Virtuosi Abroad: Soviet Music and Imperial Competition during the Early Cold War, 1945-1958

Virtuosi Abroad: Soviet Music and Imperial Competition during the Early Cold War, 1945-1958

by Kiril Tomoff
Virtuosi Abroad: Soviet Music and Imperial Competition during the Early Cold War, 1945-1958

Virtuosi Abroad: Soviet Music and Imperial Competition during the Early Cold War, 1945-1958

by Kiril Tomoff

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Overview

In the 1940s and 1950s, Soviet musicians and ensembles were acclaimed across the globe. They toured the world, wowing critics and audiences, projecting an image of the USSR as a sophisticated promoter of cultural and artistic excellence. In Virtuosi Abroad, Kiril Tomoff focuses on music and the Soviet Union's star musicians to explore the dynamics of the cultural Cold War. He views the competition in the cultural sphere as part of the ongoing U.S. and Soviet efforts to integrate the rest of the world into their respective imperial projects.

Tomoff argues that the spectacular Soviet successes in the system of international music competitions, taken together with the rapturous receptions accorded touring musicians, helped to persuade the Soviet leadership of the superiority of their system. This, combined with the historical triumphalism central to the Marxist-Leninist worldview, led to confidence that the USSR would be the inevitable winner in the global competition with the United States. Successes masked the fact that the very conditions that made them possible depended on a quiet process by which the USSR began to participate in an international legal and economic system dominated by the United States. Once the Soviet leadership transposed its talk of system superiority to the economic sphere, focusing in particular on consumer goods and popular culture, it had entered a competition that it could not win.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501701818
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 09/22/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 916 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Kiril Tomoff is Professor of History at the University of California, Riverside. He is the author of Creative Union: The Professional Organization of Soviet Composers, 1939–1953, also from Cornell.

Table of Contents

Introduction1. Shostakovich and The Iron Curtain: Intellectual Property and Transimperial Integration2. Dueling Pianos: Imperial and National Dynamics in Postwar Music Competitions3. From a Musical Holiday to the Tchaikovsky Competition: Moscow as a Global Center of Musical Culture4. Oistrakh on Tour, Richter at Home: Display, Control, and the Style of Global Empire5. Oistrakh and the Impresario: Soviet Concert Tours and Systemic IntegrationEpilogueNotes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

David Engerman

The impressive Virtuosi Abroad is based on wide research in Soviet-era archives, as well as on deep knowledge of the milieu of Soviet classical music. Kiril Tomoff's argument is original and offers insights widely applicable to a range of scholarship on the causes and consequences of cultural competition during the Cold War, the internal dynamics of Soviet classical music, and even the rise and fall of the USSR.

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