Sergei Rachmaninov | |
Selected and annotated by Malcolm MacDonald The reviews of Rachmaninovs Recollections [1] set me thinking of his Concerto in C minor, which I heard at its first performance in England by Siloti [2]. The success of the work did not surprise me, for its refreshing spontaneity and brightly coloured idiom are rare. The Symphony in E minor is no less distinguished. But for all the artistic and monetary successes that seem to come easily enough to travelling or exiled Slavs and Poles, they always seem profoundly melancholy, wanting something that the world cannot give - at least, not to them. Each time I met Rachmaninov [3] he was complaining, first, that he could not compose out of his native Russia, which alone, reflected by his ancient Mongol ancestry, could supply the lacking inspiration. The second occasion was after his return from America: an orchestral work, written and glamorously produced in the States by Stokowski [4], had not been successful elsewhere and he was very unhappy about it: indeed, nothing he had written in America seemed to please him. He was suffering badly from nostalgia: and all creative artists know full well the baneful influence of unsympathetic surroundings. As we know, the war unhorsed many a popular favourite, even among composers, and at the same time put many an unworthy person, man and artist, in the saddle. Matters may be righted in time, mostly through forgetfulness on the part of those who were then in the midst of musical life. When war broke out the whole musical fabric collapsed. Wood was rehearsing Rachmaninovs big choral work, The Bells, for Sheffield; it was never done there, though it was, I believe, performed at Queens Hall some time after hostilities ceased. There were otter performances under Wood, at Birmingham in 1921 and at Liverpool a year later, but Rachmaninov does not mention them [5]. This was one of the minor tragedies in Rachmaninovs life: greater and worse things were enacted in Russia, where the established order of artistry and artists was assailed with cruelty born of jealous knowledge and vindictiveness. Even as recently as 1931 an official ban was put on a performance in Moscow of The Bells. It seems like a nightmare after reading Carlyle s French Revolution to see before ones eyes the resolution attributed to the St Petersburg Conservatoire of Music. Rachmaninovs works express the decadent ideas of a bourgeois, and are particularly harmful under the present circumstances when the class war on the musical front is so embittered. That is a cunningly devised proscription, and probably more brutal in its effect than the ignorant assertion in Moscow that Rachmaninov was a composer who was played out long ago an insignificant imitator and reactionary. On the other hand, by La main gauche, Musical opinion June 1934 pp. 764- 765 [1] Rachmaninovs
Recollections by Oskar von Reisemann (trans Dolly Rutherford) - London, Allen &
Unwin, 1934. 990311 Havergal Brian - the official website HOME
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