Artur Rubinstein - Chopin Mazurkas
In the eighteen years since his death in Switzerland in 1982 aged 95,
Artur Rubinstein's musical and personal reputation has been subjected to
critical reappraisal Such posthumous re-evaluations are perhaps the inevitable result
of almost universal popularity, but despite the attempts to demythologise him,
Artur Rubinstein remains for many the greatest Chopin player of the last
century. It was an accolade that Rubinstein prized, but in truth, the acclaim
that he took for granted as an old man was hard-won and had taken a lifetime to
achieve, When Rubinstein began programming Chopin in the early 1900's, contemporary
critics considered his playing too dry, objective, literal, and lacking in
poetry. The same criticisms were also levelled against Busoni, Hofmann, and
later Rachmaninov. All belonged to a new generation of pianists who were making
conscious efforts to divorce themselves from the performance tradition that had
grown up in the years after Chopin's death Chopin himself had virtually
abandoned his concert career in the 1830's owing to ever-increasing physical
frailty, earning his living instead by teaching By the end of the 19"
century, Chopin's pupils had perpetuated what Rubinstein was to describe as
'the wrong tradition' - characterised by excessive rubato, exaggeration and
textual tampering. Any liberty was permissible - and even encouraged ?and many
leading pianists of the day such as Paderewski and Pachmann confused licence
with freedom.
Chopin's music formed part of Artur Rubinstein's cultural heritage, but
although born in Lodz in 1887 and Polish by birth, Artur Rubinstein was by
training a product of the great 19" century German school of piano playing
After some rather unfortunate experiences with inadequate teachers in Poland,
Rubinstein left for Berlin under the protection of the great violinist and
colleague of Brahms - Joseph Joachim. Joachim was instrumental in Rubinstein's
introduction to Heinrich Barth, one of the most important pedagogues in Berlin whose later pupils
included Wilhelm Kempff. The teacher/pupil relationship could hardly be
described as cordial. Barth attempted to lay down solid technical and
intellectual principles for the young pianist, but Rubinstein rebelled against
Barth's tough, Germanic discipline and was unwilling to submit to the boring
but necessary technical work demanded. Despite their differences, the boy prospered
and in 1899 began his professional career after a successful debut in the Great
Hall of the Berlin Hochschule playing Mozart's A Major Concerto under the
watchful eye of Joachim After six unhappy years with Barth, Rubinstein left Berlin in 1903 and returned to Poland. For then on, he was on
his own. He gave a series of concerts in Paris in 1904 and travelled to America for the first time in
1906. It was not a great success. The audiences gave him a warm reception, but
the critical response was far less ecstatic. Later Rubinstein would sum up the
tour philosophically by explaining "I was not a prodigy any more, and I
was not a mature artist. The critics were severe, much too severe. I thought I
had lost America forever".
Rubinstein eventually settled in Paris before the First World War becoming
the darling of the avant-garde championing music by de Falla, Debussy, Ravel, Stravinsky,
and Szymanowski - works that he virtually abandoned later. He appeared
successfully in Berlin in 1910 and made his London debut at the Bechstein [now Wigmore] Hall in 1912. At the
beginning of the War, Rubinstein was in London, but left for Paris to join the Polish
Legion. He might have become one of the army cut down in the slaughter, but
fortune intervened. The Legion had been disbanded and Rubinstein returned to London and secured a series of
concerts in Spain. He returned there in
1916, playing over one hundred recitals and in subsequent years repeated the
success in South
America. He
later admitted that these early concerts were littered with wrong notes, but to
his Spanish and Latin American audiences, temperament matter more than technical
accuracy.
By the 1920's, Artur Rubinstein was firmly established on the international
concert circuit and was described in the 1924 edition of Modern Music and Musicians
as 'one of the most celebrated pianists of our time? but as yet, he had
made no gramophone recordings. The old acoustic process was notoriously bad at
reproducing the full range of the modem piano, but with the advent of
electrical recording in 1925, many of the top instrumentalists - including
Rubinstein - began making discs for the major labels. Rubinstein's recordings
made before 1935 demonstrate a pianist of remarkable temperament and personality,
but one with occasionally fallible fingers and questionable musical judgement.
His first recording was of Chopin's Barcarole. The Gramophone magazine reviewed
the disc in 1928 and complained that "the pianist completely ruins the
piece by a most unnecessary rubato". It remains one of the few
negative criticisms of his fifty-year recording career.
For years Rubinstein had lived out of a suitcase, basing his playing on
temperament and natural facility but in 1932 at the age of 45 he married and
began to take stock of his artistic achievements. The technical accomplishments
of other pianists such as the young Vladimir Horowitz were capturing the public
imagination and leaving Rubinstein far behind "Was it to be said of me
that I could have been a great pianist? Was this the kind of legacy to
leave my wife and children?" He withdrew from the concert platform and
began working ferociously on his technique and when Rubinstein re- emerged in
1935; he was - according to the American critic Harold Schonberg - 'the
giant he could have been from the beginning'. For the next four decades
until his retirement in 1976, Rubinstein becoming one of the most respected
musicians of the century honoured by governments and lionised by an adoring
public. He gave thousands of recitals as both soloist and chamber musician and
left a huge legacy of recordings that continues to communicate his art to an
ever-growing army of supporters.
The Mazurkas
The Mazurkas of Chopin are amongst the composer's finest and most
personal contributions to the piano literature. There are no less than fourteen
published sets of Mazurkas that span and document Chopin's entire creative
output The traditional Mazurka originated in the 16" century, but by the
18'", it had settled into the form that Chopin would have recognised Two
or four parts of eight bars in three-four or three-eight time with a strong accent
on the second beat of the bar. Chopin transformed what was a rather crude
national dance into glittering tone poems that retain much of their Polish
flavour, but with an added veneer of Parisian good taste and sophistication However,
for Chopin they remained intense expressions of his Polish nationalism and
Robert Schumann once went so far as to describe them as "guns buried in
flowers".
Artur Rubinstein's pioneering recording of the Mazurkas was made in
1938/9 and although he subsequently re-recorded them twice more, his first version
remains a unique and spontaneous testament to a great artist at the height of
his career
Jonathan Dobson