Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Frontispiece
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Note on Transliteration and Sources
- 1 Earliest and Lifelong Russophilia
- 2 Britten and Shostakovich, 1934–63
- 3 Britten and Prokofiev
- 4 Britten and Stravinsky
- 5 Hospitality and Politics
- 6 Pushkin and Performance
- 7 Britten and Shostakovich Again: Dialogues of War and Death, 1963–76
- Conclusion
- Appendices
- 1 Letter from Lord Armstrong of Ilminster
- 2 Interview with Alan Brooke Turner
- 3 Interview with Keith Grant
- 4 Interview with Lord Harewood
- 5 Interview with Victor Hochhauser
- 6 Interview with Lilian Hochhauser
- 7 Letter from Sir Charles Mackerras
- 8 Interview with Donald Mitchell
- 9 Interview with Sir John Morgan
- 10 Interview with Gennady Rozhdestvensky
- 11 Interview with Irina Shostakovich
- 12 Letter from Boris Tishchenko
- 13 Interview with Oleg Vinogradov
- 14 Interview with Galina Vishnevskaya
- 15 Letters from Dmitri Smirnov and Elena Firsova
- 16 Letter from Vladislav Chernushenko
- 17 Britten's Volumes of Tchaikovsky's Complete Works
- Bibliography and Sources
8 - Interview with Donald Mitchell
from Appendices
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 October 2017
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Frontispiece
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Note on Transliteration and Sources
- 1 Earliest and Lifelong Russophilia
- 2 Britten and Shostakovich, 1934–63
- 3 Britten and Prokofiev
- 4 Britten and Stravinsky
- 5 Hospitality and Politics
- 6 Pushkin and Performance
- 7 Britten and Shostakovich Again: Dialogues of War and Death, 1963–76
- Conclusion
- Appendices
- 1 Letter from Lord Armstrong of Ilminster
- 2 Interview with Alan Brooke Turner
- 3 Interview with Keith Grant
- 4 Interview with Lord Harewood
- 5 Interview with Victor Hochhauser
- 6 Interview with Lilian Hochhauser
- 7 Letter from Sir Charles Mackerras
- 8 Interview with Donald Mitchell
- 9 Interview with Sir John Morgan
- 10 Interview with Gennady Rozhdestvensky
- 11 Interview with Irina Shostakovich
- 12 Letter from Boris Tishchenko
- 13 Interview with Oleg Vinogradov
- 14 Interview with Galina Vishnevskaya
- 15 Letters from Dmitri Smirnov and Elena Firsova
- 16 Letter from Vladislav Chernushenko
- 17 Britten's Volumes of Tchaikovsky's Complete Works
- Bibliography and Sources
Summary
London, 11 August 2008
The writer and publisher Donald Mitchell cbe (b. 1925) was Britten's friend and associate over many years. For a summary of their relationship, see BBLL 5, pp. 205–6.
Britten's interest in Russia and Russian music is unusual for an English composer. How would you explain it?
It was long-standing, and formed during his childhood. It derived from the overwhelming impact of Russian works on him as a young man and student. It was also part of a wider cultural phenomenon: a passionate, and selective, interest in Russia as a result of the Russian Revolution.
Was Frank Bridge an additional factor?
I don't remember Ben mentioning this, but Russian music must have been a topic they discussed from time to time given Bridge's extraordinarily wide interests and knowledge.
Why did Britten admire Tchaikovsky in particular?
Ben was enormously impressed by Tchaikovsky; his attitude was one of total admiration. He learned so much from him, and he was a constant presence in Ben's creative life. His enthusiasm for Tchaikovsky was quite amazing actually and very unusual for a young composer in this country in the 1930s. It was a passion that lived with him till his dying days. Ben was impressed by his orchestral sound and colour, and by the variety of orchestras involved in a big Tchaikovsky work. He felt that the endless challenges of Tchaikovsky's music – his originality of sound and form – were overlooked in performance, and this influenced how people listened to him: his popularity was therefore an invented and artificial one. Probably later in his life, when he was more aware of himself, Tchaikovsky's homosexuality also played a role.
How far did he admire other Russian composers?
He greatly admired Prokofiev: a vital, and often overlooked, creative influence. He never talked about Musorgsky. With Shostakovich, the Russian aspect was not the vital influence; the relationship might have happened anywhere. It derived from their mutual admiration for each other's music, and their philosophies of being a composer in the twentieth century. That mattered a great deal to Ben. He always had a very strong feeling that music should have a major role to play in the cultural life of a nation, which actually also meant in the politics of a nation.
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- Benjamin Britten and Russia , pp. 303 - 306Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2016