He Will Be Missed
Apr 27, 2007 08:44 PM Filed in:
Day To Day
Cellist Mstislav Rostropovich Dies At 80
By Martin Steinburg and Maria Danillova
MOSCOW
- Mstislav Rostropovich played the cello with grace and verve
— and lived his life offstage the same way. His death at age
80 takes away one of modern Russia's most compelling figures,
admired both for his musical mastery and his defiance of Soviet
repression.
Rostropovich stirred souls with playing that was both intense and
seemingly effortless. He fought for the rights of Soviet-era
dissidents and later triumphantly played Bach suites below the
crumbling Berlin Wall. Bach Cello Suite No. 4 - Bouree
II
In his last public appearance, at his birthday celebration in the
Kremlin on March 27, Rostropovich was frail but still able to show
his capacity for joy and generosity.
"I feel myself the happiest man in the world," he said. "I will be
even more happy if this evening will be pleasant for you."
Spokeswoman Natalia Dollezhal confirmed Rostropovich's death, but
would not immediately give details. The composer, who returned to
Russia last month after years of living in Paris, had suffered from
intestinal cancer.
After a funeral in Christ the Savior Cathedral on Sunday, he is to
be buried in Novodevichy Cemetery, where the graves of his teachers
Dmitry Shostakovich and Sergei Prokofiev also lie. The arrangements
echo the prestigious farewell this week that Russia accorded Boris
Yeltsin, the first leader of post-Soviet Russia.
President Vladimir Putin called Rostropovich's death "a huge loss
for Russian culture" and expressed condolences to his loved
ones.
Rostropovich, who was known by his friends as "Slava," was
considered by many to be the successor to Pablo Casals as the
world's greatest cellist.
A bear of a man who hugged practically anyone in sight, he was an
effusive rather than an intimidating maestro, a teacher who
nurtured Jacqueline du Pre among many other great cellists.
"He was the most inspiring musician that I have ever known," said
David Finckel, the Emerson String Quartet's cellist who studied
with Rostropovich for nine years. "He had a way to channel his
energy through other people, and it was magical."
Rostropovich's sympathies against the Communist Party leaders of
his homeland started with the Stalin-era denunciations of
Shostakovich and Prokofiev.
Under Leonid Brezhnev's regime, Rostropovich and his wife, the
Bolshoi Opera soprano Galina Vishnevskaya, sheltered the dissident
writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn in their country house in the early
1970s.
"The passing of Mstislav Rostropovich is a bitter blow to our
culture," Solzhenitsyn said Friday, according to his wife,
Natalya.
"He gave Russian culture worldwide fame. Farewell, beloved friend,"
Solzhenitsyn said.
After Solzhenitsyn won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1970,
Rostropovich wrote an open letter protesting the official Soviet
vilification of the author.
"Explain to me please, why in our literature and art (that) so
often, people absolutely incompetent in this field have the final
word?" Rostropovich asserted in the letter that went
unpublished.
The by the cellist and his wife for cultural freedom resulted in
the cancellation of concerts, foreign tours and recording projects.
Finally, in 1974, they fled to Paris with their two daughters. Four
years later, their Soviet citizenship was revoked.
After arriving in the West, "he was like a little boy, laughing,
shouting, pinching himself to make sure these really were the
streets in Paris," the late violinist Yehudi Menuhin recalled in
the 1996 book "Unfinished Journey: Twenty Years Later."
Still, exile took its toll on Rostropovich.
"When Leonid Brezhnev stripped us of our citizenship in 1978, we
were obliterated," Rostropovich recalled in a 1997 interview in
Strad magazine. "Russia was in my heart — in my mind. I
suffered because I knew that until the day I died, I would never
see Russia or my friends again."
Indeed, he was unable to attend Shostakovich's funeral in
1975.
But in 1989, as the Berlin Wall was being torn down, Rostropovich
showed up with his cello and played Bach cello suites amid the
rubble. The next year, his Soviet citizenship was restored, and he
made a triumphant return to Russia to perform with Washington's
National Symphony Orchestra, where he was music director from 1977
to 1994.
When hard-line Communists tried to overthrow then-Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev in 1991, Rostropovich rushed back to Moscow
without a visa and spent days in the Russian parliament building to
join those protesting the coup attempt.
In his early to mid-70s, he still had the energy of a middle-age
man. He recorded the six Bach solo suites for the first time when
he was 70. Five years later, he performed 16 concerts in 11 cities
in 28 days, crossing the United States twice and logging nearly
10,000 miles.
Asked by The Associated Press during the 2002 tour about his sleep,
he replied in his accented English: "Normally ... four hours for me
(is) absolutely enough."
Finckel recalled that after the release of the Bach recordings,
Rostropovich celebrated with a feast at a hotel until 2 a.m., then
reserved a meeting room for 4 a.m. in order to practice his
cello.

Ever
the bon vivant with a big smile and twinkling blue eyes, he was
known for his love of women and drink.
"He is a passionate man, and he has a real lust for life, and his
marriage is stronger because of it," his daughter Olga said when
asked by the Internet Cello Society in 2003 about his loves in
life. "What they have together is very precious, and nothing can
destroy it."
Mstislav Leopoldovich Rostropovich was born March 27, 1927, in Baku
in then Soviet Azerbaijan. His mother was a pianist. His
grandfather and father, Leopold, were cellists. One memorable photo
shows him as an infant cradled in his father's cello case. He
started playing the piano at age 4 and took up the cello at about
7, later studying at the Moscow Conservatory. Bach Cello Suite No. 1 -
Courante
"When
I started learning the cello, I fell in love with the instrument
because it seemed like a voice — my voice," Rostropovich told
Strad magazine.
He made his public debut as a cellist in 1942 at age 15, and gained
wide notice in the West nine years later when the Soviets sent him
to perform at a festival in Florence, Italy.
Life magazine reported the 24-year-old "stirred the audience to
warm applause." The New York Times critic said his music was "first
class. His tone was big, clean and accurate. ... His musical style
seemed to be ardent and intense."
He developed close musical relationships with contemporary
composers, inspiring some 100 works, from Shostakovich, Prokofiev
and Benjamin Britten — as well as from some not-so-famous
composers.
During the 2002 interview with AP, he spoke about Shostakovich, who
endured part of Nazi Germany's siege of Leningrad during World War
II and battled for individual expression in Josef Stalin's Soviet
Union.
Suffering is essential for art, Rostropovich said. "You know
creators, composers, need a palette for life, a color for life. If
he (is) only happy with his life, I think that he (does not fully)
understand what is happiness."
Rostropovich's work for humanity didn't stop with the fall of the
Soviet Union. In 1991, he and his wife established the
Vishnevskaya-Rostropovich Foundation to help improve health care
for children in former Soviet states.
Rostropovich received numerous awards, including the U.S.
Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1987 and a knighthood conferred on
him that year by Britain's Queen Elizabeth II on his 60th
birthday.
On the cellist's 80th birthday, the government newspaper
Rossiiskaya Gazeta published a letter Solzhenitsyn wrote in May
1973 after the author and his wife moved out of the Rostropoviches'
house.
"Once more I repeat to you and Galiya my delight at your
steadfastness, with which you endured all the oppression connected
with me and did not allow me to feel," Solzhenitsyn wrote. "Once
again I am grateful for the years of shelter with you, where I
survived a time that was very stormy for me, but thanks to the
exceptional circumstances I all the same wrote without
interruption."
In addition to his wife, whom he married in 1955, survivors include
their daughters, Olga and Elena.