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Tchaikovsky Is Canceled
Reason ^ | 3.9.2022 | Billy Binion

Posted on 03/10/2022 5:57:06 PM PST by nickcarraway

The Cardiff Philharmonic Orchestra scrubbed the famed composer from an upcoming program, calling his music "inappropriate at this time."

In light of Russia's invasion into Ukraine, many westerners are understandably doing their level best to distance themselves from President Vladimir Putin and those loyal to him. But some of those gestures look increasingly like performance art.

The latest utterly pointless sanction is the Cardiff Philharmonic Orchestra's announcement that it would remove music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, the Russian composer, from its all-Tchaikovsky concert, calling it "inappropriate at this time." In the last week, conductor Valery Gergiev and superstar soprano Anna Netrebko have also lost engagements and artistic affiliations due to their cozy ties to the Russian president.

Nationality and prodigious talent aside, Tchaikovsky shares little else with Gergiev and Netrebko. The latter two are alive and beneficiaries of an autocrat's favoritism; Tchaikovsky died over a century ago.

The composer is an inappropriate scapegoat for another reason: He was one of the first and only Russian composers to eschew Russian nationalism and endear his music to the West, becoming what many historians would consider one of the few bridges between Russian and European artistry.

He also loved Ukraine.

There was plenty of political and public pressure to take the opposite route. Tchaikovsky's primary contemporaries were a group of Russian composers nicknamed "The Five"—Mily Balakirev, César Cui, Modest Mussorgsky, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, and Alexander Borodin—who dedicated their musical lives to constructing a distinctly Russian-nationalist style. Tchaikovsky was the odd composer out. Having been educated at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory, where Western European influences were heavy, he inserted themes from Russian folk tunes but imbued his music with the operatic and balletic lyricism more characteristic to the works of his neighbors.

Perhaps more importantly, his disposition for an international musical style informed the ways in which he shared it with the world. In an era when many Russian composers siloed themselves off from the globe, Tchaikovsky sought to be a part of it; during a three-month tour in 1888, he became the first Russian composer to personally unveil his music to Western Europe. It was on that trip that he met Brahms, the German composer, whose music he disliked and whose popularity he chalked up to a nationalistic sort of fan-girling. Their exchange is an instructive window into how Tchaikovsky wanted his music to be received. It couldn't stand on identity. It just needed to be good.

That left him on the outskirts—an allegory for his life, in some sense, which was marred with depressive episodes as well as inner torment over his homosexuality (the latter of which, I'll add, would not make him very popular in Putin's Russia). At odds with some of the nationalist cultural elite, he gave the premiere of his opera Eugene Onegin to a group of students as opposed to a grand Russian theater. And when Rimsky-Korsakov of "the Five" had an about-face and took a job at the Western-influenced Saint Petersburg Conservatory—seen in some corners as a betrayal of sorts—it was Tchaikovsky who supported him.

Why Can't the CDC Tell the Truth About Smoking and Vaping by Teenagers? Those who agree with the Cardiff Philharmonic's decision to deprogram Tchaikovsky may note that one of the selections on the program was his 1812 Overture, a 15-minute piece celebrating the defeat of Napolean Bonaparte's attempted Russian invasion. The piece is inappropriate given the circumstances, the thinking goes. Such comparisons fall a bit flat when looking at the historical context: The piece does not commemorate Russia as the aggressor but rather as a country successfully fending off a foreign invader; as such, it has been embraced by the West and is familiar to many American audiences during 4th of July celebrations. There are lessons to be learned there.

Even still, the objection hardly necessitates scrubbing Tchaikovsky in his entirety solely because of where he was born. That's especially true in light of what was supposed to be the program's main course: his Symphony No. 2, which, in a sort of cosmic irony, is built around…three Ukrainian folk songs.

For those familiar with Tchaikovsky, that likely won't come as a shock. The composer spent several months a year in Ukraine and had close family ties to the region; his paternal grandfather was born there. "I found the peace of mind here that I had unsuccessfully sought in Moscow and Petersburg," he once wrote, ever the outsider.

Even in death, it appears Tchaikovsky will continue to play that part, the anti-nationalist again ostracized—this time by the people who purport to agree with the core of what he stood for. In a time where some are unable to differentiate between supporting Putin and being Russian, when theaters and embassies are vandalized and defaced solely because of their flag, it's not necessarily a surprise. But that doesn't make it less of a shame.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 1moretime; cancellingrussia; music; rachmaninov; ridiculous; russia; tchaikovsky; ukraine
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Remember, Tchaikovsky isn't cancelled because he's Russia, it because of HOMOPHOBIA.
1 posted on 03/10/2022 5:57:06 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Please not Rachmaninov.


2 posted on 03/10/2022 5:58:34 PM PST by crusty old prospector
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To: nickcarraway

This is as stupid as “Freedom Fries”...and the WWI fad of renaming sauerkraut “liberty cabbage”.


3 posted on 03/10/2022 5:58:53 PM PST by lightman (I am a binary Trinitarian. Deal with it!)
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To: nickcarraway

Tell Tchaikovsky the news!


4 posted on 03/10/2022 5:59:03 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: nickcarraway

Was gonna say, “but dude, he was gay!!”


5 posted on 03/10/2022 5:59:05 PM PST by mylife (It looks just like a telefunken U47... (===)
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To: nickcarraway

*in a hopeful tone*

So, that’s the guy who wrote “dance of the sugar plum fairy,” right....?


6 posted on 03/10/2022 6:01:40 PM PST by Scarlett156 (If you want my place at the table, you will have to eat what is on my plate. )
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To: crusty old prospector

I will keep playing Rach as long as I live. Period


7 posted on 03/10/2022 6:01:52 PM PST by Shady (The #JihadJunta: "We are now a nation of Men, Not of Laws. You are not as equal as we are...")
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To: nickcarraway
Who deserves the credit?
Who deserves the blame?
Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky is his name
8 posted on 03/10/2022 6:02:47 PM PST by P.O.E.
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To: nickcarraway

Somebody roll over and tell Beethoven the news.


9 posted on 03/10/2022 6:03:49 PM PST by ClearCase_guy (Ukraine is not a good country and does not deserve active US support.)
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To: dfwgator

That’s what I said on the other thread.


10 posted on 03/10/2022 6:03:59 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8s0ip_dmqQo


11 posted on 03/10/2022 6:04:06 PM PST by mylife (It looks just like a telefunken U47... (===)
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To: nickcarraway
Cancel this!

(Tchaikovsky) Piano Concerto #1--Freddy Martin & His Orchestra (1941)

#1 on some charts the day Pearl Harbor was bombed.

12 posted on 03/10/2022 6:06:07 PM PST by Fiji Hill
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To: crusty old prospector
No banning Prokofiev, Shostakovich, Mussorgsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, et al.

And no banning Dostoevsky, Gogol, Turgenev, or Bulgakov.

13 posted on 03/10/2022 6:07:20 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Yep. Stupid, eh?


14 posted on 03/10/2022 6:07:56 PM PST by Delta 21 (It started as a virus, and mutated into an IQ test.)
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To: ClearCase_guy; nickcarraway
Stokowski.
15 posted on 03/10/2022 6:08:14 PM PST by golux
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To: nickcarraway

He was also anti-Napoleon, and probably would have been against the current-day Napoleon.


16 posted on 03/10/2022 6:08:43 PM PST by oblomov
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To: nickcarraway

“I’ll kill you!”

You can turn anyone into a murderer. Just stimulate them to become angry enough, to hate enough.
Tell the perfect story about who you want them to target and you’ll be able to get them to say,
“I’ll kill them!”


17 posted on 03/10/2022 6:11:10 PM PST by conservativeimage (Spark up a fire. Light up this place. Burn out this darkness and tear down the fear.)
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To: nickcarraway

Cancel Boris and Natasha, darlinks


18 posted on 03/10/2022 6:11:30 PM PST by llevrok (Pronouns: Me/myself/& I)
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To: nickcarraway


Couldn't we just ban ONE composer,

Sergei Ligeti,

like, for all time,

and keep everyone else?

u-https-ih1-redbubble-net-image-516509599-8728-bg-f8f8f8-flat-750x-075-f-pad-750x1000-f8f8f8-u4

I'm sorry, Golux.

I'm afraid I can't do that.



19 posted on 03/10/2022 6:14:53 PM PST by golux
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To: lightman

Thinking the same thing.
The only useful Russian item I can think of to cancel is “Russian Roulette “.


20 posted on 03/10/2022 6:16:20 PM PST by griswold3 (When chaos serves the State, the State will encourage chaos)
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