home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- @
- For more than
- half a century
- Stravinsky was
- the most talked
- about and the
- most influental
- composer of his
- day. At the start
- of his long life he
- had met Peter
- Tchaikovsky, and
- at the end of his
- life he rivalled
- the audacious
- musical explorers
- of the Sixties
- #
- Stravinsky was
- part of a huge
- explosion of
- artistic talent - in
- painting, music,
- literature, poetry
- and theatre -
- which overtook
- Russia in the
- years before the
- Revolution of
- 1917. Among his
- friends and
- contemporaries
- were Ernest
- Ansermet (left),
- Sergei Diaghilev
- (on Stravinsky's
- right) and Sergei
- Prokofiev (right)
- #
- The collaboration
- between
- Stravinsky and
- Diaghilev was one
- of the most
- fruitful and
- innovative
- artistic
- associations of
- the century.
- Almost all that is
- most worthwhile
- in modern dance
- owes something
- to the revolution
- wrought in music
- and theatre-craft
- by Stravinsky
- and Diaghilev
- #
- The fate of
- Shostakovich
- demonstrates
- what Stravinsky
- might have faced
- had he gone back
- to Russia.
- Shostakovich was
- badgered all his
- life by political
- commissars. An
- avant-garde
- experimenter like
- Stravinsky would
- never have been
- allowed to work,
- and would
- probably never
- have survived
- the Stalinist
- purges
- #
- Though they met
- only once (and
- Stravinsky forgot
- the occasion), the
- musical links
- between
- Stravinsky and
- Arnold
- Schoenberg are
- strong.
- Stravinsky
- attempted works
- in the twelve-
- tone technique
- pioneered by
- Schoenberg, but
- only after the
- latter's death
- #
- By the time of his 85th birthday, which was marked by worldwide
- celebrations, Stravinsky was the grand old man of classical music.
- But he did not see it that way: in 1960, at the age of 78, he wrote
- "all my life I have thought of myself as the youngest one."
-