Scarecrow Press
Pages: 328
Trim: 6 x 9⅛
978-0-8108-5410-9 • Hardback • January 2006 • $96.00 • (£74.00)
978-1-4616-7113-8 • eBook • January 2006 • $91.00 • (£70.00)
Following a career as pianist, college teacher, concert presenter, and Director of the Cape Cod Conservatory in Massachusetts for 26 years, Elizabeth Carr is now an arts and education consultant.
Part 1 Preface
Part 2 Acknowledgments
Chapter 3 1. Mother Russia
Chapter 4 2. Baltimore, 1923
Chapter 5 3. Shura and the Palmist, the 1923-1924 Season
Chapter 6 4. Prodigies Compared: Shura and Jozio
Chapter 7 5. The Hofmann Years, 1925-1935
Chapter 8 6. Around the World, 1935-1939
Chapter 9 7. Shattered, 1940-1945
Chapter 10 8. Oblivion to Triumph: The Postwar Years
Chapter 11 9. Shura and the Gramophone
Chapter 12 10. Onstage
Chapter 13 11. A Conductor's Nemesis
Chapter 14 12. The Last Romantic?
Chapter 15 13. The House of Steinway
Chapter 16 14. On Tour, USSR, 1987
Chapter 17 15. Understanding Shura
Chapter 18 16. Prague, 1995
Chapter 19 17. Final Tributes
Part 20 Discography
Part 21 Selected Bibliography
Part 22 Index
Part 23 About the Author
Shura Cherkassky's extraordinary career was marked by individuality, tenacity and a lifelong passion for the piano. Elizabeth Carr's close association with the artist, coupled with her first-hand experience in the world of classical piano and her highly developed powers of observation, make her the ideal person to chronicle this unique pianist's fascinating life.
— John Guinn, Music Critic; Detroit Free Press
Shura Cherkassky was one of the most outrageously gifted pianists of the last century. His personality was as colorfully unique as his touch on the piano. Elizabeth Carr's comprehensive account of the man and his career compels the reader with its deeply affectionate understanding, respect, and brimful detail.
— Piers Lane, Australian Concert Pianist and Professor, Piano, Royal Academy of Music, London
Based on extensive research and interviews, this biography of the Russian pianist Shura Cherkassky (1909-1995) traces his life and career from his training with Josef Hofmann at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia and his American debut, to his long recording and performance careers, style, and influence of the Romanticism of Chopin, Liszt, and Rubinstein. Many facsimiles of letters and concert programs are interspersed, and a discography is included.
— Reference and Research Book News
Much has been written about composers and not enough about those artists who bring musical compositions alive with their performance. Elizabeth Carr has made a notable contribution with this carefully researched and engrossing life of Shura Cherkassky, a very great pianist.
— Henry Z. Steinway, Steinway Pianos