ABSTRACT

Nicholas Medtner (1880-1951) has always been a neglected figure in the history of Russian music, and yet his friend Rachmaninoff considered him the greatest of contemporary composers. He wrote three fine piano concertos, more than one hundred solo piano compositions, including a cycle of fourteen sonatas fully worthy to be set alongside those of Scriabin and Prokofiev, and many beautiful songs. He was also a great pianist. Leaving Russia after the Bolshevik Revolution, Medtner lived for a time in Germany and France before finally settling in London, where he passed the final sixteen years of his life. The present work is the first to tell the full story of his eventful life and to consider in turn each of his compositions. The author has drawn on Medtner‘s own correspondence and writings and collected the reminiscences of those who knew him personally to build a comprehensive picture of a great, if still largely unrecognised, musician.

chapter 1|12 pages

1880–1900 Childhood and conservatoire

chapter 2|14 pages

1900–1903 Start of a career

chapter 3|18 pages

1903–1906 Personal turmoil

chapter 4|21 pages

1906–1909 German sojourn

chapter 5|24 pages

1909–1911 Conservatoire professor

chapter 6|17 pages

1911–1914 Friends and critics

chapter 7|20 pages

1914–1917 War

chapter 8|19 pages

1917–1921 Revolution

chapter 9|26 pages

1921–1925 A life abroad

chapter 10|16 pages

1925–1927 Return to Russia

chapter 11|16 pages

1927–1930 Britain and America

chapter 12|16 pages

1930–1935 The Muse and the Fashion

chapter 13|10 pages

1935–1939 Move to England

chapter 14|14 pages

1939–1945 Second World War

chapter 15|16 pages

1945–1951 Indian fairy tale