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Arthur Rubinstein

Arthur Rubinstein (Polish: Artur Rubinstein; 28 January 1887 – 20 December 1982) was a Polish-American pianist.[1] He is widely regarded as one of the greatest pianists of all time.[2][3][4] He received international acclaim for his performances of the music written by a variety of composers and many regard him as one of the greatest Chopin interpreters of his time.[5][6] He played in public for eight decades.[7]

Arthur Rubinstein in 1937, by Carl Van Vechten

Early life

 
Childhood home of Artur Rubinstein at Piotrkowska Street, Łódź, Poland

Artur Rubinstein was born in Łódź, Congress Poland (part of the Russian Empire for the entire time Rubinstein resided there) on 28 January 1887, to a Jewish family. He was the youngest of seven children of Felicja Blima Fajga (née Heiman) and Izaak Rubinstein. His father owned a small textile factory.[8][9]

Rubinstein's birth name was to be Leo, but his eight-year-old brother claimed that "His name must be Artur. Since Artur X (a neighbour's son) plays the violin so nicely, the baby may also become a great musician!"[10] Thus, he was called Artur, although in English-speaking countries, he preferred to be known as Arthur Rubinstein. His United States impresario Sol Hurok, however, insisted he be billed as Artur, and records were released in the West under both versions of his name.[11]

At age two, Rubinstein demonstrated absolute pitch and a fascination with the piano, watching his elder sister's piano lessons. By the age of four, he was recognised as a child prodigy. His father had a predilection for the violin and offered Rubinstein a violin; but Rubinstein rejected it because he thought his instinct was for harmony and polyphony. The Hungarian violinist Joseph Joachim, on hearing the four-year-old child play the piano, was greatly impressed, telling Arthur's family, "This boy may become a very great musician—he certainly has the talent for it... When the time comes for serious study, bring him to me, and I shall be glad to supervise his artistic education." On 14 December 1894, seven-year-old Arthur Rubinstein had his debut with pieces by Mozart, Schubert and Mendelssohn.[10][12]

When he became ten years of age, Rubinstein moved to Berlin to continue his studies, and gave his first performance with the Berlin Philharmonic in 1900, at the age of 13.[5] Joseph Joachim recommended Karl Heinrich Barth as the boy's piano teacher. As a student of Barth, Rubinstein inherited a renowned pedagogical lineage: Barth was himself a pupil of Liszt, who had been taught by Czerny, who had in turn been a pupil of Beethoven.[5]

Music and career

In 1904, Rubinstein moved to Paris to launch his career in earnest, where he met the composers Maurice Ravel and Paul Dukas and the violinist Jacques Thibaud. He also played Camille Saint-Saëns' Piano Concerto No. 2 in the presence of the composer. Through the family of Juliusz Wertheim, whose understanding of Chopin's genius inspired Rubinstein, he formed friendships with the violinist Paul Kochanski and composer Karol Szymanowski.[12]

 
Rubinstein in 1906

Rubinstein made his New York debut at Carnegie Hall in 1906, and thereafter toured the United States, Austria, Italy, and Russia. According to his own testimony and that of his son in François Reichenbach's film L'Amour de la vie (1969), he was not well received in the United States. By 1908, Rubinstein, destitute and desperate, hounded by creditors, and threatened with being evicted from his Berlin hotel room, made a failed attempt to hang himself. Subsequently, he said that he felt "reborn" and endowed with an unconditional love of life. In 1912, he made his London debut, and found a musical home there in the Edith Grove, Chelsea, musical salon of Paul and Muriel Draper, in company with Kochanski, Igor Stravinsky, Jacques Thibaud, Pablo Casals, Pierre Monteux and others.[12]

During World War I, Rubinstein stayed in London, giving recitals and accompanying the violinist Eugène Ysaÿe. In 1916 and 1917, he made his first tours in Spain and South America where he was widely acclaimed. It was during those tours that he developed a lifelong enthusiasm for the music of Enrique Granados, Isaac Albéniz, Manuel de Falla, and Heitor Villa-Lobos. He was the dedicatee of Manuel de Falla's Fantasía Bética, Villa-Lobos's Rudepoêma and Stravinsky's Trois mouvements de Petrouchka.

Rubinstein was disgusted by Germany's conduct during the war and never played there again. His last performance in Germany was in 1914.[12]

In the autumn of 1919 Rubinstein toured Great Britain with soprano Emma Calvé and tenor Vladimir Rosing.[13]

In 1921, Rubinstein gave two American tours, travelling to New York with Karol Szymanowski and his close friend Paul Kochanski.[12] During his recital in Florida, Rubinstein was accompanied by violinist virtuoso Rudolph Bochoco.[14]

In 1934, the pianist, who stated he neglected his technique in his early years, relying instead on natural talent, withdrew from concert life for several months of intensive study and practice.

Rubinstein toured the United States again in 1937, his career becoming centered there during the World War II years when he lived in Brentwood, Los Angeles, California. He became a naturalized US citizen in 1946.[15]

 
A cast of the pianist's hands, at the Łódź museum

During his time in California, Rubinstein provided the piano soundtrack for several films, including Song of Love with Katharine Hepburn. He appeared, as himself, in the films Carnegie Hall and Of Men and Music.

Although best known as a recitalist and concerto soloist, Rubinstein was considered an outstanding chamber musician, partnering with Henryk Szeryng, Jascha Heifetz, Pablo Casals, Gregor Piatigorsky and the Guarneri Quartet. Rubinstein recorded much of the core piano repertoire, particularly that of the Romantic composers. At the time of his death, The New York Times in describing him wrote, "Chopin was his specialty ... it was [as] a Chopinist that he was considered by many without peer."[5] With the exception of the Études, he recorded most of the works of Chopin. In 1964, during the Cold War, he gave a legendary concert in Moscow, with a pure Chopin program.[16] He was one of the earliest champions of Spanish and South American composers, as well as French composers of the early 20th century (such as Debussy and Ravel). In addition, Rubinstein promoted the music of his compatriot Karol Szymanowski. Rubinstein, in conversation with Alexander Scriabin, named Brahms as his favorite composer, a response that enraged Scriabin.[17]

In 1969, the film Arthur Rubinstein – The Love of Life was released; it won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. (A later TV special, Rubinstein at 90, highlighted how he had been playing for people for eight decades.)

By the mid-1970s, Rubinstein's eyesight had begun to deteriorate. He retired from the stage at age 89 in May 1976, giving his last concert at London's Wigmore Hall, where he had first played nearly 70 years before.

Rubinstein, who was fluent in eight languages,[15] held much of the repertoire (and not only that of the piano) in his formidable memory.[15] According to his memoirs, he learned César Franck's Symphonic Variations while on a train en route to the concert, without the benefit of a piano, practicing passages in his lap. Rubinstein described his memory as photographic, to the extent that he would visualize an errant coffee stain while recalling a score.[18]

Rubinstein also had exceptionally developed aural abilities, which allowed him to play whole symphonies in his mind. "At breakfast, I might pass a Brahms symphony in my head," he said. "Then I am called to the phone, and half an hour later I find it's been going on all the time and I'm in the third movement." This ability was often tested by Rubinstein's friends, who would randomly pick extracts from opera and symphonic scores and ask him to play them from memory.[5]

Rubinstein's autobiography contained two volumes: My Young Years (1973); and My Many Years (1980). Many were displeased by their emphasis on personal anecdotes over music. Pianist Emanuel Ax, one of Rubinstein's greatest admirers, was profoundly disappointed by reading My Many Years: "Until then," he told Harvey Sachs, "I had idolized Rubinstein—I had wanted to have a life like his, the book changed all that."[7]

In a reflective muse, Rubinstein once noted "It is simply my life, music. I live it, breathe it, talk with it. I am almost unconscious of it. No, I do not mean I take it for granted—one should never take for granted any of the gifts of God. But it is like an arm, a leg, part of me. On the other hand, books and paintings and languages and people are passions with me, always to be cultivated. Travel too. I am a lucky man to have a business which allows me to be on the road so much. On the train, the plane, I have time to read. There again, I am a lucky man to be a pianist. A splendid instrument, the piano, just the right size so that you cannot take it with you. Instead of practicing, I can read. A fortunate fellow, am I not?"[19]

Personal life

 
Rubinstein in 1963

Marriage and family

Of his youth, Rubinstein once said: "It is said of me that when I was young I divided my time impartially among wine, women and song. I deny this categorically. Ninety percent of my interests were women."[5] At the age of 45, in 1932, Rubinstein married Nela Młynarska, a 24-year-old Polish ballerina (who had studied with Mary Wigman). Nela was the daughter of the Polish conductor Emil Młynarski and his wife Anna Talko-Hryncewicz, who was from a Polish aristocratic heraldic family of Iłgowski coat of arms. Nela had first fallen in love with Rubinstein when she was 18, but married Mieczysław Munz, another Polish-American pianist, after Rubinstein began an affair with an Italian princess.[20][21] Nela subsequently divorced Munz and three years later married Rubinstein.[21] They had five children (one died in infancy), including photographer Eva Rubinstein, who married William Sloane Coffin, and son John Rubinstein, a Tony Award-winning actor and father of actor Michael Weston.[22] Nela subsequently wrote Nela's Cookbook, which included the dishes she prepared for the couple's legendary parties.[23]

Both before and during his marriage, Rubinstein carried on a series of affairs with women, including Lesley Jowitt, the wife of the British politician William Jowitt, and Irene Curzon.[24]

In addition to fathering a daughter (Brazilian pianist Luli Oswald[25]) with the Italian marchioness Paola Medici del Vascello (née Princess Paola di Viggiano, also: Donna Paola Sanfelice dei Principi di Viggiano), he may have been the father of American decorator and artist Muriel Draper's son Sanders Draper, who died in World War II.[12] Luli Oswald was never recognised by her biological parents, hidden from the public and given as a newborn to a friend of Rubinstein's, the Brazilian conductor and composer Henrique Oswald (1852-1931). The latter's daughter Maria and her husband Odoardo Marchesini raised her and adopted her. The adoptive parents signed an affidavit in 1967 stating that Luli Oswald had been entrusted to them by her biological parents Paola Medici and Arthur Rubinstein because she was the "fruit of a forbidden love."[26] After the adoption, her name was Margarida Henriqueta Marchesini. Oswald later performed under the stage name Luli Oswald.

Though he and Nela never divorced, in 1977, at age 90, he left her for Annabelle Whitestone, then 33 years old.

Jewish identity

An agnostic, Rubinstein was proud of his Jewish heritage.[27] He was a great friend of Israel,[28] which he visited several times with his wife and children, giving concerts with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, recitals, and master classes at the Jerusalem Music Centre. In 1949, Rubinstein—who lost family members in the Holocaust—along with other prominent musicians (including Horowitz and Heifetz) announced that he would not appear with the Chicago Symphony if it engaged the conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler, who had remained in Germany during the war and who had performed a symphony for Hitler's birthday.[7]

Polish identity

External video
  Rubinstein performing in 1964:
Chopin's Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53,
Debussy's waltz La plus que lente, L. 121 and Prelude in A-minor,
Alexander Scriabin's Nocturne for the Left Hand, No. 2 of Op. 9,
Heitor Villa-Lobos's O Polichinelo,
de Falla's Danza Ritual del Fuego

Throughout his life, Rubinstein was deeply attached to Poland. At the inauguration of the United Nations in 1945, Rubinstein showed his Polish patriotism at a concert for the delegates. He began the concert by stating his deep disappointment that the conference did not have a delegation from Poland. Rubinstein later described becoming overwhelmed by a blind fury and angrily pointing out to the public the absence of the Polish flag. He stopped playing the piano, told the audience to stand up, including the Soviets, and played the Polish national anthem loudly and slowly, repeating the final part in a great thunderous forte. When he had finished, the public gave him a great ovation.[15][29]

Charitable contributions

Rubinstein was active in supporting charities throughout his life. He performed charity concerts to raise donations for numerous organizations which interested him. In 1961, he performed ten recitals in Carnegie Hall to raise roughly $100,000 for charities including Big Brothers, United Jewish Appeal, Polish Assistance, Musicians Emergency fund, the National Association for Mental Health, and the Legal Defense Fund of the National Advancement of Colored People.[30]

On practice

 
Rubinstein in 1968

In his two autobiographies, Rubinstein is often intensely self-critical. A natural pianist with a big technique, he claimed that he practiced as little as possible, learning new pieces quickly and with insufficient attention to detail, relying on his charm and charisma to conceal the lack of finish in his playing. The literal truth of these self-directed critiques is open to question: Rubinstein wasn't averse to making himself the butt of a good story. Even so, he insisted that his attitude toward practicing changed after his marriage. He stated that he did not want his children to see him as a second-rater, so he began in the summer of 1934 to restudy his entire repertoire. "I buckled down back to work—six hours, eight hours, nine hours a day." he recalled in 1958. "And a strange thing happened. ... I began to discover new meanings, new qualities, new possibilities in music that I have been regularly playing for more than 30 years." In general, however, Rubinstein believed that excessive practice could be dangerous for young pianists. Perhaps recalling his own youthful brush with repetitive-stress syndrome, Rubinstein regularly advised that young pianists should practice no more than three hours a day. "I was born very, very lazy and I don't always practice very long", he said, "but I must say, in my defense, that it is not so good, in a musical way, to overpractice. When you do, the music seems to come out of your pocket. If you play with a feeling of 'Oh, I know this', you play without that little drop of fresh blood that is necessary—and the audience feels it." Of his own practice methods, he said, "At every concert I leave a lot to the moment. I must have the unexpected, the unforeseen. I want to risk, to dare. I want to be surprised by what comes out. I want to enjoy it more than the audience. That way the music can bloom anew. It's like making love. The act is always the same, but each time it's different."[5][31]

Pupils

Rubinstein was reluctant to teach in his earlier life, refusing to accept William Kapell's request for lessons. It was not until the late 1950s that he accepted his first pupil, Dubravka Tomšič Srebotnjak. Other pupils of Rubinstein include François-René Duchâble, Avi Schönfeld, Ann Schein Carlyss, Eugen Indjic, Janina Fialkowska, Dean Kramer and Marc Laforêt. Rubinstein also gave master classes towards the end of his life.[28]

Death and legacy

"I have found that if you love life, life will love you back..."

"People are always setting conditions for happiness... I love life without condition."

— Arthur Rubinstein[32]
 
Grave of Arthur Rubinstein at Arthur Rubinstein forest near Jerusalem

Rubinstein died in his sleep at his home in Geneva, Switzerland, on 20 December 1982, at the age of 95. His remains were cremated.[5] On the first anniversary of his death, an urn holding his ashes was buried in Jerusalem—as specified in his will—in a dedicated plot now dubbed "Rubinstein Forest" overlooking the Jerusalem Forest.[33] This was arranged by then-mayor Teddy Kollek with Israel's Chief Rabbis, who had objected to Rubinstein's wish of having his ashes strewn over the Jerusalem Forest, given that Jewish law prohibits cremation and the forest is a public park, and as such falls under the religious law governing cemeteries.[34]

In October 2007, his family donated to the Juilliard School an extensive collection of original manuscripts, manuscript copies and published editions that had been seized by the Germans during World War II from his Paris residence. Seventy-one items were returned to his four children, marking the first time that Jewish property kept in the Berlin State Library was returned to the legal heirs.[35]

In 1974, Jan Jacob Bistritzky established the Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Master Competition, held every three years in Israel, intended to promote the careers of young and outstanding pianists. The Arthur Rubinstein Award and other prizes are presented to the winners. The Rubinstein Competition also commissions works by Israeli composers.[36]

There is an Arthur Rubinstein Street in Tel Aviv and in Białogard (Polish: ulica Artura Rubinsteina) and an Arthur Rubinstein Passage in Łódź (Polish: aleja Artura Rubinsteina).

Recordings

External audio
  Rubinstein performing in 1947 Liszt's Piano Concerto No. 1 with Antal Doráti conducting the Dallas Symphony Orchestra

In 1910, Rubinstein recorded Franz Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 10 for the Polish Favorit label.[12] The pianist was displeased with the acoustic recording process, saying it made the piano sound "like a banjo" and he did not record again until the advent of electrical recording. However, Rubinstein made numerous player piano music rolls for the Aeolian Duo-Art system and the American Piano Company (AMPICO) in the 1920s.

Beginning in 1928, Rubinstein began to record extensively for the Gramophone Company (later known as EMI Records), better known as His Master's Voice in England and for RCA Victor in the United States, making a large number of solo, concerto and chamber music recordings until his retirement in 1976. As recording technology improved, from 78-rpm discs to LPs and stereophonic recordings, Rubinstein re-recorded much of his repertoire. All of his RCA Victor recordings have been reissued on compact disc and amount to about 107 hours of music.

Rubinstein preferred to make studio recordings and during his lifetime approved for release only around three hours of live recordings. However, since his death, several labels have issued many of his live recordings sourced from various radio broadcasts.

Honours

 
Sculpture of Arthur Rubinstein on Piotrkowska Street, in Łódź, Poland, where Rubinstein was born

Filmography

See also

References

  1. ^ "Artur Rubinstein", Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. ^ . April 18, 2014. Archived from the original on April 18, 2014. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
  3. ^ "The 25 best piano players of all time". Classic FM. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  4. ^ "The 20 Greatest Pianists of all time". Classical Music. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h "Arthur Rubinstein Dies in Geneva at 95". The New York Times. November 21, 1982. from the original on November 14, 2013. Retrieved November 6, 2011.
  6. ^ Schonberg, Harold C. (1987) The great pianists. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0671638378
  7. ^ a b c Teachout, Terry (1996). "Whatever Happened to Arthur Rubinstein". Commentary. 101 (2): 48–51.
  8. ^ "Intoxicated with Romance." Time 101, no. 23 (4 June 1973): 73.
  9. ^ Artur Rubinstein. geni.com
  10. ^ a b Rubinstein 1973, p. 4.
  11. ^ Rubinstein 1973, p. 4: "In later years, my manager Sol Hurok used the h-less 'Artur' for my publicity, but I sign 'Arthur' in countries where it is common practice, 'Arturo' in Spain and Italy, and 'Artur' in the Slav countries".
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Sachs 1995, p. [page needed]
  13. ^ Newton, Ivor (1966). At the Piano – the World of an Accompanist. London: Hamish Hamilton Ltd. p. 44.
  14. ^ https://www.newspapers.com/clip/119441817/rudolph-bochco-accompanies-arthur-rubens/ Noted Pianist Coming to the Casino The Tampa Tribune. 1 Mar 1921 p. 8.
  15. ^ a b c d Sachs 1995, pp. 223–224
  16. ^ This presentation is well-documented on an audio CD edited by Joachim Kaiser, Klavier Kaiser, Sueddeutsche-Zeitung Co., Munich 2004.
  17. ^ Rubinstein 1973, quoted in Norman Lebrecht, The Book of Musical Anecdotes
  18. ^ . Time. February 25, 1966. Archived from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved April 25, 2010.
  19. ^ The Rubinstein Story (as told to Clifton Fadiman), Radio Corporation of America, 1959.
  20. ^ Taylor, Angela (12 December 1983) "Nela Rubinstein: Making a Life of Her Own". The New York Times, Section B, p. 22.
  21. ^ a b "After 50 Years of Pots and Chopins with Husband Arthur, Nela Rubinstein Rolls Out Her Own Cookbook". People Magazine, 14 November 1983 Vol. 20, No. 20
  22. ^ "John Rubinstein Biography". filmreference. 2008. Retrieved April 10, 2008.
  23. ^ Rubinstein, Nela (1983) Nela's Cookbook. Alfred A. Knopf, New York. ISBN 039451761X
  24. ^ Sachs 1995, pp. 189–90, 246–47..
  25. ^ See on German Wikipedia: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luli_Oswald, sighted on 12 March 2022.
  26. ^ Sachs 1995, pp. 223–224
  27. ^ Sachs 1995, p. 13.
  28. ^ a b Rubinstein 1980, p. [page needed]
  29. ^ Ulanowska, Elżbieta "Na cześć Artura Rubinsteina: Pianistyczna gala w Łodzi" ("In Honor of Artur Rubinstein: Piano Gala in Łódź"), Gwiazda Polarna (The Pole Star, a Polish-American biweekly), vol. 99, no. 21 (11 October 2008), p. 18.
  30. ^ Parmenter, Ross (December 11, 1961) "Music: A Grand Finale". The New York Times.
  31. ^ "UALR Public Radio – KLRE Classical 90.5 – Pianist Arthur Rubinstein". Klre.org. Retrieved January 7, 2012.
  32. ^ Life, 5 April 1948
  33. ^ "Arthur Rubinstein Remains Are Buried in Jerusalem Plot". The New York Times. Associated Press. December 22, 1983. Retrieved August 27, 2007.
  34. ^ "Writer Re-Visits Arthur Rubinstein’s Boundless Love of Israel and Link to Hebrew U", by Saul Jay Singer, 15 May 2019, for the Canadian Friends of the Hebrew University website. Accessed 3 July 2022.
  35. ^ Juilliard News. October 15, 2007
  36. ^ . The Arthur Rubinstein International Music Society. 2012. Archived from the original on April 24, 2012. Retrieved February 18, 2012.
  37. ^ a b "Cidadãos Estrangeiros Agraciados com Ordens Portuguesas". Página Oficial das Ordens Honoríficas Portuguesas. Retrieved March 20, 2019.
  38. ^ "2007: the Year of Artur Rubinstein". Culture.pl. December 31, 2007. Retrieved November 6, 2011.
  39. ^ "Arthur Rubinstein (pianist)". Gramophone. Retrieved April 12, 2012.

Sources

External links

  •   Media related to Arthur Rubinstein at Wikimedia Commons
  • Website at Sony Classical
  •   Quotations related to Arthur Rubinstein at Wikiquote
  • Arthur Rubinstein at AllMusic
  • Arthur Rubinstein profile at PBS American Masters

arthur, rubinstein, american, film, television, composer, arthur, rubinstein, polish, artur, rubinstein, january, 1887, december, 1982, polish, american, pianist, widely, regarded, greatest, pianists, time, received, international, acclaim, performances, music. For the American film and television composer see Arthur B Rubinstein Arthur Rubinstein Polish Artur Rubinstein 28 January 1887 20 December 1982 was a Polish American pianist 1 He is widely regarded as one of the greatest pianists of all time 2 3 4 He received international acclaim for his performances of the music written by a variety of composers and many regard him as one of the greatest Chopin interpreters of his time 5 6 He played in public for eight decades 7 Arthur Rubinstein in 1937 by Carl Van Vechten Contents 1 Early life 2 Music and career 3 Personal life 3 1 Marriage and family 3 2 Jewish identity 3 3 Polish identity 3 4 Charitable contributions 3 5 On practice 3 6 Pupils 4 Death and legacy 5 Recordings 6 Honours 7 Filmography 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEarly life Edit Childhood home of Artur Rubinstein at Piotrkowska Street Lodz Poland Artur Rubinstein was born in Lodz Congress Poland part of the Russian Empire for the entire time Rubinstein resided there on 28 January 1887 to a Jewish family He was the youngest of seven children of Felicja Blima Fajga nee Heiman and Izaak Rubinstein His father owned a small textile factory 8 9 Rubinstein s birth name was to be Leo but his eight year old brother claimed that His name must be Artur Since Artur X a neighbour s son plays the violin so nicely the baby may also become a great musician 10 Thus he was called Artur although in English speaking countries he preferred to be known as Arthur Rubinstein His United States impresario Sol Hurok however insisted he be billed as Artur and records were released in the West under both versions of his name 11 At age two Rubinstein demonstrated absolute pitch and a fascination with the piano watching his elder sister s piano lessons By the age of four he was recognised as a child prodigy His father had a predilection for the violin and offered Rubinstein a violin but Rubinstein rejected it because he thought his instinct was for harmony and polyphony The Hungarian violinist Joseph Joachim on hearing the four year old child play the piano was greatly impressed telling Arthur s family This boy may become a very great musician he certainly has the talent for it When the time comes for serious study bring him to me and I shall be glad to supervise his artistic education On 14 December 1894 seven year old Arthur Rubinstein had his debut with pieces by Mozart Schubert and Mendelssohn 10 12 When he became ten years of age Rubinstein moved to Berlin to continue his studies and gave his first performance with the Berlin Philharmonic in 1900 at the age of 13 5 Joseph Joachim recommended Karl Heinrich Barth as the boy s piano teacher As a student of Barth Rubinstein inherited a renowned pedagogical lineage Barth was himself a pupil of Liszt who had been taught by Czerny who had in turn been a pupil of Beethoven 5 Music and career EditIn 1904 Rubinstein moved to Paris to launch his career in earnest where he met the composers Maurice Ravel and Paul Dukas and the violinist Jacques Thibaud He also played Camille Saint Saens Piano Concerto No 2 in the presence of the composer Through the family of Juliusz Wertheim whose understanding of Chopin s genius inspired Rubinstein he formed friendships with the violinist Paul Kochanski and composer Karol Szymanowski 12 Rubinstein in 1906 Rubinstein made his New York debut at Carnegie Hall in 1906 and thereafter toured the United States Austria Italy and Russia According to his own testimony and that of his son in Francois Reichenbach s film L Amour de la vie 1969 he was not well received in the United States By 1908 Rubinstein destitute and desperate hounded by creditors and threatened with being evicted from his Berlin hotel room made a failed attempt to hang himself Subsequently he said that he felt reborn and endowed with an unconditional love of life In 1912 he made his London debut and found a musical home there in the Edith Grove Chelsea musical salon of Paul and Muriel Draper in company with Kochanski Igor Stravinsky Jacques Thibaud Pablo Casals Pierre Monteux and others 12 During World War I Rubinstein stayed in London giving recitals and accompanying the violinist Eugene Ysaye In 1916 and 1917 he made his first tours in Spain and South America where he was widely acclaimed It was during those tours that he developed a lifelong enthusiasm for the music of Enrique Granados Isaac Albeniz Manuel de Falla and Heitor Villa Lobos He was the dedicatee of Manuel de Falla s Fantasia Betica Villa Lobos s Rudepoema and Stravinsky s Trois mouvements de Petrouchka Rubinstein was disgusted by Germany s conduct during the war and never played there again His last performance in Germany was in 1914 12 In the autumn of 1919 Rubinstein toured Great Britain with soprano Emma Calve and tenor Vladimir Rosing 13 In 1921 Rubinstein gave two American tours travelling to New York with Karol Szymanowski and his close friend Paul Kochanski 12 During his recital in Florida Rubinstein was accompanied by violinist virtuoso Rudolph Bochoco 14 In 1934 the pianist who stated he neglected his technique in his early years relying instead on natural talent withdrew from concert life for several months of intensive study and practice Rubinstein toured the United States again in 1937 his career becoming centered there during the World War II years when he lived in Brentwood Los Angeles California He became a naturalized US citizen in 1946 15 A cast of the pianist s hands at the Lodz museum During his time in California Rubinstein provided the piano soundtrack for several films including Song of Love with Katharine Hepburn He appeared as himself in the films Carnegie Hall and Of Men and Music Although best known as a recitalist and concerto soloist Rubinstein was considered an outstanding chamber musician partnering with Henryk Szeryng Jascha Heifetz Pablo Casals Gregor Piatigorsky and the Guarneri Quartet Rubinstein recorded much of the core piano repertoire particularly that of the Romantic composers At the time of his death The New York Times in describing him wrote Chopin was his specialty it was as a Chopinist that he was considered by many without peer 5 With the exception of the Etudes he recorded most of the works of Chopin In 1964 during the Cold War he gave a legendary concert in Moscow with a pure Chopin program 16 He was one of the earliest champions of Spanish and South American composers as well as French composers of the early 20th century such as Debussy and Ravel In addition Rubinstein promoted the music of his compatriot Karol Szymanowski Rubinstein in conversation with Alexander Scriabin named Brahms as his favorite composer a response that enraged Scriabin 17 In 1969 the film Arthur Rubinstein The Love of Life was released it won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature A later TV special Rubinstein at 90 highlighted how he had been playing for people for eight decades By the mid 1970s Rubinstein s eyesight had begun to deteriorate He retired from the stage at age 89 in May 1976 giving his last concert at London s Wigmore Hall where he had first played nearly 70 years before Rubinstein who was fluent in eight languages 15 held much of the repertoire and not only that of the piano in his formidable memory 15 According to his memoirs he learned Cesar Franck s Symphonic Variations while on a train en route to the concert without the benefit of a piano practicing passages in his lap Rubinstein described his memory as photographic to the extent that he would visualize an errant coffee stain while recalling a score 18 Rubinstein also had exceptionally developed aural abilities which allowed him to play whole symphonies in his mind At breakfast I might pass a Brahms symphony in my head he said Then I am called to the phone and half an hour later I find it s been going on all the time and I m in the third movement This ability was often tested by Rubinstein s friends who would randomly pick extracts from opera and symphonic scores and ask him to play them from memory 5 Rubinstein s autobiography contained two volumes My Young Years 1973 and My Many Years 1980 Many were displeased by their emphasis on personal anecdotes over music Pianist Emanuel Ax one of Rubinstein s greatest admirers was profoundly disappointed by reading My Many Years Until then he told Harvey Sachs I had idolized Rubinstein I had wanted to have a life like his the book changed all that 7 In a reflective muse Rubinstein once noted It is simply my life music I live it breathe it talk with it I am almost unconscious of it No I do not mean I take it for granted one should never take for granted any of the gifts of God But it is like an arm a leg part of me On the other hand books and paintings and languages and people are passions with me always to be cultivated Travel too I am a lucky man to have a business which allows me to be on the road so much On the train the plane I have time to read There again I am a lucky man to be a pianist A splendid instrument the piano just the right size so that you cannot take it with you Instead of practicing I can read A fortunate fellow am I not 19 Personal life Edit Rubinstein in 1963 Marriage and family Edit Of his youth Rubinstein once said It is said of me that when I was young I divided my time impartially among wine women and song I deny this categorically Ninety percent of my interests were women 5 At the age of 45 in 1932 Rubinstein married Nela Mlynarska a 24 year old Polish ballerina who had studied with Mary Wigman Nela was the daughter of the Polish conductor Emil Mlynarski and his wife Anna Talko Hryncewicz who was from a Polish aristocratic heraldic family of Ilgowski coat of arms Nela had first fallen in love with Rubinstein when she was 18 but married Mieczyslaw Munz another Polish American pianist after Rubinstein began an affair with an Italian princess 20 21 Nela subsequently divorced Munz and three years later married Rubinstein 21 They had five children one died in infancy including photographer Eva Rubinstein who married William Sloane Coffin and son John Rubinstein a Tony Award winning actor and father of actor Michael Weston 22 Nela subsequently wrote Nela s Cookbook which included the dishes she prepared for the couple s legendary parties 23 Both before and during his marriage Rubinstein carried on a series of affairs with women including Lesley Jowitt the wife of the British politician William Jowitt and Irene Curzon 24 In addition to fathering a daughter Brazilian pianist Luli Oswald 25 with the Italian marchioness Paola Medici del Vascello nee Princess Paola di Viggiano also Donna Paola Sanfelice dei Principi di Viggiano he may have been the father of American decorator and artist Muriel Draper s son Sanders Draper who died in World War II 12 Luli Oswald was never recognised by her biological parents hidden from the public and given as a newborn to a friend of Rubinstein s the Brazilian conductor and composer Henrique Oswald 1852 1931 The latter s daughter Maria and her husband Odoardo Marchesini raised her and adopted her The adoptive parents signed an affidavit in 1967 stating that Luli Oswald had been entrusted to them by her biological parents Paola Medici and Arthur Rubinstein because she was the fruit of a forbidden love 26 After the adoption her name was Margarida Henriqueta Marchesini Oswald later performed under the stage name Luli Oswald Though he and Nela never divorced in 1977 at age 90 he left her for Annabelle Whitestone then 33 years old Jewish identity Edit An agnostic Rubinstein was proud of his Jewish heritage 27 He was a great friend of Israel 28 which he visited several times with his wife and children giving concerts with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra recitals and master classes at the Jerusalem Music Centre In 1949 Rubinstein who lost family members in the Holocaust along with other prominent musicians including Horowitz and Heifetz announced that he would not appear with the Chicago Symphony if it engaged the conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler who had remained in Germany during the war and who had performed a symphony for Hitler s birthday 7 Polish identity Edit External video Rubinstein performing in 1964 Chopin s Polonaise in A flat major Op 53 Debussy s waltz La plus que lente L 121 and Prelude in A minor Alexander Scriabin s Nocturne for the Left Hand No 2 of Op 9 Heitor Villa Lobos s O Polichinelo de Falla s Danza Ritual del FuegoThroughout his life Rubinstein was deeply attached to Poland At the inauguration of the United Nations in 1945 Rubinstein showed his Polish patriotism at a concert for the delegates He began the concert by stating his deep disappointment that the conference did not have a delegation from Poland Rubinstein later described becoming overwhelmed by a blind fury and angrily pointing out to the public the absence of the Polish flag He stopped playing the piano told the audience to stand up including the Soviets and played the Polish national anthem loudly and slowly repeating the final part in a great thunderous forte When he had finished the public gave him a great ovation 15 29 Charitable contributions Edit Rubinstein was active in supporting charities throughout his life He performed charity concerts to raise donations for numerous organizations which interested him In 1961 he performed ten recitals in Carnegie Hall to raise roughly 100 000 for charities including Big Brothers United Jewish Appeal Polish Assistance Musicians Emergency fund the National Association for Mental Health and the Legal Defense Fund of the National Advancement of Colored People 30 On practice Edit Rubinstein in 1968 In his two autobiographies Rubinstein is often intensely self critical A natural pianist with a big technique he claimed that he practiced as little as possible learning new pieces quickly and with insufficient attention to detail relying on his charm and charisma to conceal the lack of finish in his playing The literal truth of these self directed critiques is open to question Rubinstein wasn t averse to making himself the butt of a good story Even so he insisted that his attitude toward practicing changed after his marriage He stated that he did not want his children to see him as a second rater so he began in the summer of 1934 to restudy his entire repertoire I buckled down back to work six hours eight hours nine hours a day he recalled in 1958 And a strange thing happened I began to discover new meanings new qualities new possibilities in music that I have been regularly playing for more than 30 years In general however Rubinstein believed that excessive practice could be dangerous for young pianists Perhaps recalling his own youthful brush with repetitive stress syndrome Rubinstein regularly advised that young pianists should practice no more than three hours a day I was born very very lazy and I don t always practice very long he said but I must say in my defense that it is not so good in a musical way to overpractice When you do the music seems to come out of your pocket If you play with a feeling of Oh I know this you play without that little drop of fresh blood that is necessary and the audience feels it Of his own practice methods he said At every concert I leave a lot to the moment I must have the unexpected the unforeseen I want to risk to dare I want to be surprised by what comes out I want to enjoy it more than the audience That way the music can bloom anew It s like making love The act is always the same but each time it s different 5 31 Pupils Edit For Rubinstein s notable students see List of music students by teacher R to S Arthur Rubinstein Rubinstein was reluctant to teach in his earlier life refusing to accept William Kapell s request for lessons It was not until the late 1950s that he accepted his first pupil Dubravka Tomsic Srebotnjak Other pupils of Rubinstein include Francois Rene Duchable Avi Schonfeld Ann Schein Carlyss Eugen Indjic Janina Fialkowska Dean Kramer and Marc Laforet Rubinstein also gave master classes towards the end of his life 28 Death and legacy Edit I have found that if you love life life will love you back People are always setting conditions for happiness I love life without condition Arthur Rubinstein 32 Grave of Arthur Rubinstein at Arthur Rubinstein forest near Jerusalem Rubinstein died in his sleep at his home in Geneva Switzerland on 20 December 1982 at the age of 95 His remains were cremated 5 On the first anniversary of his death an urn holding his ashes was buried in Jerusalem as specified in his will in a dedicated plot now dubbed Rubinstein Forest overlooking the Jerusalem Forest 33 This was arranged by then mayor Teddy Kollek with Israel s Chief Rabbis who had objected to Rubinstein s wish of having his ashes strewn over the Jerusalem Forest given that Jewish law prohibits cremation and the forest is a public park and as such falls under the religious law governing cemeteries 34 In October 2007 his family donated to the Juilliard School an extensive collection of original manuscripts manuscript copies and published editions that had been seized by the Germans during World War II from his Paris residence Seventy one items were returned to his four children marking the first time that Jewish property kept in the Berlin State Library was returned to the legal heirs 35 In 1974 Jan Jacob Bistritzky established the Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Master Competition held every three years in Israel intended to promote the careers of young and outstanding pianists The Arthur Rubinstein Award and other prizes are presented to the winners The Rubinstein Competition also commissions works by Israeli composers 36 There is an Arthur Rubinstein Street in Tel Aviv and in Bialogard Polish ulica Artura Rubinsteina and an Arthur Rubinstein Passage in Lodz Polish aleja Artura Rubinsteina Recordings EditFurther information Arthur Rubinstein discography External audio Rubinstein performing in 1947 Liszt s Piano Concerto No 1 with Antal Dorati conducting the Dallas Symphony OrchestraIn 1910 Rubinstein recorded Franz Liszt s Hungarian Rhapsody No 10 for the Polish Favorit label 12 The pianist was displeased with the acoustic recording process saying it made the piano sound like a banjo and he did not record again until the advent of electrical recording However Rubinstein made numerous player piano music rolls for the Aeolian Duo Art system and the American Piano Company AMPICO in the 1920s Beginning in 1928 Rubinstein began to record extensively for the Gramophone Company later known as EMI Records better known as His Master s Voice in England and for RCA Victor in the United States making a large number of solo concerto and chamber music recordings until his retirement in 1976 As recording technology improved from 78 rpm discs to LPs and stereophonic recordings Rubinstein re recorded much of his repertoire All of his RCA Victor recordings have been reissued on compact disc and amount to about 107 hours of music Rubinstein preferred to make studio recordings and during his lifetime approved for release only around three hours of live recordings However since his death several labels have issued many of his live recordings sourced from various radio broadcasts Honours Edit Sculpture of Arthur Rubinstein on Piotrkowska Street in Lodz Poland where Rubinstein was born Officer of the Order of Saint James of the Sword Portugal 31 May 1958 37 Sonning Award of Denmark 1971 Grand Officer of the Order of Saint James of the Sword Portugal 9 May 1972 37 Presidential Medal of Freedom of the US presented by President Gerald Ford 1 April 1976 Honorary Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire KBE of Great Britain and Northern Ireland 1977 38 Kennedy Center Honors of the United States of America 1978 Grand Officier of the National Order of the Legion of Honour of France Officer s Cross Krzyz Oficerski of the Order of Polonia Restituta of Poland Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic of Italy Member of the Civil Order of Alfonso X the Wise of Spain Officier of the Order of Leopold of Belgium Voted into Gramophone s Hall of Fame in 2012 39 Grammy Award for Best Chamber Music Performance Pierre Fournier Arthur Rubinstein amp Henryk Szeryng for Schubert Trios Nos 1 in B flat Op 99 and 2 in E flat Op 100 Piano Trios Grammy Awards of 1976 Pierre Fournier Arthur Rubinstein amp Henryk Szeryng for Brahms Trios Complete Schumann Trio No 1 in D Minor Grammy Awards of 1975 Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Soloist Performance without orchestra Arthur Rubinstein for Beethoven Piano Sonata No 18 in E flat Schumann Fantasiestucke Op 12 Grammy Awards of 1978 Arthur Rubinstein for Beethoven Sonatas No 21 in C Waldstein and No 18 in E flat Grammy Awards of 1960 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award 1994 Filmography EditNight Song 1948 Arthur Rubinstein The Love of Life L Amour de la vie Artur Rubinstein 1969 See also Edit Music portalList of Polish people music Rubinstein interviewed by WQXR s Abram Chasins on February 2 1960 References Edit Artur Rubinstein Encyclopaedia Britannica The 10 Greatest Pianists of All Time Classical Music Limelight Magazine April 18 2014 Archived from the original on April 18 2014 Retrieved December 31 2020 The 25 best piano players of all time Classic FM Retrieved June 21 2020 The 20 Greatest Pianists of all time Classical Music Retrieved October 24 2021 a b c d e f g h Arthur Rubinstein Dies in Geneva at 95 The New York Times November 21 1982 Archived from the original on November 14 2013 Retrieved November 6 2011 Schonberg Harold C 1987 The great pianists Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0671638378 a b c Teachout Terry 1996 Whatever Happened to Arthur Rubinstein Commentary 101 2 48 51 Intoxicated with Romance Time 101 no 23 4 June 1973 73 Artur Rubinstein geni com a b Rubinstein 1973 p 4 Rubinstein 1973 p 4 In later years my manager Sol Hurok used the h less Artur for my publicity but I sign Arthur in countries where it is common practice Arturo in Spain and Italy and Artur in the Slav countries a b c d e f g Sachs 1995 p page needed Newton Ivor 1966 At the Piano the World of an Accompanist London Hamish Hamilton Ltd p 44 https www newspapers com clip 119441817 rudolph bochco accompanies arthur rubens Noted Pianist Coming to the Casino The Tampa Tribune 1 Mar 1921 p 8 a b c d Sachs 1995 pp 223 224 This presentation is well documented on an audio CD edited by Joachim Kaiser Klavier Kaiser Sueddeutsche Zeitung Co Munich 2004 Rubinstein 1973 quoted in Norman Lebrecht The Book of Musical Anecdotes Pianists The Undeniable Romantic Time February 25 1966 Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved April 25 2010 The Rubinstein Story as told to Clifton Fadiman Radio Corporation of America 1959 Taylor Angela 12 December 1983 Nela Rubinstein Making a Life of Her Own The New York Times Section B p 22 a b After 50 Years of Pots and Chopins with Husband Arthur Nela Rubinstein Rolls Out Her Own Cookbook People Magazine 14 November 1983 Vol 20 No 20 John Rubinstein Biography filmreference 2008 Retrieved April 10 2008 Rubinstein Nela 1983 Nela s Cookbook Alfred A Knopf New York ISBN 039451761X Sachs 1995 pp 189 90 246 47 See on German Wikipedia https de wikipedia org wiki Luli Oswald sighted on 12 March 2022 Sachs 1995 pp 223 224 Sachs 1995 p 13 a b Rubinstein 1980 p page needed Ulanowska Elzbieta Na czesc Artura Rubinsteina Pianistyczna gala w Lodzi In Honor of Artur Rubinstein Piano Gala in Lodz Gwiazda Polarna The Pole Star a Polish American biweekly vol 99 no 21 11 October 2008 p 18 Parmenter Ross December 11 1961 Music A Grand Finale The New York Times UALR Public Radio KLRE Classical 90 5 Pianist Arthur Rubinstein Klre org Retrieved January 7 2012 Life 5 April 1948 Arthur Rubinstein Remains Are Buried in Jerusalem Plot The New York Times Associated Press December 22 1983 Retrieved August 27 2007 Writer Re Visits Arthur Rubinstein s Boundless Love of Israel and Link to Hebrew U by Saul Jay Singer 15 May 2019 for the Canadian Friends of the Hebrew University website Accessed 3 July 2022 Juilliard News October 15 2007 About The Arthur Rubinstein International Music Society 2012 Archived from the original on April 24 2012 Retrieved February 18 2012 a b Cidadaos Estrangeiros Agraciados com Ordens Portuguesas Pagina Oficial das Ordens Honorificas Portuguesas Retrieved March 20 2019 2007 the Year of Artur Rubinstein Culture pl December 31 2007 Retrieved November 6 2011 Arthur Rubinstein pianist Gramophone Retrieved April 12 2012 Sources Rubinstein Arthur 1973 My Young Years New York Knopf ISBN 0 394 46890 2 Rubinstein Arthur 1980 My Many Years New York ISBN 0 394 42253 8 Sachs Harvey 1995 Rubinstein A Life Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 1579 9 External links Edit Media related to Arthur Rubinstein at Wikimedia Commons Website at Sony Classical Quotations related to Arthur Rubinstein at Wikiquote Arthur Rubinstein at AllMusic Arthur Rubinstein profile at PBS American Masters Portals Classical music Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur Rubinstein amp oldid 1146613485, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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