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SERGEI VASSILYEVITCH RACHMANINOV (1873 - 1943)
Sergei Rachmaninov was undoubtedly one of the greatest
performers ever and nobody who heard him playing Beethoven'sAppassionata,
Chopin's B flat minor sonata or the Liszt transcriptions of Bach
readily forgot him.
Rachmaninov's father was an aristrocatric landowner who resigned
his commission in the Cavalry's Guards of the Imperial Russian
Army and retired to his estate in the Novgord district where he
became involved in various musical activities. Lyou Boutakovia,
Rachmaninov's mother had been born into a wealthy family and was
also very interested in music so that when the four year old Sergei
decided he wished to play the piano it was his mother who gave
him his first piano lessons.
Inside two months, Rachmaninov had achieved what a normal child
would take two years to accomplish on the piano and was playing
quite difficult works to visitors. Soon his mother engaged Anna
Ornazkaya, an ex student of the St. John Petersburg Conservatoire
as his teacher.
Despite his interest in music Rachmaninov's father wanted him
to enter the military academy at St Petersburg but his mother
was equally insistent that he should go to the Anton Rubinstein
Conservatoire in the same city. The matter was resplved when Rachmaninov
obtained a scholarship to the conservatoire and as his father
had squandered all his money he ws allowed to take it up.
The abolition of serfdom meant that his father's estate was no
longer a viable commercial proposition and the family moved to
a small flat in St Petersburg. After the move it was not long
before his parents separated.
Rachmaninov was naturally lazy and often missed lectures to visit
the ice rink. His teachers were not very inspiring and he became
so bored that he began to improvise extensively.
However Rachmaninov's mother realised that he was wasting a lot
of time and on the advice of her cousin he was sent to study with
Zverev who was quite prepared to resort to physical violence when
he lost his temper. In addition he worked twelve hours a day and
expected his students to do the same. Zverve also severely restricted
the number of visits which students' parents could make and rarely
allowed his students to go home. However his enthusiasm for music
and his unlimited generosity provided rich rewards to students
who resided at his house.
When Anton Rubinstein visited Moscow to conduct his opera Demon,
he took the opportunity to visit the Academy and Zverev arranged
for his Rachmaninov to play Bach's English Suite in A minor to
him. Afterwards Rubinstein played Beethoven's Sonata in F sharp
(Opus 78) and in the following year gave a series of great recitals
in Moscow and Rachmaninov was able to attend them. As a result
Rachmaninov became familiar with Rubinstein's expert use of the
pedal which according to Rubinstein was "the soul of the
piano"
Rachmaninov began to study harmony with Arensky who encouraged
him to compose. Soon Rachmaninov wrote his study in E sharp and
although it was in many respects a mediocre piece Zverev was sufficiently
impressed to mention it to Tschaikovsky. This was the start of
a valuable friendship and Tschaikovsky gave Rachmaninov permission
to arrange his Manfred Symphony for Two Pianos.
In the final exam of the harmony course Rachmaninov's marks were
the highest ever in the history of the Conservatoire. As a result
it was assumed that his future lay in composition and he was enrolled
in Taneyev's counterpoint class.
At the age of sixteen Rachmaninov was still living at Zverev's
house. Because of a quarrel with his room mate Rachmaninov asked
Zverev for a room to himself. This precipitated a violent quarrel
and Rachmaninov went to live with an aunt who also lived in Moscow.
In September Rachmaninov went swimming in the river and for months
afterwards was unwell. Eventually, his aunt called in Professor
Metropolsky (one of Moscow's most eminent doctors) and the condition
was diagonosed as typhoid.
Rachmaninov was confined to bed for a few months and when he
was allowed up discovered he had lost his talent for composing.
However his skill returned in time for his final examinations
at the Conservatoire and his setting of the one act opera Aleko
was so favourably received by Zverev that he kissed Rachmaninov
and presented him with his gold watch and chain. Rachmaninov was
so touched by this gesture that he wore the gift for the rest
of his life. In addition Rachmaninov was awarded the"Great
Gold Medal", the highest honour available at the Conservatoire
and his name was inscribed on its Roll of Honour - a distinction
only attained by two other students since the foundation of the
College.
At this time he sold several of his works to a publisher and
was delighted to obtain 500 roubles. Aleko was produced in 1893
at the Grand Theatre, Moscow and in the same year Rachmaninov
gave his first public recital as a pianist, but the most important
event that year was the publication of Pianoforte Pieces Opus
3, which included the Prelude in C sharp minor - a piece that
has since been played by millions of amateur pianists.
During this period Rachmaninov was working mostly on compositions
but his First Symphony was a disaster - as soon as he heard it
rehearsed he knew it would fail.
Because of the popularity of the 'Prelude' in England the Royal
Philharmonic Society invited him to perform in one of its concerts
in the autumn of 1898. He conducted and played several piano pieces
including the'Prelude' and the visit was a resounding success.
The Society invited him to play his Concerto No 1 in the following
year but Rachmaninov said he would prefer to write a second concerto
especially for the occasion and this was immediately agreed.
Unfortunately he became seriously depressed when he returned
to Moscow with the result that the engagement was not fulfilled
and he had to consult a psychiatrist.
In 1902 he married his cousin Natalie and they settled in Moscow.
In 1905 he became a conductor of opera in the Imperial Theatre
and a year later moved to Dresden.
He completed his Second Concerto but it was not heard outside
Russia till 1908 when he was invited to play at a concert given
by the Vienna Philharmonic Society and for the next few years
he pursued a tripartite career as composer, pianist and conductor.
The Third Concerto was written specifically for his tour of America
in 1909. During this tour he appeared as pianist and conductor
at twenty concerts given by the Boston Symphony Orchestra. In
the first performance of the Concerto the conductor was Damrosch
and Rachmaninov himself was the soloist. Later it was performed
under the baton of Mahler with Rachmaninov as soloist.
In 1910 Rachmaninov conducted his Second Symphony at the Leeds
Festival and in 1914 gave a series of recitals in England.
When the 1914 - 1918 war broke out Rachmaninov was in Russia
and during its early years gave many recitals for war charities
including a tour of the principal Russian towns, in which he played
the works of Scriabin, the great Russian composer who died in
1915.
Rachmaninov's reaction to the 1917 Revolution is clearly expressed
in his Recollections (published by George Allen and Unwin):
"Almost from the very beginning of the Revolution I realised
that it was mishandled. Already by March 1917 I had decided to
leave Russiia but was unable to carry out my plan, for Europe
was still fighting and no one could cross the frontier..."
"The outbreak of the Bolshevik upheaval still found me in
my old flat in Moscow. I had started to re-write my First Concerto
for pianoforte, which I intended to play again, and was so engrossed
with my work that I did not notice what went on around me... I
sat at the writing table or piano all day without troubling about
the rattle of machine guns and rifle shots..."
"Three or four days after the shooting in Moscow had begun
I received a telegram suggesting that I should make a tour of
ten concerts in Scandanavia.. I had difficulty obtaining a visa
from theBolsheviks... Later I heard that I was the last to receive
permission to leave Russia in a legal manner. I travelled to St
Petersburg by myself... My wife with the two girls followed later
and together we took the train which carried us via Finland to
the Swedish frontier..."
Rachmaninov and his family crossed the frontier on a sledge during
a blizzard and arrived at Stockholn on Christmas Eve. He played
in all the main towns in Switzerland and formed the opinion that
his piano playing offered him the best means of earning a living.
Having reached this decision he realised that his repertoire was
largly comprised of his own composition. Accordingly he rented
a house in Copenhagen and began expanding his repertoire.
During this period he turned down an invitation to become the
conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra but on realising the
opportunities available in America he decided to go anyway.
Rachmaninov and his family arrived in New York on 10 November
1918 and witnessed the ecstatic celebrations on the following
day.
His arrival was well timed because Paderewski was too involved
with politics to give piano recitals and Charles Ellis (Paderewski's
agent) was on the lookout for another charismatic pianist.
In his first concert Rachmaninov played Schumann's Carnival,
the Chopin Sonata in B flat, and the Beethoven Appassionata. This
was exactly what the American audiences craved and he received
rapturous applause.
This was the beginning of Rachmaninov's long career in the New
World. He was especially associated with several of the great
American orchestras. His performances with the conductor Stokowski
and the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra being particularly memorable.
1928 saw him tour Europe again and reaching the pinnacle of his
fame. Extensive tours in Europe and America followed and these
coupled with many recording sessions resulted in him neglecting
his compositions so that he was known primarly as a pianist, despite
having three symphonies and three concertos to his credit.
Rachmaninov did not return to Russia. For years he criticised
the communist government and in 1951 his music was banned in the
Soviet Union because it was representative of"the decadent
attitude of the lower middle class" and"especially dangerous
on the musical front... class war"
However he eventually modified his criticism and acknowledged
what was praisworthy in the USSR's efforts to promote the welfare
and culture of the Russian people. To his great delight the ban
was lifted and his works were again performed and studied in the
USSR
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