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van Cliburn

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发表于 2004-9-11 17:05 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式 来自 北京市
History, politics, dirty tricks and a dramatic finish: all this and more
lies behind this week's recording, the most famous and best selling
classical album of the 1960's. And what a story it is!

The Times

1957. The Cold War is icing up and freezing over. The Russians are the
enemy, Communism is the greatest threat to the Free World. Krushchev
famously announces to the West "We will bury you!" and emphasises the point
by banging his shoe on the polished UN tabletop.

In October Russia launches Sputnik, and Americans haplessly watch the skies
as the Totalitarian technology cruises over their heads. There is a real
fear that this same technology could easily deliver a cargo of nuclear
weapons. The comfortable world of the 1950's has suddenly become a small and
frightening place.

The Competition

In March, 1958 the First Moscow Tchaikovsky Piano Competition is about to
begin. The line-up is daunting. The General Chairman is Dmitri Shostakovich,
and the jurors include such revered names as Sviatoslav Richter, Emil
Gilels, Dmitri Kabalevsky and Sir Arthur Bliss. 50 contestants from around
the world, each required to play concertos by the very Russian Tchaikovsky
and Rachmaninov.

Into this ferment steps a lanky (6'3") Texan with the unlikely name of Van
Cliburn. The Hall is packed for the final round, the atmosphere electric.
Most of the audience have never seen an American, their indoctrinated
distrust overpowered by their curiosity and love of music.

Cliburn's choice is bold: the Tchaikovsky First Piano Concerto, and the
Rachmaninov Third. Both well-known, well-loved and fiendishly difficult.
This is not music to play wrong in front of the home crowd.

Cliburn plays his heart out. Technically perfect, full of insight and
virtuosity, he breaths new vigour and personality into these concert-hall
standards. The audience erupts into applause, applause that does not stop
until Gilels leads Cliburn out onto the stage to finally acknowledge it.

Skullduggery

The jurors are faced with a dilemma. Although Cliburn is clearly the best,
he has one great disadvantage in their eyes: he is American. Many of the
jurors had already picked out a Russian, Lev Vlasenko as the winner, a
decision they thought would meet with the approval of Krushchev and the
audience.

And so they give Cliburn a very average score. Richter senses what is
happening and to redress the imbalance awards Cliburn a perfect 25 out of
25, and many of the other pianists zero. When confronted about his unusual
scoring system, Richter replies "eople either make music or they don't."

Richter and Gilels decide to approach Krushchev directly. Krushchev asks who
is the best. Krushchev and Gilels reply that it is Cliburn. "Well," says
Krushchev, "in that case, give him the Prize!"

The Homecoming

Cliburn returns to the United States a hero, the “Texan who Conquered
Russia”. He is given a ticker-tape parade welcome in New York City, and a
string of concerts and recording contracts make him a household name.

His first recording on returning to the US is the same Tchaikovsky Piano
Concerto no.1 with Kirill Kondrashin, the same conductor as for the
competition. The record is an instant best-seller, the first classical
record ever to sell over a million copies.

And that is the recording on this CD, coupled with the Rachmaninov Piano
Concerto no.2 with Fritz Reiner and the Chicago Symphony. The unforgetable
twelve chords that open the Rachmaninov welling up and melting into one of
the most gorgeous melodies of the twntieth century. Richly inventive, these
recordings signalled the return of the personality to the stage, not
surprising as Cliburn's teachers have a legacy dating back to Franz Liszt.

Intermission

After a very successful and lauded career performing and recording, Van
Cliburn gave it all up in 1978, initially aiming to rest for a year, but
which stretched out to ten.
“I'd always known that someday I would take some time off just for myself.
Even before Russia, I had said 'I know the first part of my life I would
have to work very hard, and I would want an intermission because I know the
last part of my life I would again have to work very hard'”
Only in 1987 did he return to the stage, at the invitation of the President
Reagan. The occassion was a visit by Mikhail Gorbachev to celebrate the thaw
in relations between the superpowers. Gorbachev invited Van Cliburn back to
Russia for a series of concerts which were a huge success.

A full circle of art bridging enemy nations. And to think it all started
with the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto - this is a recording to treasure.
2
发表于 2004-9-13 23:43 | 只看该作者 来自 LAN
哇  过了6级又怎样? 还是看不全懂。 [s:14]  [s:14]
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