Description
About the Author
Anne Swartz is professor of music at Baruch College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
Reviews
Swartz collected a lot of information for this book. She begins with the influence of early music education, notably piano study under the patronage of the state, and proceeds through the development of Russian piano factories and the influence of imported instruments. She looks at how the piano slowly developed and became a major economic influence in the country with the assistance of serf workers and large, family-owned factories. There are many interesting bits of information throughout, including side notes about women's musical instruction and women's patronage; the complex system of tariffs and trade restrictions and protections on the piano building industry; and piano builders and makers long since forgotten. . . .[T]he bibliography, which points to significant research and digging to create this narrative, will be important for researcher in this area and should be of special value. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty, professionals. * CHOICE *
[T]his books paints a vivid picture of the musical world of nineteenth-century Russia and shows how profoundly the domestic-built piano influenced that world. English-speakers can be grateful that Swartz, fluent in Russian, has brought us closer to understanding a world hitherto unknown to Westerners. I hope this book will be a springboard for further research on many fronts. * American Musical Instrument Society *
The book by Anna Schwartz . . . provides all necessary information about the place, role and development of the piano culture in nineteenth-century Russia. * Pianist *
Anne Swartz's Piano Makers in Russia in the Nineteenth Century comprehensively fills a massive gap in the history of the piano. Her extensive research has opened a hitherto closed door and revealed the makers, the performers, the critical relationship of the piano industry and music education with the Russian throne, and its role across the socio-economic levels of the population, as well as its relationship to the rest of Europe. This book is a necessary component in the library of any serious scholar of the piano. -- Anne Beetem Acker, independent historic keyboard specialist; area and contributing editor to the Grove Dictionary of Musical Instruments
"As with so many features of nineteenth-century cultural life, Russia first borrowed, then assimilated, and finally re-exported the piano to Western Europe, and in Piano Makers in Russia in the Nineteenth Century, Anne Swartz deftly traces the story of how domestic uprights and concert grands became the chosen instruments of the Russian state. Whether in girls' schools and later conservatories in Moscow and St. Petersburg, in provincial drawing rooms as far away as Siberia and Central Asia, or in concert halls throughout the empire, the piano did much to foster modern Russia's sense of itself as an artistic nation. At the same time, Swartz never underestimates the role played by a vast serf and worker community in supporting cultural production in Imperial Russia. Swartz's study will be obligatory reading for anybody interested not just in Russian music and society but also in how innovative methods of economic analysis can shed new light on the arts in the nineteenth century." -- Philip Ross Bullock, university lecturer, and fellow and tutor in Russian, Wadham College, University of Oxford
The history of the piano has long centered on the familiar network of Vienna, Paris, London, and the plethora of German makers. Russia has been a footnote. In this remarkably comprehensive and riveting narrative, Swartz uses the lens of the piano to illuminate countless fresh facets of Russian culture, going far beyond the author's overly modest title. Among scores of delectable revelations, who knew the favored piano of both Anton Rubinstein and Tchaikovsky was a Becker? -- Robert Winter, Distinguished Professor of Music, Presidential Chair in Music and Interactive Arts, UCLA
"With monumental performers such as Shostakovich, Yudina, Rachmaninoff, Horowitz, Prokofiev, Scriabin, and Richter it is clear that Russia has served as a cradle for extraordinary pianists. Anne Swartz's brilliant book sheds new light on how it got that way. Focusing on issues of technology, gender, material culture, and industry, and ranging from Moscow to the Far East, Swartz's important work illustrates the process through which the piano came to occupy center stage in the Russian imagination." -- Michael Beckerman, Carroll and Milton Petrie Professor of Music, New York University
Book Information
ISBN 9781611461589
Author Anne Swartz
Format Hardback
Page Count 214
Imprint Lehigh University Press
Publisher Lehigh University Press
Weight(grams) 454g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 161mm * 21mm