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Programs & Activities
Music & Dance
Stas Wisniach
Farmington, Michigan
Accordionist and master of Polish folk music
Stas Wisniach is an outstanding master accordionist
and a symbol of Polish traditional music. He began accordion lessons at
about the age of 4 when his parents recognized his musical potential after
hearing him play an accordion given to him by his uncle. His father once
took him to a wedding, accordion in tow, and sat him beside a concertina
player. Stas played along in perfect time, and it was then that his father
invested in a larger accordion.
When Stas was 9, he organized his own band and played at neighborhood
clubs, dances, and many different Polish social events. In 1945 he graduated
from the Detroit Institute of Musical Art as the first student with a
major in the accordion. In the 1950s he became the orchestra leader of
the Club Polka show on WXYZ and also performed on "Soupy Sales"
and "Our Friend Harry." He moved to California in 1966 where
he lived and performed professionally for Polish communities and others.
He returned to Detroit in 2001 to perform at the gala reception of the
exhibition, "Polish Presence in Detroit," at the Detroit Historical
Museum, and he has remained.
During his more-than-70-year career, Stas has taught accordion to many.
He also has made a number of recordings. It is, however, the 1960s collection
of Polish folk ballads, "Sentimental Journey to Poland," with
the Jan Wojnar ensemble that Polish music historian Laurie Gomulka Palazzolo
regards as "one of the most perfect recordings ever made." She
states, "Stas's work on this recording represents some of the finest
musicianship I have ever heard"
Stas, who has a large following in southeast Michigan, continues to perform
and teach. In 2004 he was selected for a Michigan Traditional Arts Apprenticeship
award to teach accordion and Polish folk music to Georgiana Leonard. In
recognition for a lifetime dedicated to the accordion and his role in
the maintenance of Polish traditional music, Stas Wisniach is honored
with the 2004 Michigan Heritage Award.
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