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Home
> Famous Poles > Fryderyk
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Fryderyk
Franciszek
Chopin
1810-1849
Biographies
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Fryderyk
Franciszek Chopin, the Polish composer and pianist,
was born on 1 March 1810, according to the statements
of the artist himself and his family, but according
to his baptismal certificate, which was written
several weeks after his birth, the date was 22 February.
His birthplace was the village of Zelazowa Wola
near Sochaczew, in the region of Mazovia, which
was part of the Duchy of Warsaw.
The manor-house in Zelazowa Wola belonged to Count
Skarbek and Chopin's father, Mikolaj (Nicolas) Chopin,
a Polonized Frenchman, was employed there as a tutor.
He had been born in 1771 in Marainville in the province
of Lorraine in France, but already as a child he
had established contacts with the Polish families
of Count Michal Pac and the manager of his estate,
Jan Adam Weydlich. At the age of 16, Mikolaj accompanied
them to Poland where he settled down permanently.
He never returned to France and did not retain contacts
with his French family but brought up his children
as Poles.
In
1806, Mikolaj Chopin married Tekla Justyna Krzyzanowska,
who was the housekeeper for the Skarbek family at
Zelazowa Wola. They had four children: three daughters
Ludwika, Izabela and Emilia, and a son Fryderyk,
the second child. Several months after his birth,
the whole family moved to Warsaw, where Mikolaj
Chopin was offered the post of French language and
literature lecturer in the Warsaw Lyceum. He also
ran a boarding school for sons of the gentry.
The
musical talent of Fryderyk became apparent extremely
early on, and it was compared with the childhood
genius of Mozart. Already at the age of 7, Fryderyk
was the author of two polonaises (in G minor
and B flat major), the first being published
in the engraving workshop of Father Cybulski. The
prodigy was featured in the Warsaw newspapers, and
"little Chopin" became the attraction
and ornament of receptions given in the aristocratic
salons of the capital. He also began giving public
charity concerts. His first professional piano lessons,
given to him by Wojciech Zywny (b. 1756 in Bohemia),
lasted from 1816 to 1822, when the teacher was no
longer able to give any more help to the pupil whose
skills surpassed his own. The further development
of Fryderyk's talent was supervised by Wilhelm Würfel
(b.1791 in Bohemia), the renowned pianist and professor
at the Warsaw Conservatory who was to offer valuable,
although irregular, advice as regards playing the
piano and organ.
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From
1823 to 1826, Fryderyk attended the Warsaw Lyceum
where his father was one of the professors. He spent
his summer holidays in estates belonging to the
parents of his school friends in various parts of
the country. For example, he twice visited Szafarnia
in the Kujawy region where he revealed a particular
interest in folk music and country traditions. The
young composer listened to and noted down the texts
of folk songs, took part in peasant weddings and
harvest festivities, danced, and played a folk instrument
resembling a double bass with the village musicians;
all of which he described in his letters. Chopin
became well acquainted with the folk music of the
Polish plains in its authentic form, with its distinct
tonality, richness of rhythms and dance vigour.
When composing his first mazurkas in 1825, as well
as the later ones, he resorted to this source of
inspiration which he kept in mind until the very
end of his life.
In
the autumn of 1826, Chopin began studying the theory
of music, figured bass and composition at the Warsaw
High School of Music, which was both part of the
Conservatory and, at the same time, connected with
Warsaw
University. Its head was the composer Józef
Elsner (b. 1769 in Silesia). Chopin, however, did
not attend the piano class. Aware of the exceptional
nature of Chopin's talent, Elsner allowed him, in
accordance with his personality and temperament,
to concentrate on piano music but was unbending
as regards theoretical subjects, in particular counterpoint.
Chopin, endowed by nature with magnificent melodic
invention, ease of free improvisation and an inclination
towards brilliant effects and perfect harmony, gained
in Elsner's school a solid grounding, discipline,
and precision of construction, as well as an understanding
of the meaning and logic of each note. This was
the period of the first extended works such as the
Sonata in C minor, Variations, op. 2 on a
theme from Don Juan by Mozart, the Rondo
á la Krakowiak, op. 14, the Fantaisie,
op. 13 on Polish Airs (the three last ones written
for piano and orchestra) and the Trio in G minor,
op. 8 for piano, violin and cello. Chopin ended
his education at the High School in 1829, and after
the third year of his studies Elsner wrote in a
report: "Chopin, Fryderyk, third year student,
amazing talent, musical genius".
After
completing his studies, Chopin planned a longer
stay abroad to become acquainted with the musical
life of Europe and to win fame. Up to then, he had
never left Poland, with the exception of two brief
stays in Prussia. In 1826, he had spent a holiday
in Bad Reinertz (modern day Duszniki-Zdrój) in Lower
Silesia, and two years later he had accompanied
his father's friend, Professor Feliks Jarocki, on
his journey to Berlin to attend a congress of naturalists.
Here, quite unknown to the Prussian public, he concentrated
on observing the local musical scene. Now he pursued
bolder plans. In July 1829 he made a short excursion
to Vienna in the company of his acquaintances. Wilhelm
Würfel, who had been staying there for three years,
introduced him to the musical milieu, and enabled
Chopin to give two performances in the Kärtnertortheater,
where, accompanied by an orchestra, he played Variations,
op.2 on a Mozart theme and the Rondo á la Krakowiak,
op. 14 , as well as performing improvisations. He
enjoyed tremendous success with the public, and
although the critics censured his performance for
its small volume of sound, they acclaimed him as
a genius of the piano and praised his compositions.
Consequently, the Viennese publisher Tobias Haslinger
printed the Variations on a theme from Mozart
(1830). This was the first publication of a Chopin
composition abroad, for up to then, his works had
only been published in Warsaw.
Upon
his return to Warsaw, Chopin, already free from
student duties, devoted himself to composition and
wrote, among other pieces, two Concertos
for piano and orchestra: in F minor and E minor.
The first concerto was inspired to a considerable
extent by the composer's feelings towards Konstancja
Gladkowska, who studied singing at the Conservatory.
This was also the period of the first nocturne,
etudes, waltzes, mazurkas, and songs to words by
Stefan Witwicki. During the last months prior to
his planned longer stay abroad, Chopin gave a number
of public performances, mainly in the National Theatre
in Warsaw where the premičre of both concertos took
place. Originally, his destination was to be Berlin,
where the artist had been invited by Prince Antoni
Radziwill, the governor of the Grand Duchy of Poznan,
who had been appointed by the King of Prussia, and
who was a long-standing admirer of Chopin's talent
and who, in the autumn of 1829, was his host in
Antonin. Chopin, however, ultimately chose Vienna
where he wished to consolidate his earlier success
and establish his reputation. On 11 October 1830,
he gave a ceremonial farewell concert in the National
Theatre in Warsaw, during which he played the Concerto
in E minor, and K. Gladkowska sang. On 2 November,
together with his friend Tytus Woyciechowski, Chopin
left for Austria, with the intention of going on
to Italy.
Several
days after their arrival in Vienna, the two friends
learnt about the outbreak of the uprising in Warsaw,
against the subservience of the Kingdom of Poland
to Russia and the presence of the Russian Tsar on
the Polish throne. This was the beginning of a months-long
Russo-Polish war. T. Woyciechowski returned to Warsaw
to join the insurgent army, while Chopin, succumbing
to the persuasion of his friend, stayed in Vienna.
In low spirits and anxious about the fate of his
country and family, he ceased planning the further
course of his career, an attitude explained in a
letter to J. Elsner: "In vain does Malfatti
try to convince me that every artist is a cosmopolitan.
Even if so, as an artist, I am still in my cradle,
as a Pole, I am already twenty; I hope, therefore
that, knowing me well, you will not chide me that
so far I have not thought about the programme of
the concert". The performance ultimately took
place on 11 June 1831, in the Kärtnerthortheater,
where Chopin played the Concerto in E minor.
The eight months spent in Vienna were not wasted.
Strong and dramatic emotional experiences inspired
the creative imagination of the composer, probably
accelerating the emergence of a new, individual
style, quite different from his previous brilliant
style. The new works, which revealed force and passion,
included the sketch of the Scherzo in B minor
and, above all, the powerful Etudes from
op. 10.
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Having
given up his plans for a journey to Italy, due to
the hostilities there against Austria, Chopin resolved
to go to Paris. On the way, he first stopped in
Munich where he gave a concert on the 28th of August
and then went on to Stuttgart. Here he learnt about
the dramatic collapse of the November Uprising and
the capture of Warsaw by the Russians. His reaction
to this news assumed the form of a fever and nervous
crisis. Traces of these experiences are encountered
in the so-called Stuttgart diary: "The enemy
is in the house (...) Oh God, do You exist? You
do and yet You do not avenge. - Have You not had
enough of Moscow's crimes - or - or are You Yourself
a Muscovite [...] I here, useless! And I here empty-handed.
At times I can only groan, suffer, and pour out
my despair at my piano!".
In
the autumn of 1831 Chopin arrived in Paris where
he met many fellow countrymen. Following the national
defeat, thousands of exiles, including participants
of the armed struggle, politicians, representatives
of Polish culture, such as the writer Julian Ursyn
Niemcewicz, Romantic poets A. Mickiewicz and Juliusz
Slowacki, and the Warsaw friends of Chopin, the
poets Stefan Witwicki and Bohdan Zaleski, sought
refuge from the Russian occupation in a country
and city which they found most friendly. Chopin
made close contacts with the so-called Great Emigration,
befriended its leader Prince Adam Czartoryski, and
became a member of the Polish Literary Society,
which he supported financially. He also attended
emigré meetings, played at charity concerts held
for poor emigrés, and organized similar events.
In
Paris, his reputation as an artist grew rapidly.
Letters of recommendation which the composer brought
from Vienna allowed him immediately to join the
local musical milieu, which welcomed him cordially.
Chopin became the friend of Liszt, Mendelssohn,
Ferdinand Hiller, Berlioz and Auguste Franchomme.
Later on, in 1835, in Leipzig, he also met Schumann
who held his works in great esteem and wrote enthusiastic
articles about the Polish composer. Upon hearing
the performance of the unknown arrival from Warsaw,
the great pianist Friedrich Kalkbrenner, called
the "King of the Piano", organized a concert
for Chopin which took place on the 26th of February
1832 in the Salle Pleyel. The ensuing success was
enormous, and he quickly became a famous musician,
renowned throughout Paris. This rise to fame aroused
the interest of publishers and by the summer of
1832, Chopin had signed a contract with the leading
Parisian publishing firm of Schlesinger. At the
same time, his compositions were published in Leipzig
by Probst, and then Breitkopf, and in London by
Wessel.
The
most important source of Chopin's income in Paris
was, however, from giving lessons. He became a popular
teacher among the Polish and French aristocracy
and Parisian salons were his favorite place for
performances. As a pianist, Chopin was ranked among
the greatest artists of his epoch, such as Kalkbrenner,
Liszt, Thalberg and Herz, but, in contrast to them,
he disliked public performances and appeared rarely
and rather unwillingly. In a friendly, intimate
group of listeners he disclosed supreme artistry
and the full scale of his pianistic and expressive
talents.
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Having
settled down in Paris, Chopin deliberately chose
the status of an emigré. Despite the requests of
his father, he did not obey the Tsarist regulations,
issued in subjugated Poland, and never extended
his passport in the Russian embassy. Consequently,
being regarded as a political refugee, Chopin deprived
himself of the possibility of legally revisiting
his homeland. He longed to see his family and friends
and, seeking refuge against loneliness, decided
to share accommodation with the physician Aleksander
Hoffman, another Polish exile, and after the latter's
departure from Paris, with his Warsaw friend, former
insurgent and physician, Jan Matuszynski. In this
situation, the composer could meet his parents only
outside Poland and when in August 1835 they went
to Karlsbad for a cure, Chopin soon followed. Afterwards,
while in nearby Dresden, he renewed his acquaintance
with the Wodzinski family. Years earlier, the three
young Wodzinski sons had stayed in the boarding
house managed by Mikolaj Chopin. Their younger sister,
Maria, now an adolescent, showed considerable musical
and artistic talent and Chopin fell in love with
her and wanted to marry her and set up a family
home of his own in exile. The following year, during
a holiday spent together with the seventeen year-old
Maria and her mother in Marienbad (modern day Márianské
Lázne in the Czech Republic), and then in Dresden,
he proposed and was accepted on the condition that
he would take better care of his health. The engagement
was unofficial, and did not end in marriage, for
after a year-long "trial" period, Maria's
parents, disturbed by the bad state of the health
of her fiancé who was seriously ill in the winter,
and especially by his irregular lifestyle, viewed
him as an unsuitable partner for their daughter.
Chopin found this rejection an extremely painful
experience, and labeled the letters from the Wodzinski
family, tied into a small bundle, "My sorrow".
In
July 1837, Chopin traveled to London in the company
of Camille Pleyel in the hope of forgetting all
unpleasant memories. Soon afterwards, he entered
into a close liaison with the famous French writer
George Sand. This author of daring novels, older
by six years, and a divorcee with two children,
offered the lonely artist what he missed most from
the time when he left Warsaw: extraordinary tenderness,
warmth and maternal care. The lovers spent the winter
of 1838/1839 on the Spanish island of Majorca, living
in a former monastery in Valdemosa. There, due to
unfavorable weather conditions, Chopin became gravely
ill and showed symptoms of tuberculosis. For many
weeks, he remained so weak as to be unable to leave
the house but nonetheless, continued to work intensively
and composed a number of masterpieces: the series
of 24 preludes, the Polonaise in C minor, the Ballade
in F major, and the Scherzo in C sharp minor. On
his return from Majorca in the spring of 1839, and
following a convalescence in Marseilles, Chopin,
still greatly weakened, moved to George Sand's manor
house in Nohant, in central France. Here, he was
to spend long vacations up to 1846, with the exception
of 1840, returning to Paris only for the winters.
This was the happiest, and the most productive,
period in his life after he left his family home.
The majority of his most outstanding and profound
works were composed in Nohant. In Paris, the composer
and writer were treated as a married couple, although
they were never married. Both had common friends
among the artistic circles of the capital, such
as the painter Delacroix and the singer Pauline
Viardot, as well as the Polish emigrés, such as
A. Mickiewicz and W. Grzymala. For years, the couple
enjoyed a deep love and friendship, but with time
the increasingly hostile attitude of George Sand's
son, who exerted a strong influence on the writer,
caused ever more serious conflicts. A final parting
of ways took place in July 1847.
Grievous
personal experiences as well as the loss of Nohant,
so important for the health and creativity of the
composer, had a devastating effect on Chopin's mental
and physical state. He almost completely gave up
composition, and from then to the end of his life
wrote only a few miniatures. In April 1848, persuaded
by his Scottish pupil, Jane Stirling, Chopin left
for England and Scotland. Together with her sister,
Miss Stirling organized concerts and visits in various
localities, including the castles of the Scottish
aristocracy. This exceptionally hectic life style
and excessive strain on his strength from constant
traveling and numerous performances, together with
a climate deleterious to his lungs, further damaged
his health.
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On
16 November 1848, despite frailty and a fever, Chopin
gave his last concert, playing for Polish emigrés
in the Guildhall in London. A few days later, he
returned to Paris. His
rapidly progressing disease made it impossible to
continue giving lessons. In the summer of 1849,
Ludwika Jedrzejewiczowa, the eldest sister of the
composer, came from Warsaw to take care of her ill
brother. On 17 October 1849, Chopin died of pulmonary
tuberculosis in his Parisian flat in the Place Vendôme.
He was buried in the Pčre-Lachaise cemetery in Paris.
In accordance with his will, however, his heart,
taken from his body after death, was brought by
his sister to Warsaw where it was placed in an urn
installed in a pillar of the Holy Cross church in
Krakowskie Przedmiscie.
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| Biographies |
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to top |
Books
by Jim Samson:
-
The
Cambridge Complete to Chopin, Cambridge University
Press, 1994
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The
Cambridge Companion to Chopin, Cambridge
University Press, 1992
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Chopin,
Schimmer Books , 1996
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Chopin
: the Four Ballades, Cambridge University
Press, 1992
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The
music of Chopin, Oxford University Press, 1994
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Chopin
Studies, Cambridge University Press, 1995
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Chopin
: Pianist & Teacher as seen by His Pupils,
Jean Eigeldinger, Roy Howat, Cambridge,1989
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Chopin
the Man & His music, James Huneker,
Dover Publications, 1976
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The
Chopin Companion : Profiles of the Man and the
Musician, Alan Walker, Norton, 1973
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Chopin
the Composer & His music, John F. Porte,
Scholarly Press, 1976
-
Frederic
Chopin, Franz liszt, Vienna House, 1973/
???
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Fryderyk
Chopin: Pianist from Warsaw, William G.
Atwood, Columbia University Press, 1987
Other
authors:
- Fryderyk
Chopin: Pianist from Warsaw, by Atwood, William G.
- Selected
Correspondence of Fryderyk Chopin : Abridged from
Fryderyk Chopin's Correspondence,
by
Arthur Hedley (Editor)
- The
Scottish Autumn of Frederick Chopin, by Zaluski,
P.
- Approaches
to Teaching Chopin's the Awakening
, by Bernard Koloski (Editor)
- The
Parisian Worlds of Frederic Chopin,
by William G. Atwood
- The
greatest Piano Virtuosos of Our Time from Personal
Acquaintance: Liszt, Chopin, Tausig, Henselt
Wilhelm von Lenz/Madeleine R. Baker (Translators), Da
capo Press, 1973
- In
Search of Chopin, Alfred Cortot, Greenwood, 1975
- Isaak
lgnaz Mocheles : The life of the composer & His
Encounters with Beethoven, Liszt, Chopin &
Mendelssohn, Emil F. Smidak, Charlotte
Moscheles, Ashgate, 1989
- The
Skein of Early Printed Editions of the Works of
Frederic Chopin in the University of Chicago Library,
University of Chicago Press, 1998
- Chopin,
Arthur Hedley , J M Dent & Sons Ltd, 1974
- Chopin
and George Sand in Majorca, BartolomE,
FerrA (?), Haskell House PubLtd, 1974
- Nocturn
: A life of Chopin, Ruth Jordan, Taplinger Pub Co,
1978
- Chopin
the Composer : His Structure Art and its influence on
contemporaneous Music, Edgar Stillman Kelley,
Cooper Square Pub, 1913
- Abby
Whiteside on Piano Playing : indispensables of Piano Playing-Mastering
the Chopin Etudes and Other Essays, Amadeus Press,
1997
- A
Handbook to Chopin's works : For the use of
Concert-Goers, Pianists and Pianola-players, G. C.
Ashton Jonson, Ayer Co Pub, 1972
- Chopin
Playing : From the Composer to the Present Day,
james. Methen-Campbell,Taplinger Pub Co, 1981
- Chopin
in Paris : The Life and Times of the Romantic
Composer, Tad
Szulc, Scibner, 1998
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