LOPALEWSKI

The nineteenth Chopin Competition has come to an end, leaving Warsaw a little quieter than it was a few weeks ago. Every five years, this remarkable event gathers pianists from around the world—young talents chasing perfection and, perhaps, a touch of immortality. For that days, Chopin’s music seems to fill the country’s airwaves and living rooms. In the last edition, his presence in Poland felt even stronger than the pandemic that had just swept through. I was lucky to attend the post-competition concert by the new laureate, the brilliant Canadian Bruce Liu, at the National Forum of Music in Wrocław. It was an evening of pure clarity and joy—a reminder of how alive Chopin’s music still feels when played with honesty and fire.

The Chopin Competition is, for me, also a family story. A story of a musical lineage in which a special place belonged to my grandfather Zygmunt – the very man whose name I carry.
It was his dream that my father would become a pianist. He began playing before the war, as a little boy. In our family apartment on Emilii Plater Street in Warsaw – long gone now, destroyed during the war – stood a piano.
Some photographs have survived… black and white, their edges softly worn, yet still alive with the memory of those moments.

Father played beautifully, by all accounts. He graduated from music school and, in 1960, took part in the preliminary qualifications for the Chopin Competition. He told me about it once – how, at the time, the final decisions were made by teachers from other schools, and how he was instead offered a chance to compete in Brussels.
That year, Polish pianists did not fare well in Warsaw. The brilliant Maurizio Pollini won. Father said with admiration that “no one could match Pollini then,” but he also felt he could have defended the honour of the Polish school.
Something in him must have broken after that. The piano was sold, and in its place appeared a reel-to-reel tape recorder – a technological marvel of the day, of which he was very proud.
Apparently, the look on my grandfather’s face when he saw that massive machine said it all. My father never played again, though whenever he heard a piano somewhere, I could see the quiet ache in his eyes. All that remains of him, the pianist, is one old photograph. And a silence filled with unsaid notes.

There is one more story – also tied to the Competition.
In 1985, my father, by then an accomplished television director, was tasked with supervising the broadcast of two stages of the Chopin Competition. For two weeks he lived in the Metropol Hotel in Warsaw, just ten minutes’ walk from the National Philharmonic.
The Metropol still stands today – I stay there sometimes. It has a certain charm, a whisper of another era.
Back then, Father spent nearly all his days inside the broadcast van, working tirelessly, jotting down small but precise notes in his spare moments. He correctly predicted the winner (fantastic Stanislav Bunin) and most of the laureates – as if he were listening not only with the ear of a professional, but with the heart of a musician he never stopped being.

I don’t play the piano – that was never my choice, more an echo of my father’s dreams.
And yet, Chopin has always been a part of me. His music – filled with light, tenderness, and unrest – awakens something deep inside me. The same kind of tremor I feel whenever my fingers brush a piano key.

My son – Krzyś – doesn’t play any instrument as me. Perhaps that’s all right. Each of us carries our own kind of music inside.
Once, I took a photograph of him that I still cherish. There’s something in it – a trace of silence after sound, a kind of memory that refuses to fade.

But back to the title of this story.
Not long ago, while hiking in the gentle mountains of Lower Silesia, we came across a monument to Fryderyk Chopin on the summit of Orlica.
I admit, I was surprised. The frail, sixteen-year-old Chopin – in the mountains? I had to look it up.

Chopin, it turns out, visited the mountains twice – in 1826 and again in 1829.
In August 1826, sixteen years old, he came to the spa town of Duszniki-Zdrój (then Reinerz) with his mother and sisters, seeking to regain his health. He drank the mineral waters, strolled through the park, and gave one of his first public performances – in the building now known as the Chopin Manor.
There’s no real evidence he climbed Orlica. Yet local tradition insists he took a walk in that direction.
The obelisk standing there today symbolically binds the young composer to this land – more through the spirit of Romanticism than through historical fact.
It’s beautiful, really, how history sometimes writes for a poet or a musician the chapters they never had time to live – or to see.

Three years later, in 1829, Chopin travelled to the Tatra Mountains – to the Chochołowska and Kościeliska valleys. In his letters from that time, he wrote of his awe at the landscape and the mountain folk music:

“I have seen marvellous things. Mountains, valleys, streams – like something out of a fairy tale! But the climbing is hard, so I sit here below, gazing at the peaks others are conquering.”

I like to think that, in that moment, he was simply a young man – like any of us – moved by the beauty of the world, yet wistful that he lacked the strength to touch its highest summits.

Searching for beautiful mountain views is my winter obsession. Maybe that’s why I like skiing so much. I’m not a great skier. Oh well, I’m doing fine. But this is all about something else. Frost, sun, omnipresent white. And peaks to the horizon. Every winter must have a few similar accents. Otherwise it’s not winter. So, the Kitzsteinhorn glacier in Austria is a good place to start. A sequel should come pretty soon…

A beautiful trip to the Dolomites with my son for skiing. Location, weather. Even though I had to focus on work in the first days, we managed to spend time together doing what I love, and Krzysiek does it just perfectly. And the son is basically an adult…

Chris is great at skiing probably because he learned it very early. And he was predisposed to it. Year 2009. How old was he then? Just over 3. A beautiful village in the Polish Tatra mountains, close to my heart, Bukowina Tatrzańska. Climate, views, and a few slopes, tiny in total. Today it is looked at with sentiment, but it is actually terribly rickety. For people familiar with the Alps – a joke, for us, in Poland, one of the legendary places. Why? A great place for small children, everything is easy to manage. Excellent instructors – Chris taught Wojtek – a person created for this, a great ski teacher. So it’s hardly surprising that my son quickly learned to ski, right there. It is worth adding here that I also learned to ski there as a teenager. The infrastructure in the 1980s was the same… But that’s another story, unfortunately I don’t have any photos from that time. I remember an old friend comment who also learned to ski there and is now a professional instructor. „Why Bukowina? To learn how to ride, you have to feel what the sweat, blood and tears are…” TRUE.

2010 and 2011, Bukowina again. Continuation. Better and better results … That’s why trips to slightly more ambitious routes in nearby towns, completely unknown to people from abroad. For example, Bialka Tatrzanska. One of the most popular ski resorts in Poland. EXPENSIVE!!! Good lifts, very short slopes, and crowds in the season. Well, unfortunately, we do not have the Alps in Poland.

And from 2012, the escapades began further. Trips to the Polish mountains, the so-called „men’s trips”, were a great breakthrough at the beginning of the season. But then there were the Carpathians, and Alps. Mostly, Where we haven’t been…? Slovakia – Chopok, Tatranska Lomnica, the Czech Republic – Cerna Hora, then – Austria – Schladming, Zell Am See, Kitzsteinhorn, Italy and Kronplatz, La Thuille, Via Lattea… Long list. There are beautiful memories and probably not the worst photo staff…

Last year, after the pandemic and all these horrors, there was a return to the high mountains. Hintertux, around. I was proud to watch my growing older son.

Recently, Chris stated in a diplomatic way that actually … skiing is not so passionate for him anymore. That’s why he would like to try snowboarding next season … Then he will be an adult. And he will go not with me, but with his friends … Or maybe, contrary to declarations, he will decide to go with his father?

A beautiful start to the year on the „Alpine Roof” – return to the Ziller Valley and its spectacular end – the Hintertux Glacier.

The first time I was there during a pandemic, slightly letting go. It was summer, 2020. After difficult months, I decided that … summer skiing will be the thing that will allow me to break away from everyday topics. It was an exotic, wonderful experience.

I returned to the glacier last winter in the wonderful company of my son and friends. The weather was good and the views fed the senses.

The last trip was as wonderful as the previous ones, despite the spring in the middle of winter. At an altitude of 3,250 meters, the temperature was only -0.4 degrees, at 2,660 meters +4, and at 2,250 meters almost +9 … It’s hard not to notice climatic changes in the high mountains. So let’s enjoy skiing while we still can…