Classics for the Masses : Shaping Soviet Musical Identity under Lenin and Stalin
Classics for the Masses : Shaping Soviet Musical Identity under Lenin and Stalin
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Author(s): Fairclough, Pauline
ISBN No.: 9780300217193
Pages: 296
Year: 201605
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 62.10
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"These books give fuller, finer-grained and better-shaded accounts of Soviet policy ups and downs and their impact on musicians than any previous study."--Richard Taruskin, Times Literary Supplement "Indeed, Fairclough is the first to assemble a broad picture of music making in Soviet Russia's elite institutions and the ways in which it differed from other Soviet arts. Even though she assumes substantial fluency in Soviet musical culture and pan-European musical trends, Classics for the Masses is essential reading for any scholar of Stalinist culture."--Kevin M. Bartig, Slavic Review "Noteworthy not only for opening another door into the Soviet music world but also for its subtle, informed analysis."-- Choice "Compelling . a must-read."--Simon Mikkonen, European History Quarterly "A masterpiece"--Sabrina P.


Mamet, Europe-Asia Studies "Specialist scholars will come away with a clear sense of the whimsical changes in approved repertoire between 1917 and 1953 as well as the techniques of re-branding composers to accommodate those policy shifts."--Judith Kuhn, Notes Quarterly Journal "Thoughtful and thorough, . deserve[s] a wide audience. It will take time for [its] implications to filter into scholarship, teaching, and performing, but filter they necessarily will."--Peter Schmelz, Twentieth-Century Music "In this excellent study, Pauline Fairclough analyzes a topic of fundamental importance to our understanding of Soviet musical life: the relationship between music policy, the programming practices of Soviet performing ensembles, and critical reception. It is a fascinating read. Classics for the Masses is highly recommended to those interested in Soviet music, Soviet cultural life, and the everyday practices that shaped the opportunities and experiences of the Soviet urban population during the first half of the Soviet period."--Kiril Tomoff, Russian Review Won the 2017 Choice Award for Outstanding Academic Title Has just been awarded the Women's Forum Book Prize of the British Association of Slavonic and East European Studies (BASEES).



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