Composer / Pianist

Franciszek Lessel

(1780 - 26.12.1838)

Music print, Franciszek Lessel, Fugue: pour le piano à quatre mains: composée et dediée à Madame Kamińska née Kochanowska, 1812, from the collection of the National Library in Warsaw / (Polona), in the public domain

Track list

Composer and pianist, born in Warsaw, died in Piotrków Trybunalski. Having taken his first lessons of music with his father, Wincenty Ferdynand Lessel, composer, pianist and pedagogue of Czech descent, Lessel left for Vienna in late 1799 to study composition under Joseph Haydn, and remained a student of Haydn’s until Haydn’s death in 1809.

It was before leaving for Vienna that Lessel started giving concerts, first in a chamber string ensemble in Lvov (with, among others, Karol Kurpiński and Karol Lipiński at Count’s Łączyński), then also as a pianist. While a student in Vienna, he would come to Poland a number of times, working as a court musician at the Lubomirskis in Lancut. Upon his return to Poland in 1809, he started giving piano concerts of his own works, appearing, among other places, in Cracow and at the Warsaw National Theatre. He also played on the glass harmonica, an instrument which was hugely popular at the time, gave music lessons and, for a while, was director of the Warsaw Amateur Music Society.

For the rest of his life he did jobs which were not related to music; he did not give up composing, however. In 1812 he became an estate administrator in Gzików near Kalisz, from 1823 was the plenipotentiary of Maria Wirtemberska’s property in Pilica, and in the 1830s managed the Poplawskis’ estate in Pecice. In 1836 he took the position of administrator at the Marymont Institute of Farming, and the following year was appointed inspector of the regional Gymnasium in Piotrków Trybunalski, a tenure he was to hold until his death.

 

Source: www.culture.pl, Małgorzata Kosińska, Polish Music Information Center, October 2006.