Tchaikovsky's Empire, Morrison
Tchaikovsky's Empire, Morrison
Tchaikovsky is famous for all the wrong reasons. Portrayed as a hopeless romantic, a suffering melancholic or a morbid obsessive, the Tchaikovsky we think we know is a shadow of the fascinating reality. It is all too easy to forget that he composed an empire’s worth of music and navigated the imperial Russian court to great advantage.
In this iconoclastic biography, celebrated author Simon Morrison re-creates Tchaikovsky’s complex world. His life and art were framed by Russian national ambition, and his work was the emanation of an imperial subject: kaleidoscopic, capacious, cosmopolitan, decentred.
Morrison reexamines the relationship between Tchaikovsky’s music, personal life and politics; his support of Tsars Alexander II and III, and his engagement with the cultures of the imperial margins, in Ukraine, Poland and the Caucasus. Tchaikovsky’s Empire unsettles everything we thought we knew — and gives us a vivid new appreciation of Russia’s most popular composer.
Simon Morrison is professor of music and Slavic languages and literature at Princeton University. He has written numerous celebrated books on subjects ranging from Prokofiev and Russian opera to Roxy Music and Stevie Nicks.
Author: Simon Morrison
Format: Hardcover, 384 pages
Publisher: Yale University Press (2024)
ISBN: 9780300192100