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Stravinsky: v. 2: The Second Exile, France and America, 1934-1971
 
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Stravinsky: v. 2: The Second Exile, France and America, 1934-1971 (Hardcover)

by Stephen Walsh (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Stravinsky: v. 2: The Second Exile, France and America, 1934-1971 + Stravinsky (Volume 1): A Creative Spring - Russia and France 1882-1934 (Pimlico): v. 1 + An Autobiography (1903-1934)
Price For All Three: £44.85

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 736 pages
  • Publisher: Jonathan Cape Ltd (6 Jul 2006)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0224060783
  • ISBN-13: 978-0224060783
  • Product Dimensions: 23.8 x 15.6 x 4.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 589,517 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category:

    #32 in  Books > Music, Stage & Screen > Music > Composers & Musicians > Classical Music > Stravinsky

Product Description

Sunday Times - 16th July

"Stephen Walsh’s scrupulousness in contextualising and considering quotes, hearsays and other evidence reveals a more complete, complex picture."


Literary Review - July

'this work is a stunning achievement.'

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Stravinsky: v. 2: The Second Exile, France and America, 1934-1971
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4.0 out of 5 stars Zig-zag: "A cuckoo among composers", 9 Aug 2009
By Nicholas Casley (Plymouth, Devon, UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Zig-zag: "A cuckoo among composers".

The cuckoo reference is that of Peter Heyworth, writing in the Observer in 1956; the zig-zag is Walsh's own description of Stravinsky's constant compositional turning in his endeavour to be ever fresh: Writing of the 1960s, Walsh says, "As ever, others wanted his old music, [but] he was interested in the new". And yet, remarkable as it may now seem, by 1935 one critic could conclude that "the great revolutionary had become an establishment icon."

Walsh begins his second and final volume of Stravinsky's life with an entr-acte, revisiting concisely the story so far of "a house divided". He then dives back in to the life, during its predominantly French phase in the 1930s. Of course, this was a politically sensitive time for all Europeans. No one in the public eye could seemingly not take sides. So what do we make of Stravinsky conducting the Berlin Philharmonic in 1938? Walsh is equivocal: "The question of whether it was or was not ethical to appear to endorse a regime that was openly violating and humiliating Jews like his own daughter's husband seems not have occupied him to any noticeable extent. It was more important that the thousand-mark fee would help pay for that daughter's urgently needed medical treatment."

And so, from France to America, and the composition of his Symphony in Three Movements - Walsh's discussion of this work has forever changed my view of this work: apparently, the clucking of chickens is a leading influence - and then the great (and not so great) revisions that the composer undertook for financial gain. Walsh calls this a myth, but "like all the best myths, a half-truth at the very most."

Walsh covers Stravinsky's life in great detail and with style. To give a flavour of the magnitude of this biography, here are some random notes made by me when reading this second volume. They include Walsh's noting of the parallels with WH Auden in his addiction to clarity and precision; Stravinsky's failure to appreciate the music of Mahler (or `malheur', as he called him); and the composer's disparaging remarks about Shostakovich's eleventh symphony. But whose music is played more today in the concert halls of the world?

The shadow cast by Robert Craft still means that Walsh has to be careful to some degree. Of Craft's Parisian meeting with Souvtchinsky in the 1950s Walsh writes, "Craft's account of the meeting is one of the best half-dozen pages in his published diary." All well and good, but then at the end of the following paragraph, Walsh laments that "In no sense is it a reliable account." And yet, and yet, Walsh knows the value of Craft: "The one thing Craft never seems to have done in Stravinsky's name is write his music, and yet the mere existence of the works of the 1950s and 60s is beyond question his greatest justification." Whilst Walsh may often be critical of Craft's role, he also gives him his due and empathises with the often difficult position in which he was placed.

And so we come to the composer's restless schedule in the last years of his life, an amazingly hectic schedule of travelling, performing, and composing. By never resting on his laurels, his life seems to have been lengthened. The book's final chapter acts like an appendix, as the main players of his life - his second wife, the children of his first, and Craft - battle over his legacy.

This book is a must-read for any serious student of Stravinsky or for anyone who adores his works. I am neither, and yet I enjoyed the book a great deal and feel inspired to savour some of the lesser-known later works of the composer. For Walsh ends his work with a beautiful yet brutally honest and crisp description of the late Stravinsky: "... the unpleasantness is something sharp and invigorating, it grows on you as the taste of beer grows on an adolescent boy ... this music that supposedly expresses nothing, and always seemed studiously, impenetrably deaf to the world around it, has turned out to be the most exact echo and the best response to those terrifying years that brought it into being." But is this of the man as well as his music?

Again, there are some interesting plates provided. A list of Stravinsky's works, endnotes, a bibliography and index bring up the rear.
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