1 in March 1928, with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra under Sir Dan Godfrey (the source refers to him as a "teenager", but he appears to have been about 23).
On 18 January 1930, in Madrid, he gave the first performance of Joaquín Turina's Contes d'Espagne, Set II, Op.
[5] For a performance at Birmingham Town Hall around 1950 he brought his own piano in a box trailer towed behind his car.
Niedzielski is not well known today, but he had a commanding technique as shown in his own paraphrase on Johann Strauss II's A Thousand and One Nights Waltz, Op.
[1] His recordings are now rare (some have been reissued on CD in recent years): He settled in Paris, dying there in 1975 of a tropical disease contracted during an African tour.