The People's Artist - Simon Morrison

The People's Artist

Prokofiev's Soviet Years

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
512 Seiten
2008
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-518167-8 (ISBN)
174,55 inkl. MwSt
A detailed chronicle of Prokofiev's career from 1932 to 1953, based on exclusive and extensive research conducted at several Russian archives. Prokofiev's Soviet Years examines Prokofiev's decision to relocate to Stalin's Russia in 1936, the mandated rewriting of such major works as Romeo and Juliet and War and Peace, and the composer's aesthetic and spiritual views.
A study in contrasts, the career of Sergey Prokofiev spanned the globe, leaving him witness to the most significant political and historical events of the first half of the twentieth century. In 1918, after completing a program of studies at the St. Petersburg conservatory, Prokofiev escaped Russia for the United States and later France where, like most émigré artists of the time, he made Paris his home. During these hectic years, he composed three ballets and three operas, fulfilled recording contracts, and played recitals of tempestuous music. Scores were stored in suitcases, scenarios and librettos drafted on hotel letterhead. The constant uprooting and transience fatigued him, but he regarded himself as a person of action who, personally and professionally, traveled against rather that with the current. Thus, in 1936, as political anxieties increased in Western Europe, Prokofiev escaped back to Russia. Though at first pampered by the totalitarian regime, Prokofiev soon suffered official correction and censorship. He wrote and revised his late ballets and operas to appease his bureaucratic overseers but, more often than not, his labors came to naught. Following his official condemnation in 1948, many of his compositions were withdrawn from performance. Physical illness and mental exhaustion characterized his last years. Housebound, he journeyed inward, creating a series of works on the theme of youth whose music sounds despondently optimistic.
The reasons for Prokofievs return to Russia and the specifics of his dealings with the Stalinist regime have long been mysterious. Owing to their sensitive political and personal nature, over half of the Prokofiev documents at the Russian State Archive have been sealed since their deposit there in 1955, two years after Prokofievs premature death. The disintegration of the Soviet Union did not lead to the rescinding of this prohibition. Author Simon Morrison is the first scholar, non-Russian or Russian, to receive the privilege to study them. Alongside wholly or partly unknown score materials, Morrison has studied Prokofievs never-seen journals and diaries, the original, unexpurgated versions of his official speeches, and the bulk of his correspondence. This new information makes possible for the first time an accurate study of the tragic second phase of Prokofievs career. Moving chronologically, Morrison alternates biographical details with discussions of Prokofievs major works, furnishing dramatic new insights into Prokofievs engagement with the Stalinist regime and the consequences that it had for his family and his health.

Associate Professor of Music, Princeton University, and author, Russian Opera and the Symbolist Movement (Cal UP, 2002).

Introduction ; Chapter 1: 1935-1938 ; Chapter 2: 1938-39 ; Chapter 3: The Pushkin Centennial Scores ; Chapter 4: 1940-43 ; Chapter 5: The Eisenstein Films and Tonya ; Chapter 6: 1944-47 ; Chapter 7: 1948 ; Chapter 8: 194953

Erscheint lt. Verlag 27.11.2008
Zusatzinfo 10 halftones, 30 music examples
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 236 x 157 mm
Gewicht 885 g
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Musik Klassik / Oper / Musical
ISBN-10 0-19-518167-0 / 0195181670
ISBN-13 978-0-19-518167-8 / 9780195181678
Zustand Neuware
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