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Karol Szymanowski - Etude No. 3, Op. 4

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Uploaded by on Aug 22, 2011

Karol Maciej Szymanowski (3 October 1882 -- 28 March 1937) was a Polish composer and pianist.

Four Etudes, Opus 4 (1900-1902)

3. Andante

Martin Jones, piano

Editor:First edition (+ reissues)

Publisher Info.:Warsaw: Gebethner & Wolff, 1906. Plates 19-22.

Reprinted:Vienna: Universal Edition, n.d.(ca.1912). Plate U.E. 3855

Szymanowski was born into a wealthy land-owning Polish gentry family (of the Korwin/Ślepowron coat-of-arms) in Tymoszówka, then in the Russian Empire, now in Cherkasy Oblast, Ukraine. He studied music privately with his father before going to Gustav Neuhaus' Elizavetgrad School of Music from 1892. From 1901 he attended the State Conservatory in Warsaw, of which he was later director from 1926 until retiring in 1930. Musical opportunities in Russian-occupied Poland being quite limited at the time, he travelled widely throughout Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and the US. These travels, especially those to the Mediterranean area, provided much inspiration to the composer and esthete.

The fruits of these trips included not only musical works, but poetry and his novel on Greek love Efebos, parts of which were subsequently lost in a fire in 1939. The central chapter was translated by him into Russian and given as a gift in 1919 to Boris Kochno, who was his beloved at the time. Szymanowski also wrote a number of love poems, in French, to the 15-year-old boy. Among these are Ganymède, Baedecker, N'importe, and Vagabond.

Writing about his novel, Szymanowski said, "In it I expressed much, perhaps all that I have to say on this matter, which is for me very important and very beautiful." It remains available in a German translation as Das Gastmahl. Ein Kapitel aus dem verlorenen Roman Ephebos.

Szymanowski maintained a long correspondence with pianist Jan Smeterlin, who was a significant champion of his piano works. Their correspondence was published by Allegro Press in 1969.

Szymanowski died in a sanatorium in Lausanne, Switzerland from tuberculosis.

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Top Comments

  • @pawsoned I mean gem o_O

  • This one is really a germ.

    Thanks for downloading Szymanowski's music

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All Comments (7)

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  • @liksiadub you're right ; )

  • this is insanely beautiful :)

  • @nousernamewhatsoever tbh Szymanowski's work is not my 'cup of tea', so to speak. Indeed, I don't find his violin concerto or Stabat Mater exquisite compositions. Although I don't know all his works, his impressionistic style seems a bit 'odd' as far as I'm concerned, and sadly it seems to me that such compositions as this one are rare

  • @pawsoned lol what Freud would say about that slip :P but i agree this is a real gem!! do you maybe know other pieces of his that are worth playing and listening to?

  • 1:19 Faute de texte (on doit jouer une dièse sur le do et non pas le ré). Sinon, une interprétation très belle, à part quelque "impuretés" dans les gammes.

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