BBC Music Magazine

Welcome

o get an idea of the astonishing longevity of Stravinsky’s career, it’s worth setting it within the context of global events. When the Russian composer hit the Parisian headlines with the premiere in June 1910, Robert Scott and Roald Amundsen were both setting off from Europe in their bids to become the first explorers to reach the South Pole; at the other end of the timeline, his final appearance as a conductor, in May 1967, fell in the same month that The Beatles released their album. Times change, and Stravinsky most certainly changed with them. As Erik Levi explores on p26, his ballets could always be relied upon to produce the unexpected, whether pushing into new rhythmic territory or doffing a cap to the greats of the past. But perhaps the most potent mark of his genius is the fact that, well over a century after its premiere, still sounds so strikingly new.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Music Magazine

BBC Music Magazine1 min read
Welcome
Can it be the June issue already? I’m delighted to be back in the Reviews Editor’s chair, which has been kept warm by Steve Wright. My thanks to him for keeping these pages full of great music, too, this issue included. You’ll be dazzled by the lates
BBC Music Magazine1 min read
Heavenly Holst Or Cosmic Cox? The Choice Is Yours…
Holst’s 150th anniversary later this year will doubtless bring countless performances of the world’s most famous astrology-inspired work (see p48). But for those who may find moon phases, Librans and all that a touch mumbo-jumbo for their liking, Pro
BBC Music Magazine1 min read
BBC Music Magazine
Plus our favourite work depicting a particular place (see p64) Editor Charlotte Smith Bax’s Tintagel Deputy editor Jeremy Pound Mendelssohn’s Hebrides Overture Reviews editor Michael Beek John Williams’s A Hymn to New England Multi-plantform content

Related