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The
remarkable Russian-born American pianist, Shura (Alexander Isaakovich)
Cherkassky, began piano training with his mother. While still a child,
he was taken by his family to the USA, where he continued his studies
with Josef Hofmann at the newly founded Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia.
After making his debut in Baltimore at the age of 11, he appeared as a
soloist with Waiter Damrosch and the New York Symhony Orchestra and performed
at the White House in Washington, D.C. in 1923.
Shura
Cherkassky made his first tour abroad in 1928 with visits to Australia
and South Africa. Although he also made a few recordings during the 1920's
and 1930's, his career did not really take off until after World War II.
By that time, the pianists, like Hofmann, who had learned from the 19th
century greats Liszt, Moszkowski, and others, were no longer around. Following
a major tour of Europe in 1946, he moved to London. Cherkassky was acknowledged
as the heir of that particular school of performance, and just as Franz
Liszt and the others had had their own idiosyncrasies, he had his own
individual style that seemed to give fresh meaning to everything he played.
He toured almost continually around the world during his career, making
some time nearly every year to take a holiday in Thailand. He made a successful
debut in Russia in 1976 and returned for subsequent tours in 1977 and
1987. He gave many recitals at New York's 92nd Street Y, which honoured
him in 1986 with the establishment of the Shura Cherkassky Recital Award
to be given annually to a gifted young pianist. On December 2, 1991, he
celebrated his 80th year with a recital at New York's Carnegie Hall in
a program of works by Schumann, Chopin, Bach-Busoni, Tchaikovsky-Pabst,
Josef Hofmann, and well-received encores.
As
one of the last representatives of the hallowed Romantic school of piano
virtuosity, Shura Cherkassky regaled audiences with a bravura technique
and singing tone in the grand Russian manner. He combined Romantic sensitivity
of touch with the power of a modern player, and he traveled easily between
works by the Romantics and those by Ives, Paul Hindemith, Boulez, and
Ligeti. This blend of talents served him well, particularly in works such
as Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition.
Aryeh Oron ©
SHURA
CHERKASSKY - THE PIANO'S LAST CZAR
BIOGRAPHY
OF SHURA CHERKASSKY BY ELIZABETH CARR
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