Józef Wieniawski / source: Music Division, The New York Public Library (The New York Public Library Digital Collections)

Józef Wieniawski

(23 May 1837 ? 11 November 1912) pianist, composer and teacher, born in Lublin, died in Brussels. He was educated in Paris, Weimar, and Berlin. Together with his brother Henryk Wieniawski, they performed in auditoriums across Poland, Russia, Germany, Austria, and France. He was also one of the founders of the Warsaw Music Society and a professor in various music schools in Moscow and Brussels, where all of his compositions were created.

One of the first Wieniawski?s teachers in Lublin was Franciszek Synek. Later, as a ten-year-old boy, Wieniawski moved to Paris where he studied four years in the conservatoire under Piotr Józef Zimmermann and Antoni Franciszek Marmontel. He also perfected his piano technique with his uncle Edward Wolff. Karol Walenty Alkan taught him composition. Wieniawski graduated from the academy with honours, receiving the Premier Grand Prix in piano and harmony.

He started his career as a composer when he was just ten years old, next to his brother in Paris. The young boys performed together as ?the wonder children?, causing sensation and explosions of applause in concert halls across the Russian Empire (around 200 concerts within two years), Germany, Austria, Belgium, and France. In 1859 the artist moved to Warsaw, where he devoted himself to organising musical mornings and evenings where he performed among such stars as J. Hornziel, J. Goebelt, A. Wieniawski (brother), M. Kalergis, M. Więckowska, and F. Dulcken, and later also I. J. Paderewski. Wieniawski later moved to Paris where he helped Stanisław Moniuszko to promote his compositions in France. Thanks to the efforts of Józef Wieniawski, Moniuszko?s 34 Cantos were printed in 1862 in Paris by G. Flaxland together with Echos de Pologne. Wieniawski also strived to perform one of Moniuszko?s operas in France. In 1864 the artist moved to Moscow where he began to work as a teacher in the music school of the Russian Music Society, where in 1866 he became a professor and the secretary of the artistic council of the conservatorium. After a year he opened a private music school where he taught about 700 students (according to Jan Kleczyński). In 1870 Wieniawski came back to Warsaw, where he had been a constant visitor anyway. In 1871 the artist was one of the founding fathers of the Warsaw Music Society. In the same year he gave his third, and as it later turned out, his last concert in Kraków; in 1872 he performed in Drezno and in 1875 gave his only recital in Wrocław.

Józef Wieniawski was very active in Warsaw, especially after he succeeded Aleksander Zarzycki in 1875 as the chief of the Music Society. He performed symphonic concerts and cooperated with the greatest soloists from abroad. After three years of work, Wieniawski resigned from seeking for re-election and left for France. In 1878 Wieniawski started to work as a teacher at a Brussels conservatoire, where he successfully organized concerts in Palais des Beaux Arts (together with Jenő Hubay) and in Salle de la Grande Harmonie (together with Eug?n Ysa?). In 1889 the artist married Melanie Hilsheimer, daughter of a banker from Drezno, and had a son and two daughters with her. From 1900 he gave his own Séances de Piano. In 1896 he was awarded with the Warsaw Music Society honorary member prize. He gave one of his last concerts in Lipsk in 1910. He managed to record some of his works on piano rolls.

 

Sourcewww.culture.pl, Filip Lech, October 2016, translated by AW, October 2016.

Chamber works

  • Allegro de Sonate, Op. 2, 1848 Download

    Details:

    composed by brothers Henryk and Józef Wieniawski

  • Duo on Finnish themes for violin and piano, 1851

  • Fantaisie for 2 pianos, Op. 42, ca. 1886 Download

    Details:

    second instrumentation for 2 pianos and orchestra

  • Grand Duo Concertant about themes from G. Donizetti?s opera ?Lucia di Lammermoor? for violin and piano, Op. 6, work lost

  • Guillaume le Taciturne for piano four-hands, Op. 43, first instrumentation for orchestra

  • Overture in E major for piano four-hands, Op. 28, first instrumentation for orchestra

  • Quartet in A minor for 2 violins, viola and cello, Op. 32 Borrow

  • Sonata in D minor for violin and piano, Op. 24 Download

  • Sonata in E major for cello and piano, Op. 26 Buy

  • Trio in G major for piano, violin and cello, Op. 40, ca. 1885 Download

Piano works

  • 2 Idylles, Op. 1 Download

    Details:
    1. Epanchement, 2. La barque
  • 2 Morceaux de concert, Opp. 9 and 10 Download

    Details:
    1. Barcarolle-Caprice, 2. Romance-Etude
  • 24 Etudes de mécanisme et de style, op. 44 Borrow

  • 4-me Polonaise in G major, Op. 48 Download

  • 6 Pi?ces romantiques, Op. 39 Download

    Details:
    1. Idylle; 2. Evocation; 3. Jeux de Fées; 4. Ballade; 5. Elégie orientale; 6. Sc?ne rustique
  • 8 Mazourkas, Op. 23 Download

  • 8 Romances sans paroles, Op. 14 Download

  • Adagio e rondo giocoso, 1857

  • Ballade in E flat minor, Op. 31 Download

  • Barcarolle in B flat major, Op. 29 Download

  • Deuxi?me Etude de concert in A major, Op. 36 Download

  • Deuxi?me Impromptu in F major, Op. 34 Download

  • Deuxi?me tarantelle in A minor, Op. 35 Download

  • Deuxi?me valse de concert in E major, Op. 30 Download

  • Etude de concert in G major, Op. 33 Download

  • Faintaisie et Variations de concert sur des motifs de "La Sonnambula" de Bellini, Op. 6 Download

  • Fantaisie brillante, before 1858

  • Fantaisie et fugue in B flat minor, Op. 25 Download

  • Impromptu in B major, Op. 19 Download

  • Klavierstücke, Op. 51 Download

    Details:

    another title Morceaux; movements- 1. Impromptu; 2. Etude; 3. Tristesse; 4. Valse

  • Minuet in D major from living stage picture ?Szlachectwo? Download

  • Nocturne in E minor, Op. 37 Download

  • Pensée fugitive, Op. 8 Download

  • Polka brillante, Op. 11 Download

  • Polonaise in C major, Op. 13 Download

  • Polonaise triomphale in A flat major, Op. 21 Download

  • R?verie in E flat major, Op. 45 Download

  • Rondeau in G minor, Op. 15 Download

  • Sonata in B minor, Op. 22 Download

  • Song without words in E flat minor Download

  • Souvenir d?une valse in F major, Op. 18 Download

  • Souvenir de Lublin. Romance variée, Op. 12 Download

  • Suite romantique, Op. 41 Download

    Details:

    first version for orchestra

  • Sur l?océan. Contemplation in D sharp minor, Op. 28, 1887 Download

  • Tarantelle in E minor, Op. 4 Download

  • Troisi?me Polonaise in G sharp minor, Op. 27 Download

  • Valse de concert in D flat major, Op. 3, 1854 Download

  • Valse de salon in F major, Op. 7 Download

  • Valse-Caprice in A major, Op. 46 Download

Works for piano and orchestra

  • Piano concerto in G minor, Op. 20, 1858 Download