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NOVEMBER 2002
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Kalendar
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SVYATOSLAV RICHTER
Born in 1915, Zhitomir
Died in 1997, Moscow
Composer, Pianist, Interpreter
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"Music is a universally understood language through which
man directly expresses his feelings to others and awakens their
participation." (Jean-Jacques Rousseau)
Holidays: Allerheiligen, All Saints' Day
_________Volkstrauertag,
Day of National Mourning
_________Buß- und
Bettag, Day of Repentance and Prayer
_________Totensonntag,
All Souls' Day
PIANIST VIRTUOSO OF THE 20TH CENTURY
Svyatoslav Richter was already a legend before anyone had heard
him in the musical world of the West. Artists and art critics returned
from their travels through the Soviet Union and reported that they
had heard a wondrous pianist who without a doubt counted among the
greatest contemporary pianists.
In 1958 Van Cliburn was celebrated with ticker tape parades in
New York. This cool, matter-of-fact, brilliant representative of
a new generation of pianists won the first prize at an international
Tchaikovsky competition in Moscow. Concerning Richter, who was sitting
in the panel of judges, Van Cliburn, early in his fame commented,
"I was as if dumbfounded. This is the most powerful piano playing
I have ever heard."
Other Soviet virtuosi had been triumphantly received long before
in the concert halls of the centers of Western music. However, Richter
did not travel to the West. Finally, a West German record company
was allowed to produce recordings by Richter. He played Robert Schumann's
Toccata, which is considered one of the most difficult piano
pieces, at one sitting. When he was not satisfied with his performance
he played it six more times. Other pianists were glad when they
managed to do the work once.
After his first concert abroad in Finland in 1960, a music critic
in Helsinki wrote, "Strange that a Communist country could
produce the most arrogantly individualistic instrumentalist of this
era." That same year he performed for 10 weeks as a guest in
the USA. The New York Times wrote about Richter, "Came,
saw, and conquered." For Richter, however, there was a reunion
with his mother in New York after almost 20 years. Richter's family
was a family of musicians. His father, Theophil, came from a German
family in Volhynia. He was educated at the conservatory in Vienna.
Afterward he returned to his hometown of Zhitomir to become established
as a piano teacher and organist. There he married his student, Anna,
the daughter of a Russian estate owner.
The elder Richter was 42 years old when his son Svyatoslav was
born on 20 March 1915. One year later, at the invitation of an Evangelical
Lutheran parish, the family moved to Odessa where he worked as an
organist and also gave music lessons to children of diplomats. His
son attended the German school there and spoke German fluently.
As an eight-year old, Svyatoslav could only be taken away from
the piano in the evenings and put to bed after he had played the
piano passages all the way through to the end of the operas that
he was already practicing. By that age he had also begun to compose.
At age 16 Richter was serving his second term with the opera in
Odessa and by age 18 was already the resident chief conductor. There
were great tensions at home. His mother Anna, who was many years
younger than his father, did not make a secret of her relationship
with the professor of music, Sergei Kondratyev. In 1937 Svyatoslav
abruptly went to Moscow where he received lessons from Heinrich
Neuhaus at the Tchaikovsky conservatory. The piano professor called
the 22-year-old self-taught young man a genius. Later Richter said
he had had three teachers: his father, Richard Wagner, and Neuhaus.
In 1941, a few days before the invasion by Rumanian troops, his
father was arrested, tortured and executed. Anna Richter stayed
in Odessa under Rumanian occupation. When the occupational forces
began their retreat, she went with Kondratyev to Munich by way of
Bucharest.
One day Anna, who had had no contact with Svyatoslav for a long
time, heard a concert by her son on Moscow radio. She was able to
get records by Richter in East Berlin. A friend of the family smuggled
a casual letter to him in Moscow, with no return address, signed
"Your Anna who loves you," and made the first contact.
She went to New York to meet him at Carnegie Hall after a concert.
He gave eight concerts at that time. Richter completed four more
tours, but never returned to his apartment on the sixth floor of
a run-down, modern high-rise in Moscow. Together with his wife Nina
Dorliac, a soprano from France, he visited his mother in southern
Germany where she lived with Kondratyev. Anna suffered a heart attack
after this visit and died in 1963. Svyatoslav Richter spent his
last years in Paris. In 1997 he went to Moscow to study the archival
file of his father in Odessa. He died two days before keeping the
appointment and was buried in Moscow. He was a unique phenomenon
among his contemporary interpreters of music, held in esteem as
"first pianist of this century" by musicians as well as
critics.
German text by Susanne Baker
According to Georg Egert and Vladimir Smirnov
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