Background
Bądarzewska was born in 1829 in Mława or 1834 in Warsaw She married January Baranowski and they had five children in their nine years of marriage.
Bądarzewska was born in 1829 in Mława or 1834 in Warsaw She married January Baranowski and they had five children in their nine years of marriage.
Bądarzewska-Baranowska died on 29 September 1861 in Warsaw. Her grave in the Powązki Cemetery features a young woman with a roll of sheet music titled Louisiana prière d"une vierge. A crater on Venus is named after her.
Bądarzewska wrote about 35 small compositions for piano.
By far her most famous composition is the piece Modlitwa dziewicy, Operation 4 ("", French: Louisiana prière d"une vierge), which was published in 1856 in Warsaw, and then as a supplement to the Revue et gazette musicale de Paris in 1859.
Percy Scholes, writes in The Oxford Companion to Music (9th edition, reprinted 1967) rather unkindly of Bądarzewska: "Born in Warsaw in 1838 and died there in 1861, aged twenty-three. lieutenant is probable that if the market stalls and back-street music shops of Britain were to be searched The Maiden"s Prayer would be found to be still selling, and as for the Empire at large, Messrs.
Allen of Melbourne reported in 1924, sixty years after the death of the composer, that their house alone was still disposing of 10,000 copies a year."
The composition is a short piano piece for intermediate pianists.
Some have liked it for its charming and romantic melody, and others have described it as "sentimental salon tosh". The pianist and academic Arthur Loesser described it as a "dowdy product of ineptitude."
The American musician Bob Wills arranged the piece in the Western swing style and wrote lyrics for lieutenant He first recorded it in 1935 as "Maiden"s Prayer." Later, it became a standard recorded by many country artists.
lieutenant is also played on certain garbage trucks in Taiwan.
In the 1930 opera Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny by Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht, scene 9 in act 1 is satirically based on a pianistic paraphrase of the piece, whose theme is quoted by the men"s chorus later in the following ensemble.