


I have heard Andrzej play many times but rarely Beethoven, so it was a real revelation to hear the dynamic drive and fluidity of this early op 10 n.1 Sonata. The first of three early sonatas dedicated to his teacher Haydn. In fact they take the form inherited from his mentor and begin to transform it into something ever more intense emotionally. The third of this set is in particular a revelation for the long very emotionally generated slow movement. This first Sonata is much simpler but is imbued with the genius of Beethoven where the simplicity of the ‘Adagio’ like the second piano concerto, has the same simplicity and radiance as Mozart.The outer movements though are imbued with the irascible energy and startling contrast in dynamic outbursts that are so much part of Beethoven’s genial character. Andrzej played the opening ‘Allegro’ with a vitality and energy of exhilarating daring with ornaments that were like highly wound springs. A chiselled beauty to the ‘Adagio’ with its continual mellifluous outpouring of Mozartian simplicity and with a ravishingly whispered coda. He brought an urgency to the ‘Prestissimo’ that he played with sparkling brilliance and great clarity.

Debussy’s second book of Images are touched by an etherial magic that is missing in the first book which is more earthbound. It gave Andrzej the opportunity to open the door to his kaleidoscopic palette of sounds and to reveal even more the poetic soul of a true artist who is listening to the sounds that he is shaping. There was a luminosity and glowing beauty with washes of sound as the bells are heard with the nostalgic radiance of a faded postcard. A crystalline clarity as Andrzej illuminated the entire keyboard with the bells heard with ever more glowing insistence, creating the atmosphere for a beautifully subtle ending. A simple purity to the sound as the ruins of the Temple were surrounded by magic rays.A wonderful range of sounds including the glow of an Indonesian gamelan that surround this vision that Andrzej described with beautiful florid arm movements of disarming simplicity. He gave us a final chiselled vision of these monumental remains as they were lit by passing rays from the light of the moon. ‘Poissons d’or’ had probably been inspired by an image of a golden fish in Chinese lacquer artwork or embroidery as Poissons rouge are the Goldfish in a bowl. A beautifully shaped melodic line was etched out over a stream of undulating notes as these fish seemed to flit across the keys with improvised grace. A passionate climax was of exhilarating liberation and Andrzej brought a remarkable clarity to the intricate final cadenza that dissolved into a whisper.

Andrzej bought a great sense of drama to Liszt’s ‘Dante’ Sonata allowing the story to unfold with a mastery of searing beauty. A wide range of sounds, but it was silence that spoke as poignantly as the sounds. Playing of aristocratic authority but also of ravishing beauty as feats of technical bravura and showmanship were contrasted with a ravishing whispered radiance of emotional intensity. Here was a great personality that could allow the music to breathe and speak with a voice of passion and consolation.

A wonderful sense of improvised freedom marked the opening of Chopin’s Polonaise – Fantaisie where the opening chords were played with sumptuous beauty as they were allowed to reverberate over the entire keyboard with just one single arm movement, allowing the left hand to add the final note with timeless ease. The Polonaise took flight with passion and grandeur as the central episode was allowed to unwind with subtle freedom and expressive intensity. The build up to the final triumphant outpouring was played with aristocratic control , but the remarkable thing about Andrzej’s playing is the beauty of sound even in the most exhilarating passages. It is never hard but seems to grow in beauty from the bass that gives an anchor to the freedom and fluidity of his playing. His Chopin playing, in particular , is exactly of the freedom that Chopin describes as being with the roots of the tree deeply embedded in the ground but the branches free to move naturally above.
It was this freedom and sense of style that brought to life the ‘Grande valse brillante’ op 18 which Andrzej bravely offered as an encore after his ‘ tour de force ‘ of both books of Brahms Paganini Variations.

Both books of Brahms Paganini Variations requires stamina and technical mastery as each of the variations has a technical problem to be resolved. Transcendentally complex they may be with a wide range of problems from complicated rhythmic difficulties and hair raising passages requiring great agility with octaves that are both imperious and intricate all played with a dynamic rhythmic energy. The variations are linked by moments of expansive sensual beauty of sumptuously rich sounds of an elegance where even a simple dance is elaborated with octave glissandi to be played with simplicity and lightness. All the difficulties are incorporated into a whole of architectural shape creating two great movements separated only by the repeat of Paganini’s theme. Andrzej played with a sumptuous beauty where the actual difficulties disappeared as we were only made aware of the continual outpouring of music that was exciting, expressive and at times seductive. An overall architectural shape that united these two blocks that had been inspired by the 24th Caprice for solo violin by Nicolò Paganini, the greatest showman the world has ever known. Brahms had been inspired too to transcribe the famous Chaconne by Bach from solo violin to the piano, choosing the left hand alone that in some way created the same wonder that Bach had created for single violin. A masterly performance by Andrzej where one was swept away by the passionate intensity and seductive beauty of his playing and any slight blemishes were of no significance when one is in the hands of a musician who can show us the great architectural line of a work of such transcendental complexity.

Andrzej Wiercinski studied with Professor Anna Jastrzebska-Quinn at the Zenon Brzewski Secondary School of Music in Warsaw (2010–2014), and he graduated with honors in 2019 from the Karol Szymanowski Academy of Music in Katowice in the piano class of Professor Wojciech Switala. In 2020, he completed postgraduate studies at the Mozarteum University in Salzburg under the guidance of Professor Pavel Gililov. In 2024, he graduated with honors from the Royal College of Music in London, where he studied as a scholarship holder under the mentorship of renowned pianist Norma Fisher. He was a semifinalist of the 18th International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw. In 2019, he won the third prize at the Hong Kong International Piano Competition, and in 2022, he won the third prize at the American International Piano Competition Ignacy Jan Paderewski in Los Angeles, as well as the Grand Prix of the “Red Maple Music Competition” in Toronto. He has won numerous awards at other prestigious national and international piano competitions, including: the first prize at the “Golden Ring” International Chopin Competition in Slovenia, the first prize at the International Chopin Competition in Budapest, the first prize at the “Masters Neapolitan Piano Competition” in Naples, the Gold Medal at the First International Music Competition in Vienna, first place at the International Piano Competition in Saint-Priest, France, along with several special awards, including a record contract with KNS Classical and a European concert tour, the Silver Medal at the Berlin International Music Competition, and an Honorary Prize at the Paris International Music Competition.
Andrzej Wiercinski regularly performs recitals in most European countries and around the world, including in the United Arab Emirates, where he represented Poland at the World Expo in Dubai. He also performed in the Theatre of Digital Art (TODA) in Dubai. His concerts have taken place in the United States, Canada, Brazil, Indonesia, China, and Japan. His cooperation with KAWAI and Japan Arts has resulted in several tours in Asia. In 2015, during an official visit of the President of the Republic of Poland, Bronislaw Komorowski, to Japan, he performed a Chopin Recital in Tokyo, attended by, among others, Her Imperial Highness Princess Masako Owada of Japan. He has also collaborated with prestigious orchestras such as the Deutsche Philharmonie Merck Orchestra, the Polish Radio National Symphony Orchestra, and the Warsaw National Symphony Orchestra. In 2015, under the auspices of the Fryderyk Chopin Institute in Warsaw, he released an album with solo piano works by Fryderyk Chopin, Domenico Scarlatti, and Robert Schumann.















































































































































