Shura Cherkassky
The Piano's Last Czar- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2006
Summary
Shura Cherkassky's life story, like his piano playing, is provocative and captivating. At his death in 1995, Cherkassky was considered one of history's greatest pianists, as well as the last direct link to the Romantic piano tradition of Chopin, Liszt, and Anton Rubinstein.
Cherkassky's story merits telling not only for his musical achievements but also for the inspiration he provided by demonstrating tenacity, integrity, common sense, and uncommon courage. Cherkassky began his concert playing life in Ukrainian Odessa at a time of lethal civil strife. Escaping with his parents to America, the child prodigy came under the tutelage of famed pianist Josef Hofmann, whose unfailing personal and professional assistance continued for more than twenty years. Cherkassky overcame poverty, prejudice against his Jewish origins, and unhappiness from his ambivalence over his homosexuality to forge an impressive touring and recording career, an enormous musical repertoire, and an intriguing personality both on stage and off. From his sensational 1923 American debut tour to sold-out concerts on six continents, Cherkassky retained his brilliance throughout a seventy-five year professional career.
As a close friend for his last twenty years, author Elizabeth Carr traveled with Cherkassky on tour, attending recording and rehearsal sessions and watching him practice, plan programs, and cope with pianos, acoustics, conductors, and orchestras. Her role as confidante results in a keen understanding of Cherkassky both as a human being and a performer. Through observations, anecdotes, sixteen pages of photos, and personal correspondence reprinted in the book, this biography offers extensive research never before published, and an intimate look at the man and his music.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2006
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-8108-5410-9
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-4616-7113-8
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 301
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Table of Contents No access
- Preface No access
- Acknowledgments No access
- Chapter 1: Mother Russia No access Pages 1 - 10
- Chapter 2: Baltimore, 1923 No access Pages 11 - 24
- Chapter 3: Shura and the Palmist, the 1923-1924 Season No access Pages 25 - 31
- Chapter 4: Prodigies Compared: Shura and Jozio No access Pages 32 - 43
- Chapter 5: The Hofmann Years, 1925-1935 No access Pages 44 - 72
- Chapter 6: Around the World, 1935-1939 No access Pages 73 - 90
- Chapter 7: Shattered, 1940-1945 No access Pages 91 - 110
- Chapter 8: Oblivion to Triumph: The Postwar Years No access Pages 111 - 131
- Chapter 9: Shura and the Gramophone No access Pages 132 - 144
- Chapter 10: Onstage No access Pages 145 - 162
- Chapter 11: A Conductor's Nemesis No access Pages 163 - 175
- Chapter 12: The Last Romantic? No access Pages 176 - 197
- Chapter 13: The House of Steinway No access Pages 198 - 207
- Chapter 14: On Tour, USSR, 1987 No access Pages 208 - 222
- Chapter 15: Understanding Shura No access Pages 223 - 248
- Chapter 16: Prague, 1995 No access Pages 249 - 254
- Chapter 17: Final Tributes No access Pages 255 - 258
- Discography No access Pages 259 - 282
- Selected Bibliography No access Pages 283 - 290
- Index No access Pages 291 - 300
- About the Author No access Pages 301 - 301





