Karol Kurpiński
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15 Polonaises2 Polonaises for Maria Feodorovna and Mazurek2 Polonaises for the 1825 Birthday of Konstantin Pavlovich3 Polonaises3 Polonaises, Book 26 VariationsB
Bitwa pod Możajskiem, Op.15Bohaterowi!C
Chwila snu okropnegoD
Dumanie nad mogiłą WandyE
Elegy on the Death of Tadeusz KościuszkoF
Fugue and CodaJ
Józef ZajączekK
KalmoraL
LitwinkaLucifer's PalaceM
Mars i FloraMass in E minorMazur in D majorModlitwa in A minorP
Polonaise and Mazurek for Genowefa PusłowskaPolonaise for the 1820 Nameday of Alexander IPolonaise for the 1822 Nameday of Alexander IPolonaise for the 1824 Birthday of Elizabeth AlexeievnaPolonaise for the 1825 Nameday of Alexander IPolonaise for Their Imperial MajestiesPolonaise in A minorPolonaise in E-flat major for a 1830 ballPolonaise marcialePolonaise No.1Polonaise on Rossini's themesPolonaise on 'Rule Britannia' and 'God Save the King'Polonaise on themes from 'Zelmira' and MazurekPolonaise 'Pustota'Polonaise 'Witaj Królu'Potpourri in D minorPróżno na piasek słońce szle oświatyT
The RewardW
WarszawiankaWykład systematyczny zasad muzyki na klawikordZ
Zabobon, czyli Krakowiacy i GóraleZamek na CzorsztynieZasady muzyki na pianoforteZbiór ulubionych polonezówŁ
Łaska imperatoraWikipediaKarol Kazimierz Kurpiński (March 6, 1785 – September 18, 1857) was a Polish composer, conductor and pedagogue. He was a representative of late classicism and a member of the Warsaw Society of Friends of Learning (Polish: Towarzystwo Warszawskie Przyjaciół Nauk, TWPN). He is also known for having composed the music to the 1831 patriotic song La Varsovienne with lyrics by Casimir Delavigne.
Born in Włoszakowice, Karol began his studies under his father, Marcin Kurpiński, an organist. At the age of 12, he became organist at a church in Sarnowa, Konin County, near Rawicz, where his uncle Karol Wański was a parish priest. In 1800 his other uncle, the cellist Roch Wański, took him to the estate of count Feliks Polanowski near Lviv, who had a private orchestra of which Wański was a member, and in which the young Kurpiński played violin.
There, around 1808, Kurpiński composed his first opera, Pygmalion. In 1810 he settled in Warsaw. With the help of
Józef Elsner he became a conductor of the Warsaw Opera, a position he held until 1840. He taught music at several prominent schools including one he founded. In 1815 he became a member of many musical societies in Poland and abroad, including the Société des Enfants d'Apollon in Paris. He became Kapellmeister of the Polish royal chapel in 1819 and in the same year received a lifetime achievement award for his services to music. In 1820 he founded and edited the first Polish music newsletter. He was decorated with the Order of Saint Stanislaus in 1823.
Kurpiński was a romanticist and one of the most revered composers before
Frédéric Chopin, and helped to lay the foundations of a national style and prepared the ground for Polish music of the Romantic period. He contributed to the development of Polish opera, introducing new musical devices and achieving a novel mode of expression.
He died on September 18, 1857, in Warsaw, aged 72.