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Available for 28 days
Donald Macleod explores Rachmaninov’s life in exile from Russia and attachment to the country estate he left behind: Ivanovka. Sergei Rachmaninov became one of the finest pianists of his generation, touring the world in the 1920s and 30s as a musical megastar. Composing had been his real passion since childhood, and towards the end of his time in Russia before the Revolution, it was farming. Though St Petersburg and then Moscow was his base for much of his early life, it was Ivanovka – a country estate deep in the Russian countryside - that formed him. The house and the land surrounding it were a major source of his creative inspiration until his last visit in 1917. Donald Macleod explores how important Ivanovka was to Rachmaninov, and how he carried the precious memory of it with him when he left it behind for a life of exile. Rachmaninov finds himself having to take on the running of the Ivanovka estate, and buys a car to zip around the surrounding countryside when it all gets a bit much. He's on the verge of buying a tractor too when the First World War breaks out - but from 1914 onwards his time at Ivanovka is running out. 15 Songs Op 26 No 10 - Before my window Ekaterina Siurina, soprano Iain Burnside, piano Symphony No 2 (Mvt 2) Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Vladimir Ashkenazy, conductor Songs Op 34 Nos 12 and 13 Asmik Grigorian, soprano Lukas Geniušas, piano Piano Concerto No 3 (Mvt 1) Yuja Wang, piano Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela Gustavo Dudamel, conductor All-Night Vigil (Excerpt: 4, 5 and 6) Latvian Radio Choir Sigvards Kļava, conductor
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