by Marissa Silverman (Author)
Interlacing material from previously unknown Russian archives, original recordings, photographs, and essays, Gregory Haimovsky: A Pianist's Odyssey to Freedom is the story of an extraordinary Russian concert pianist who, fighting the cultural prohibitions of the USSR, eventually succeeded in performing and recording major works by the prominent French composer Olivier Messiaen. At the lowest point of his life, expelled from Moscow and exiled to a small provincial city, Haimovsky discovered Messiaen's oeuvre uncatalogued and hidden in the library of the Union of Soviet Composers. Haimovsky's intense studies and Soviet premieres of these banned compositions healed and liberated his mind, spirit, and artistic imagination. Messiaen's music also deepened and fueled Haimovsky's fierce personal and musical opposition to Soviet political and cultural doctrines. Told partly in Haimovsky's own words and supplemented by interviews with several performers who worked with him between 1960 and 1972 as well as stories from his correspondence with major Russian artists, writers, and musicians of the time, Marissa Silverman's vivid narrative sheds new light on relationships between twentieth-century Russian music, Soviet politics, and the culture wars that raged during and after Stalin's barbaric rule. Marissa Silverman is Associate Professor of Music at the John J. Cali School of Music, Montclair State University.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 280
Publisher: University of Rochester Press
Published: 25 Jun 2018
ISBN 10: 1580469310
ISBN 13: 9781580469319
Gregory Haimovsky: A Pianist's Odyssey to Freedom is a significant study of Haimovsky's life and career in the Soviet Union, with an emphasis on the ways in which Olivier Messaien's music transformed the pianist's life during difficult times. Highly readable, Marissa Silverman's book addresses issues of artistic citizenship while providing a rare and compelling look into Haimovsky's childhood and early years. Silverman shows the reader what life was like for a performing musician outside the urban centers of Moscow and St. Petersburg. Haimovsky, an accomplished pianist, provides invaluable insights about his years in the Soviet Union and sheds a fresh light on the lack of artistic freedom in the pre-and-post-Stalin era.
--Anne Swartz, Baruch College and the Graduate Center, CUNY