Zygmunt Denis Antoni Jordan de Stojowski (aka Sigismond Stojowski), composer, pianist and pedagogue; born most probably on 27 March 1870 (OS) [8 April 1870 (NS) - some sources quote also 2 and 14 May, and the following years: 1863, 1869, 1871 and 1876] in Strzelce near Kielce; died on 5 November 1946 in New York.
Stojowski's mother, Maria née Bogdeńska, was his first piano teacher. Later he attended Cracow's St Anne's Gymnasium and studied piano and composition as a private student under Władyslaw Żeleński. In 1886, aged sixteen, he took part in the concerts of the Cracow Music Society, and in 1887 gave his first own concert in the double role of the pianist and the composer. Having completed his gymnasium education in 1887, he went to France and enrolled in the Paris Conservatoire to study piano in the class of Louis Diémer, harmony under Theodore Dubois and composition under Léo Delibes (after Delibes' death in 1891, Stojowski received consultation from Jules Massenet and Camille Saint-Saëns). He was a student of Ignacy Jan Paderewski in 1891 - an acquaintance which turned into an almost half-a-century-long friendship; both of them will work for the Polish cause, and Paderewski will invite Stojowski to join the first Polish government, an offer which Stojowski will refuse, choosing to serve the Polish cause from overseas.
While a student in Paris, Stojowski listened to lectures in history, philosophy, languages and literature at the Sorbonne, and befriended Peter Tchaikovsky and Johannes Brahms. Having graduated with honours from the Conservatoire, he stayed on in France for a while and gave concerts in Paris, London, Brussels, Berlin and in Poland (in Cracow, Wroclaw, Warsaw and Lublin). In 1898 his Symphony in D minor op. 21 (1898) won him the 1st prize for an orchestral work at the Ignacy Jan Paderewski Composition Competition in Leipzig.
He left for the United States in October 1905 and lived their until his death. He became an American citizen in 1938. Until 1911 he was professor at the Institute of Musical Art in New York (the predecessor of the famous Juilliard School of Music), heading the piano chair. There he earned a reputation as an excellent teacher. Afterwards he taught at the Von Ende School of Music (nowadays the University of the State of New York) until 1918 as well as giving private lessons. Around 1918 he established a school of his own, his students including Aleksander Brachocki, Antonia Brico, Phyllida Ashley, Oscar Levant, Mischa Levitzki, Arthur Loesser, Alfred Newman, Guiomar Novaes, and Harriet Ware. He also organized festivals and master courses, and concertized with various orchestras in a number of cities in the United States, Canada and South America. In addition to his owns works, he played concertos by Ludwig van Beethoven, Frederic Chopin, Franz Liszt and Camille Saint-Saëns. His compositions were in turn performed by Ignacy Jan Paderewski, Aleksander Michałowski, Józef Hofman, Mieczysław Horszowski, Antonina Adamska, Rudolf Ganz, Carl Friedberg, Aleksander Brachocki, Artur Loesser, Percy Grainger, Olga Samaroff, Mischa Levitzki, Michael von Zadora, Władysław Górski, Paweł Kochański, Henryk Opieński, August Wilhemj, Jacques Thibaud, Jascha Heifetz, George Enescu, Pablo Casals, Grzegorz Piatigorski, Jozef Adamski, Marcelina Sembrich-Kochańska and Karol Fürstenberg. Stojowski's scores were published by C.F. Peters in Leipzig, J.H. Heugel in Paris, G. Augener in London and G. Schirmer in New York.
Stojowski was the founder of the Polish Institute of Arts and Letters, the predecessor of the present-day Polish Institute of Arts & Sciences, he has also been involved in the work of Kosciuszko Foundation for twenty years. He wrote essays and articles on piano teaching, contributing to the music magazine "The Etude" for thirty-five years.
The Polish government awarded Stojowski the order Polonia Restituta. He also received several decorations (including the Distinguished Service Medal) from the United States.
Major compositions:
- Deux pensées musicales op. 1 for piano
- Deux caprices-études op. 2 for piano
- Piano concerto in F sharp minor op. 3 (ca. 1890)
- Trois intermédes op. 4 for piano
- Quatre morceaux op. 5 for piano
- Variations et Fugue op. 6 for string quartet
- Le Printemps / Spring op. 7, cantata for mixed choir and orchestra to Horace's Ode
- Three pieces op. 8 for piano
- Suite in E flat major op. 9 for orchestra
- Deux orientales op. 10 for piano
- Five Songs op. 11 for voice and piano, words by Adam Asnyk
- Danses humoresques op. 12 for piano
- Sonata for violin and piano in G major op. 13
- Two piano pieces op. 15 for piano
- Deux caprices op. 16 for piano
- Dumka / Song op. 17 for piano
- Sonata for cello and piano in A major op. 18
- Five Miniatures op. 19 for piano
- Romance op. 20 for violin and orchestra
- Symphony in D minor op. 21 (1898)
- Concerto for violin and orchestra in G major op. 22
- Rapsodie symphonique op. 23 for piano and orchestra (before 1900)
- Polish Idylls op. 24 for piano
- Romantic Pieces op. 25 for piano
- Four Pieces op. 26 for piano
- Fantaisie op. 27 for trombone and piano
- Deux mazurkas op. 28 for piano
- Auf Sturm und Stille op. 29, 6 pieces for piano
- Trois esquisses op. 30 for piano
- Concertstück op. 31 for cello and orchestra
- Piano concerto no. 2 in A flat major op. 32 (1909-10)
- Six Songs op. 33 for voice and piano, words by Kazimierz Przerwa-Tetmajer
- Trois etudes de concert op. 35 for piano
- Poèmes d'été op. 36 for piano
- Sonata for violin and piano in E major op. 37
- Fantaisie op. 38 for piano
- Aspirations op. 39 for piano
- Interméde lyrique op. 40 for piano (1916)
- Prayer for Poland op. 40, cantata for soprano, baritone, mixed choir, orchestra and organ, words by Zygmunt Krasiński
- Scherzo-caprice op. 41 for piano (1933)
- Variations and Fugue upon an Original Thema for piano op. 42
- Romance op. 43 for piano
Author: Małgorzata Kosińska, Polish Music Information Center, October 2006