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Tchaikovsky competition ends in Cold War era scandal

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  • Tchaikovsky competition ends in Cold War era scandal

    Agence France Presse
    June 30, 2011 Thursday 7:56 PM GMT


    Tchaikovsky competition ends in Cold War era scandal

    MOSCOW, June 30 2011


    The classic music competition bearing the name of Tchaikovsky and made
    famous by the young Van Cliburn ended in scandal Thursday befitting
    its storied Cold War era past.

    The prestigious piano prize at the quadrennial event went to Russia's
    Daniil Trifonov, while the violin award was kept by the judges after
    both the local entry and an Israeli candidate were deemed to be only
    worthy of joint second.

    "We can all call the 14th International Tchaikovsky Competition a
    success," Russia Culture Minister Alexander Avdeyev told the award
    ceremony.

    "This was a grand celebration for all music lovers."

    The Moscow Conservatory grounds have been home to intrigue since the
    inaugural grand prize went to the young US pianist Van Cliburn in 1958
    -- a decision so stunning it had to be approved by Soviet leader
    Nikita Khrushchev.

    Soviet legend says that the imposing figure asked the quivering head
    of the Tchaikovsky jury if Cliburn was really the best man. A nod in
    the affirmative drew the gruff Khrushchev response: "Then give him the
    prize."

    The Soviet Union's perception of its cultural supremacy was restored
    at subsequent competitions and most of the prizes have since gone to
    local stars.

    Trifonov was born in the central Russian city of Nizhny Novgorod in
    1991 and studied at the renowned Moscow Gnessin Special Music School.
    His personal biography say he also composes piano and orchestra music.

    The cello award went to Armenia's Narek Hakhnazaryan while voice was
    won by two South Koreans -- Sun Young Seo for women and Jong Min Park
    for the men.

    But the awards ceremony was preceded by two weeks of competition
    during which some of the biggest names got axed by a jury that faced
    criticism not only from music critics but even the government's main
    newspaper.

    "In almost every category, all the bright personalities were
    eliminated by the third round," the Rossiyskaya Gazeta daily said.

    "By tradition, the judges' decisions were the most widely-debated part
    of the whole competition."

    Organisers have dismissed all criticism and boasted that the event was
    only gaining in significance because its performances could now be
    watched online for the first time.

    The final ceremony was expected to watched by up to a million people online.

    Some critics however think the grand event may hold more sentimental
    value for the nation than it does relevance for the international
    music community as a whole.

    "The Tchaikovsky competition is our everything. More than simply a
    contest between musicians, more than just one of the main brands of
    Soviet culture," Kommersant daily music critic Dmitry Renansky wrote
    on the Openspace.ru website.

    "In the Soviet Union, the Tchaikovsky competition was an oasis of
    liberalism and free thinking, even if it was controlled. Where else
    could people openly say that foreigners were better than Soviet
    citizens?"

    But he lamented that today's Tchaikovsky judges still clung to
    romantic traditions favoured in bygone eras while refusing to accept
    the more contemporary interpretations sparking interest in the West.

    "At the Tchaikovsky competition, what was always valued the most was
    the grand concert style -- pompous, large-scale and solid as
    reinforced concrete.

    "At the start of the 21st century, completely different aesthetics are
    running the show."


    From: Baghdasarian
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