The author and translator of the monograph Magdalena Majewska

Last evening (September 18th 2025), at the Steinway Salon in Warsaw, I attended a charming book launch. This was of a superbly written monograph in English on Ignacy Jan Paderewski published by PWM (Polskie Wydawnicwo Muzyczne) written and translated from the original Polish by the author Magdalena Majewska. She had won a competition to write this well-researched and entertaining volume, signing herself  'The Wizard' after the musical critics designation of the day on Paderewski playing as the 'keyboard wizard'. The judges were particularly taken by this stylish insight. The book is one of a series of monographs by PWM on Polish composers.

The audience were a mixture of music lovers fascinated by this noble musical life, those interested in Polish history, members of the diplomatic corps and those who appreciated the life and music of Paderewski, a great musician and statesman.


Lt. to Rt.  Agata Szpadzińska, Director of the International Paderewski Piano Competition in Bydgoszcz

Paweł Kerntopf, member of the family who manufactured the famous Polish J.Kerntopf and Son pianos, admired by the pianist Howard Shelley

Magdalena Majewska, author and translator of the monograph

Marek Żebrowski, Director of the Polish Music Center at USC Los Angeles

Agnieszka Lakner, specialist composer promotion, PWM Edition

Anna Warmińska from the Department of Cultural Diplomacy and Promotion of Poland, Poland MFA

Prof. Marek Szlezer from the Krzysztof Penderecki Academy of Music, Kraków

Michael Moran, monograph contributor, Australian author and music critic



Lt. to Rt. Magdalena Majewska, Anna Warmińska, Prof. Marek Szelzer 


We were given a 'surprise' as an excerpt from the Chopin 'Heroic' Polonaise played by Paderewski from the marvelous film Moonlight Sonata. In this movie Paderewski entertainingly plays himself and of course the piano.

A charming scene from the lyrical and innocent film Moonlight Sonata 

Prof. Marek Szlezer from the Krzysztof Penderecki Academy of Music in Krakow then gave an excellent recital of pieces favoured by Paderewski in performance and a selection of his memorable works.

We heard the famous Menuet of course played with grace and stylethe emotional and profoundly affecting Nocturne, the musical and dramatic landscape painted by Szlezer of the Legende No.1, the spirited Cracovienne and finally two Chopin polonaises - the spirited and rarely performed 'Military' Polonaise in A major Op.40 No.1 and to conclude a noble and passionate performance of the A-flat major 'Heroic' Polonaise Op.53. An excellent and emotionally satisfying recital of great professionalism crowned this event musically.

My own contribution to the book was very modest relating to the 'cinematic' associations that embraced me listening to the romantically affecting Romanza Andante second movement of his evocative A minor piano concerto. I also mentioned his immense popularity in Australia and New Zealand on his 1904 tour (where he engagingly dressed in Maori native costume!). This legendary reputation continues unabated to this day, also associated with his friend and genius of the voice, Dame Nellie Melba.

The consummate actor and humorist Ignacy Jan Paderewski (on the far Rt. holding a native baton) with his wife Helen and groups of accompanying people  dressed in Maori costumes in Rotorua during a tour by the pianist in New Zealand 1904

One tends to forget that travel to Australia and New Zealand in the earliest twentieth century was a long voyage by ship. The decision was an extraordinary one requiring unwavering enthusiasm, artistic confidence and commitment from everyone involved.

To purchase the book online:

https://pwm.sklep.pl/paderewski

Every three years there is an outstanding International Paderewski Piano Competition in the city of Bydgoszcz in Poland. You may like to read about the present competition about to begin on November 8th 2025 and scheduled here:

https://paderewskicompetition.pl/schedule-of-the-13rd-competition-2025/

Ignacy Jan Paderewski was at once artist and statesman - a moral beacon for the world. 

We are in desperate need of a leader of his stamp of moral and leadership character in this blighted world we inhabit at present.


The Paderewski Memorial in Paderewski Park, Warsaw

piotr-betlej-op-10-n-1-2016-copyright-galerie-roi-dore

   Ignacy Jan Paderewski (1860-1941)

[Piotr Betlej 2016 © Galerie Roi Doré]

Paderewski is such an underestimated composer of affecting lyrical and poetic piano music which speaks directly to the heart and sensibility rather than burdening the intellect with high seriousness. As an example of relieving humour, at the Paris Peace Conference Georges Clemenceau (the 'old Tiger') came up to Paderewski and wickedly asked 'Are you a cousin of the famous pianist Paderewski?' When Paderewski replied 'It is I, Monsieur le Président,' Clemenceau observed, acting as if greatly surprised 'And you the famous artist have become Prime Minister? What a come-down!'

Paderewski at the  Versailles Conference following the conclusion of the Great War

Naturally, being a great patriot, Paderewski wrote many Polish mazurkas and polonaises but much of his piano music reminds me of a superb film score for say an intensely romantic French love affair set in Provence directed by Francois Truffaut. During the Romanza from his A minor piano concerto, in our imagination we could be bowling along a poplar lined route secondaire past hills of vineyards with Catherine Deneuve or Stephane Audran in the passenger seat of a Chapron Citroen cabriolet. Her hair is wonderfully awry in the wind as we head towards une belle gentilhommiere and nights of sophisticated sensual bliss, days of cultivated tastes, food and wine.  Ah...what we have lost in 2025 of true civilization and culture after the Great War  ... Paderewski had it all.


A charming photograph of Ignacy Jan Paderewski and his wife Helena Maria and son Alfred

The music of Paderewski wears its learning lightly with poetry, charm, elegance and refinement of the highest order. His solo  pieces are a neglected repertoire for young pianists and with luck might kindle poetry and charm in their playing.


My argument of neglect is validated by the only recording of his complete piano works I know of, made by the pianist Karol Radziwonowicz in Warsaw in 1991 in a co-production for the French Le Chant Du Monde label and the now dissolved Polish label Selene. To my knowledge it has never been reissued.  LDC 278 1073/5 distributed by Harmonia Mundi. Used copies are still available.


A recent recording of Paderewski is of early piano pieces Op. 1 - Op. 9 is by the outstanding Polish pianist 

  Michał Szymanowski

I reviewed his fine playing at the XI Darmstadt International Chopin Piano Competition 6 – 16 October 2017 where he was awarded the 4th prize. He has improved immensely since then and developed a burgeoning talent for conducting.

I wrote of his  Chopin Nocturne in D-flat major op. 27 No.2 :

'His maturity and authority as a pianist was clear from the outset. The opening cantilena, yearningly beautiful, is the romantic core of this sublime work. André Gide, who was rather obsessed with the music of Chopin, wrote prescient observations applicable here in his Notes on Chopin (p.21):

‘[He Chopin] seemed to be constantly seeking, inventing, discovering his thought little by little. This kind of charming hesitation, of surprise and delight, ceases to be possible if the work is presented to us, no longer in a state of successive formation, but as an already perfect, precise and objective whole.’

Minimal and very skillful pedalling. Here was a beautiful tone, an example of seamless playing full of nuances, exercising a great deal of dynamic control. Lovely tone and touch exhibiting a full expressive range of colour. Sensitive but not sentimental. Note perfect.'

And of the Chopin Sonata in B minor Op.58 :

'An absolutely magnificent, fully integrated rendition of this immensely difficult sonata.'



Paderewski wrote interestingly and engagingly in his memoirs:

When I finished [the] concerto, I was still lacking in experience. I had not even heard it performed—it was something I was longing for. I wanted to have the opinion then of a really great orchestral composer. I needed it. So without further thought I took my score and went directly to Saint-Saëns. But I was rather timid … I realized on second thoughts that it was, perhaps, presumption on my part to go to him. Still I went to his house nevertheless. I was so anxious for his opinion. 

He opened the door himself. ‘Oh, Paderewski, it’s you. Come in,’ he said. ‘Come in. What do you want?’ I realised even before he spoke that he was in a great hurry and irritable, probably writing something as usual and not wanting to be interrupted. ‘What can I do for you? What do you want?’ I hesitated what to answer. I knew he was annoyed. I had come at the wrong moment … ‘I came to ask your opinion about my piano concerto,’ I said very timidly. ‘I ——.’ ‘My dear Paderewski,’ he cried, ‘I have not the time. I cannot talk to you today. I cannot.’ He took a few steps impatiently about the room. ‘Well, you are here so I suppose I must receive you. Let me hear your concerto. Will you play it for me?’ 

He took the score and read it as I played. He listened very attentively. At the Andante he stopped me, saying, ‘What a delightful Andante! Will you kindly repeat that?’ I repeated it. I began to feel encouraged. He was interested. Finally he said, ‘There is nothing to be changed. You may play it whenever you like. It will please the people. It’s quite ready. You needn’t be afraid of it, I assure you.’ So the interview turned out very happily after all, and he sent me off with high hopes and renewed courage. At that moment in my career, his assurance that the concerto was ready made me feel a certain faith in my work that I might not have had then. (The Paderewski Memoirs  London 1939 p. 149-50)


The Paderewski Piano Concerto is a lyrical and grand work full of piano pyrotechnics, noble harmonies, dance energy and infectious charm. Audiences adore it!

The 29th June 2025 was the 84th anniversary of the death of Paderewski.
I attended a wonderful recital by Michał Szymanowski in the Paderewski Park as part of the Paderewski Festival in Warsaw.


l1060416


Paderewski's Study at his villa near Morges, Switzerland


Ignacy Jan Paderewski converses with the Polish composer and friend Zygmunt Stojowski at his vineyard in Paso Robles, California 



Paderewski during a Duo Art piano roll recording


A Bösendorfer piano once owned by Paderewski at the  Casimir Puławski Museum at Warka some 50 kms from Warsaw, Poland


Paderewski collected silver spoons on his travels abroad as souvenirs. A small sample from the collection at the Casimir Puławski Museum at Warka some 50 kms from Warsaw. Poland


A sign of the power of the statesman - a 'Paderewski' Armoured Train during the Great War

You may like to read this excellent and heartfelt article on Paderewski 

WRITTEN ON THE 75TH ANNIVERSARY OF PADEREWSKI’S DEATH (29  June 1941)
‘Poland is immortal!’

Stanisław Dybowski

So said Ignacy Jan Paderewski on 23 January 1940 at the inaugural meeting  of the National Council of the Republic of Poland in Paris, when the situation of the country occupied by two invaders was being pondered. 

He once said about himself: ‘I am neither lured by power nor attracted to the prestige of being the father of the nation and the more modest  position of a useful son of his land would be more than sufficient to me’… and about himself as a pianist: ‘everybody told me – and I was beginning to believe it myself – that I would never be a pianist.'

And yet, his strong belief that Poland is immortal led him right up to the pinnacle of art and politics. He worked in both those areas in order to further his patriotic goals, to which he subordinated everything else!

‘Ignacy Jan Paderewski , said the Primate of Poland in 1986, ‘died in the United States. The funeral ceremonies lasted several days. First, a grand memorial service was held in St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York. Then, the body was carried to Washington, D.C., and, on 5 July 1941, was laid at Arlington cemetery with military honours. The coffin with the body was laid, but not interred. The funeral was not finished’. 

It was finished 51 years later, on 5 July 1992, in the presence of the Presidents of Poland and the united States, with the artist’s remains being placed in the crypt of St. John’s cathedral in Warsaw. Thus the will of the Great Pole was implemented, which was to be laid to rest in free Poland, for which he had fought as a politician and a statesman and the cause of which he had championed through his concerts, carrying the name of Frederic Chopin high on his banner.

In his excellent book on Paderewski Adam Zamoyski wrote the following beautiful words:

‘The name of Paderewski was on the lips of many generations. For people who knew nothing about music he was the embodiment of a pianist; for those who knew nothing about Poland he was the embodiment of a fiery Pole; finally, to those who did not have the faintest idea about his political career he looked like Moses – the leader of his people’.

Paderewski made a career – as was often written and said – on a cosmic scale. There has been no human being, before or after him, who enjoyed such a degree of popularity. Even Franz Liszt’s great career, limited to  the European continent, could not equal the extent of influence exerted by Paderewski’s name. ‘It was sometimes enough' As poet Jan Lechoń wrote:

‘For Paderewski to appear on stage with his distant look, lion-like hair, a legendary white tie and a modest, almost humble demeanour, more reminiscent of some  village bard than a great virtuoso, to make the public stand up and worship in him art itself, all that is unselfish, noble and generous in life and that everyone associated with Paderewski. Paderewski’s star rose in those sad times when Poland was absent from the map of Europe – he was a son of an unhappy country, with no proud embassies or wealthy patrons standing behind him and supporting his art.

However, Paderewski felt Chopin’s soul in his own soul; eager to listen to the voices in his heart, he found in them echoes of a thousand years of our beautiful and magnanimous history; […] listening to those mysterious voices, he felt that he was rich and strong. From the very first time he appeared on the art horizon he behaved like a king; having never asked anyone for anything he always wished to be generous to everyone and all his life was the fulfillment of that wish. […]No one represented true Poland in the eyes of the world better than Paderewski’.

He was formed as an artist at the Warsaw Institute of Music thanks to, among others, Professor Juliusz Janotha (1819–1883), an outstanding pianist and teacher. Professor Władysław Żeleński (1837–1921)gave the following correct assessment of the student’s personality:

‘A young eagle, of a noble breed, proud, courageous, ambitious, a bit aggressive and self-willed but, most of all, independent […]. He had an innate sense of what is right, rebelling against the existing state of affairs if he considered it wrong.’

The great Polish pianist and pedagogue Theodor Leschetizky (1830–1915), Paderewski’s last professor in Vienna, said the following about his pupil for the Tygodnik Ilustrowany weekly in 1899:

‘Paderewski… Paderewski…, repeated Leschetizky several times, as if caressing himself with that word. ‘My pride and honour … He will be a brilliant artist until the end of his days, because he has the character, because he did not and would not think of any goals other than his work … He studied under my guidance for four years, two of which were devoted by him solely to five-finger exercises, until he finally achieved what we call technique … Nowadays he may not be playing for months and will still not lose his skill; his fingers will play by themselves … This is how my system works – to make finger muscles independent from elbow and forearm muscles. It is then that you achieve total freedom … 

And the style? After the technique we worked on developing the style […], on reconciling the individuality of the virtuoso with the intentions of the composer. The artist's individuality is a small nucleus contained within a large number of sheaths. The teacher may change the latter, but the nucleus should remain untouched. […] Paderewski is a model that demonstrates exactly how a teacher should instruct his pupil to ensure that everything that his heart may feel and his head may think gets to his fingers through tiny nerve and muscle threads.’

Paderewski achieved everything with hard work, setting high standards for himself expectations and, then, pursuing them mercilessly; he was also always an adamant guardian of the values that he believed in. This manifested itself in him as a virtuoso pianist, a Pole – fighting for his land’s independence, a composer and a teacher. Those traits of his character were noticed by everyone and it was them that drew people to him.

As a Bonner Zeitung critic wrote:

‘Paderewski has become one with the piano just like Chopin did before him. For him the piano is everything – the eye, the ear, the heart and the mouth; the world sings to him in piano tones, he lives the piano and uses it to interact with the world’

while a Kurier Warszawski reporter wrote:

‘For a whole hour the public was flocking to Paderewski’s third concert. In the vestibule downstairs the crowd was filling the staircase and the antechamber on the first floor was so packed with people that any movement towards the grand hall was hardly possible. It did not matter to anyone that other people were treading on his or her feet; even the ladies were not offended if anyone stepped on their train or got caught in their laces. Never mind the train or the laces – we are going to hear Paderewski!’

Edward Risler (1873–1929), a famous pianist and professor at the Consevatoire de Paris, described him briefly as ‘A poet of the piano, a moving performer, a dazzling wizard with a noble heart, great in war and peace.  Another piano master, Alfred Cortot (1877–1962), wrote the following in his letter to Paderewski:

Is it not to the marvellous charm of Chopin’s work that Poland owes its spiritual survival in human memory in the times of painful slavery? And is it not the inspired performer of his works that has been tasked with the mission of ensuring that his enslaved and martyred land becomes an independent state again? How wonderful and steeped in legend is the epic of a country that owes its liberation more to the lyre than to the sword! All of us who love and admire you are very happy to be able to honour you as a double hero – a hero of Art and of his Motherland!’

Paderewski was a virtuoso, but not in the colloquial, modern meaning of this word, i.e. a musician playing fast and loudly, but rather in the sense that it really expresses. The Latin ‘virtus’ means virtue, manhood, courage, strength and bravery, but also constancy. Those features were characteristic of him in all his activities. In this respect he was close to Chopin, with whom he shared similar views on art, the same love for music and the piano and the same strong uncompromising love for his Motherland!

Paderewski understood – better most people in the past and nowadays – these well-known truths when he said that ‘no country may be happy unless it is free and no country may be free unless it is strong’ and that ‘the cause of the nation is not an undertaking that one should abandon if it yields losses instead of profits. It is a continuous and regular effort, unwavering perseverance and uninterrupted devotion from  generation to generation. It can never stop and no penny should ever be spared on it.

In his portrait dedicated to Paderewski the great French composer Charles Gounod wrote only three, but very significant, words: ‘To my dear, great and noble Paderewski’.

On the 75th anniversary of the death of the Great Pole his compatriots honoured him with concerts and the 10th Ignacy Jan Paderewski  International Piano Competition was held on 6–20 November in Bydgoszcz.

 9780689112485-uk


Copies of this discerning biography of Paderewski by the masterful author Adam Zamoyski are available on this link

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Paderewski-Adam-Zamoyski/dp/B08FP9Z1J9/ref=sr_1_1?crid=26UG11ZT0PZ1C&keywords=paderewski+zamoyski&qid=1668953154&s=books&sprefix=paderewski+zamoyski%2Cstripbooks%2C89&sr=1-1


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