as a seventeen-year-old student, he made his debut as a concert pianist performing
Beethoven's
Piano Concerto No. 3 with the local orchestra.
At the age of eighteen he moved to Paris and studied piano with
Louis Diémer and composition with
Léo Delibes. Two years later at the Paris Conservatoire, he would win first prizes in piano performance, counterpoint and fugue. According to Stojowski, however, in a December 1901 interview that appeared in a Warsaw magazine, the teachers who had the most profound influence on him as a musician were the Polish violinist-composer Wladyslaw Gorski and pianist-composer
Ignacy Jan Paderewski.
Stojowski's music was found worthy enough to be included in the first concert of the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra, on 5 November 1901. His Symphony in D minor, Op. 21, which was featured in that first concert conducted by
Emil Młynarski, had won first prize (1000 rubles) in a Paderewski Music Competition in Leipzig on 9 July 1898. Besides having his symphony performed at that first prestigious concert, Stojowski appeared as a recitalist in December and again as the soloist in
Saint-Saëns' Piano Concerto No. 4 in January 1902.
In October 1905, Stojowski sailed on the SS Moltke to the USA on the invitation of Frank Damrosch, founder and director of the newly formed Institute of Musical Art, to head the institute's piano department; he was recommended for the position by pianist
Harold Bauer and cellist Pablo Casals. New York became his home for the rest of his life.
The institute would later merge in 1924 with the Juilliard Graduate School to form the Juilliard School, where Stojowski would also teach during the summers of 1932 and 1940-46. In New York, he was acclaimed as a great composer, pianist and pedagogue, and had the distinction of being the first Polish composer to have an entire concert devoted to his music performed by the New York Philharmonic.
After six years of teaching at the Institute of Musical Art, Stojowski then headed the piano department at the Von Ende School of Music until 1917. Finally, due to the large number of students who wished to work with him, he opened his own 'Stojowski Studios' at his four-story brownstone home at 150 West 76th Street in Manhattan. Among Stojowski's pupils were
Mischa Levitzki, Alfred Newman, Antonia Brico, Arthur Loesser, and Oscar Levant.
Here, together with his Peruvian-born wife, Luisa Morales-Macedo, the pianist/composer not only taught until the end of the 1930s, but also raised what he called his three best compositions: his sons, Alfred (1919), Henry (1921) and Ignace (1923–1984).
He died on November 5, 1946 in New York City.