Russian Music at Home and Abroad

Regular price €38.99
19th century russian music
20th century russian music
A01=Richard Taruskin
Author_Richard Taruskin
Category=AVL
contemporary russian music
eq_art-fashion-photography
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international response to russian music
music history
music of the former soviet union
musicology
pokifieff
postrevolutionary russian music
pussy riot
russian composers
russian cultural products
russian music
russian music history
russian musicology
russian national music
russias antihumanistic music
sacre du printemps
stavinsky
zdravitsa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780520288096
  • Weight: 816g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Sep 2016
  • Publisher: University of California Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This new collection views Russian music through the Greek triad of "the Good, the True, and the Beautiful" to investigate how the idea of "nation" embeds itself in the public discourse about music and other arts with results at times invigorating, at times corrupting. In our divided, post-Cold War, and now post-9/11 world, Russian music, formerly a quiet corner on the margins of musicology, has become a site of noisy contention. Richard Taruskin assesses the political and cultural stakes that attach to it in the era of Pussy Riot and renewed international tensions, before turning to individual cases from the nineteenth century to the present. Much of the volume is devoted to the resolutely cosmopolitan but inveterately Russian Igor Stravinsky, one of the major forces in the music of the twentieth century and subject of particular interest to composers and music theorists all over the world. Taruskin here revisits him for the first time since the 1990s, when everything changed for Russia and its cultural products. Other essays are devoted to the cultural and social policies of the Soviet Union and their effect on the music produced there as those policies swung away from Communist internationalism to traditional Russian nationalism; to the musicians of the Russian postrevolutionary diaspora; and to the tension between the compelling artistic quality of works such as Stravinsky's Sacre du Printemps or Prokofieff's Zdravitsa and the antihumanistic or totalitarian messages they convey. Russian Music at Home and Abroad addresses these concerns in a personal and critical way, characteristically demonstrating Taruskin's authority and ability to bring living history out of the shadows.
Richard Taruskin is the Class of 1955 Professor of Music emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, where he taught from 1987 to 2014, after twenty-six years at Columbia University (man and boy). He is the author of Stravinsky and the Russian Traditions, On Russian Music, Defining Russia Musically, and the six-volume Oxford History of Western Music.