DULUTH – This past February, celebrated accordion player Florian Chmielewski played his own 97th birthday party at the Cloquet VFW — and even tacked on a few more gigs after that in nearby Cromwell, Sandstone and beyond.
“He just kept going,” his daughter Patty Chmielewski said. “As long as he could see, as long as his arms worked, he would play.”
Chmielewski, a farmer, a Minnesota state senator for 26 years and a musician for triple that amount of time, died in his Sturgeon Lake, Minn., home on the morning of April 23. He had congestive heart failure, according to his daughter, who was among the family with him at the end.
His Chmielewski Funtime Band, which has included several generations of Chmielewski musicians, was featured on a polka-centered television show that aired for decades in both the United States and Canada. The family crisscrossed the country, performing hundreds of shows a year — complete with onstage antics and jokes. Chmielewski was behind a long-running International Polka Festival that started in Chisholm in the late 1970s and shifted venues in later years.
“Everyone knew him everywhere,” Patty Chmielewski said.
Florian Chmielewski, grew up with 14 siblings on the family’s northeastern Minnesota dairy farm. He got his first accordion when he was 18, a handoff from his brother whose landlord had grown weary of the sound. According to family lore, Chmielewski had a four-song repertoire and had booked a wedding within his first 30 days of playing.
He played music alongside his own siblings and friends, and after he married Pat Stolquist in 1956 and their own family grew, the kids joined the family band. They were given a choice, Patty Chmielewski said: The alternative to making music was milking the cows. Music won.
These days, the band includes some of Florian Chmielewski’s grandchildren.