標  題:拉赫曼尼諾夫熱(節錄至紐約時報網站)  
發  表 人:Ah Cheng(chen_cheng_yi) 
發表時間:2001/09/06 17:56:12 
NYT SEP 02, 2001 
Suddenly Seeing More in Rachmaninoff 
By JAMES R. OESTREICH 
THE "reception historians" will have their hands full with music of 
the 20th century. Reception studies, relatively new as an independent 
discipline, examine how a specific body of works was greeted when new 
and how it has fared since in the awareness of the public and the 
estimation of professionals. The conclusions reached bear not only on 
changing tastes and intrepretations but also on the social forces at 
work. 
These studies have so far found their richest terrain in 19th-century 
Romanticism, trying to glean, for example, the various meanings that 
Beethoven held for his time, as revolutionary and hero, and holds for 
posterity, as icon and canon fodder. But Beethoven's case may prove 
simple compared with those of composers who typified the deep rifts in 
the musical consciousness of the last century: Schoenberg, say, a 
longtime darling of professionals, or Sibelius, a periodic favorite of 
audiences. 
Or Rachmaninoff, a composer consistently lionized by the public for 
just a handful of works and dismissed by advanced thinkers as a 
throwback. A mere two decades ago, upholding Rachmaninoff as worthy 
not only of popularity but also of respect seemed a lonely business. 
Certainly, few then would have bet much on his chances of thriving in 
a new century one presumably even more relentlessly forward-looking 
than the last, at least in professional circles. 
Yet here it is: Rachmaninoff is the toast of the musical season soon 
to ring out in New York. Beginning on Sept. 13, Lincoln Center 
presents "Rachmaninoff Revisited," a two-month immersion in concerts, 
discussions and films, in its Great Performers series. Vladimir 
Ashkenazy conducts the Philharmonia Orchestra of London in the main 
event: three concerts, including the Third Piano Concerto, with 
Mikhail Pletnev as soloist, and what is said to be the American 
premiere of the original manuscript version of the Fourth Concerto, 
with Aleksandr Ghindin. (Rachmaninoff trimmed later versions.) 
And next month Carnegie Hall begins its season-long "Focus on: 
Rachmaninoff," with works scattered among programs by the pianists 
Martha Argerich, Nelson Freire and Garrick Ohlsson, the baritone 
Dmitri Hvorostovsky, Valery Gergiev and the Kirov Orchestra and Yuri 
Temirkanov and the St. Petersburg Philharmonic. It's just as well that 
the opera houses are not chiming in, to plunge us into new bouts of 
millennial navel-gazing.
由 Patrick 於 08/22/2002  08:51:41 修改
			
		
