Sergei Rachmaninov – Biography
“The piano piece also established the general styles and mood of his music: rather dark, melancholy, and brooding”
RACHMANINOV "Piano Concerto n. 2" Mov. 1
(Wild/Horenstein)
Sergei Rachmaninov composed in much the same strongly dramatic, Romantic manner as his great Russian predecessor Tchaikovsky. Living on well into the 20th century, this made him a musical conservative. But as music lovers became increasingly bewildered by the music of such contemporaries as Bartók, Schoenberg, and Stravinsky, they turned with relief and pleasure to Rachmaninov's unashamed Romanticism.
Rachmaninov was born 1 April, 1873 in Semyonovo, Russia to impoverished
Russian aristocrats. He studied music at both the St Petersburg and Moscow
conservatories. As a young man, Rachmaninov quickly made a mark for himself as
a composer, conductor, and pianist in the musical circles of late 19th-century
Russia.
Fellow Russian composer Igor Stravinsky later described
Rachmaninov as a "six and half foot scowl". Indeed, Rachmaninov was
very tall, and in public, at any rate, he did maintain a somewhat severe and
inscrutable expression. Privately, however, he showed a completely different
side of his nature. Those who knew him well reported on his hearty laugh,
infectious sense of humour, and his fondness for good food and wine. The young
Rachmaninov also enjoyed the outdoors, especially the countryside around the
family house at Ivanovka, southeast of Moscow. A devoted husband and father, he
had a great zest for life: He was one of the first people in Russian to own and
drive a car. Later, after he had left Russia, he bought a motorboat, which he
drove at high speed on a lake close to his Swiss home (and then warned his
friends not to tell his wife!).
A superb pianist, he also wrote brilliantly for both the
piano and orchestra. Part of Rachmaninov's fame and brilliance as a pianist can
be attributed to his unusually large hands, with their very long fingers and
thumbs. He could stretch his hands and fingers further across the keyboard than
practically any other pianist. Much of his own piano music, known for its big
chords and rapid, glittering runs up and down the keyboard, echoes this unique
physical ability. All these qualities of styles, mood, and technical mastery
combined to make Rachmaninov one of the most popular among the great composers.
With his Prelude in C-sharp Minor, written at the age of 19,
Rachmaninov became famous almost overnight. The piano piece also established
the general styles and mood of his music: rather dark, melancholy, and
brooding. In 1897 Rachmaninov's First Symphony premiered disastrously and
Rachmaninov fell into a deep depression. Unable to compose for nearly three
years, the composer consulted Dr Dahl, a pioneer Moscow hypnotherapist. His
therapist succeeded in restoring Rachmaninov's self-confidence, and the result
was the most successful and much-loved Piano Concerto No.2 in 1900 (which he
dedicated to Dr. Dahl).
Rachmaninov conducted at Moscow's Bolshoi Opera from 1904 to
1906. The abortive Russian revolution of January 1905 broke out in the middle
of Rachmaninov's tenure as music director of the Bolshoi Opera. He had to
contend with continual political agitation from members of staff caught up in
the general revolutionary fervour, a strike by the dancers, a particularly high
level of opera house intrigue, and artistic demands even more outrageous than
usual. Not surprisingly, Rachmaninov felt the need to get away from it all. He
resigned from the Bolshoi and took his family abroad to Dresden in Germany. He
refused all performing engagements and concentrated on composition.
In 1909, he toured America, during which time he wrote the
Third Piano Concerto. He was well received and was invited to remain in the
States. However, he chose to return to Moscow for a few more years. He had
already written some of his best works when, at the age of 44, his career was
seriously disrupted by the Russian Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. The Revolution
forced him, his wife, and his two daughters to escape into exile. He was forced
to start his career over as a concert pianist, dividing his time between Europe
and America, where he composed and gave concert tours. Fortunately, his
brilliance brought him fresh fame and success internationally. If anything, the
long years in exile and the aching nostalgia he felt for his Russian homeland
added a depth and strength to his music that made it more effective. Rachmaninov
remained in exile for the rest of his life, eventually making his home in the
US.
Rachmaninov died at his home in Beverly Hills, California on
28 March, 1943.
Contributed by Gifford, Katya
Source: HumanitiesWeb.org
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