Alexey Shor (b.1970) Violin Concerto

Started by Alan Howe, Thursday 14 July 2022, 18:27

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Wheesht

I have a subscription to VAN magazine and have just tried copying and pasting the full text of the article, without illustrations, to see if I could make it fit in here. While this would work, I am loath to do it as it would be an infringement of copyright IMHO.   

Alan Howe

It sounds impractical to me, so unless someone has the time to make a summary of the article, I'd say let's wait until we can find another source or report.

Alan Howe


Christopher

Dear oh dear. Am happy to DM the article to anyone interested.  I am still working (it's 22:15 here) so really wouldn't have time to precis an already-well-written article, sorry.

Alan Howe


Alan Howe

If you send me the article by PM I'll produce a summary.

Alan Howe

Basically, the article reveals that:
(i) The music is has little substance (although there's little discussion of it);
(ii) The composer's influence stems from connections with Putin's Russia;
(iii) This influence not only facilitates the promotion of his own music but also serves as a propaganda tool of the Russian state;
(iv) His enormous wealth has enabled him to 'buy' the services of high-profile musicians.

Frankly, it's all very distasteful. A good way of registering our distaste might be to cease all discussion of his music.


semloh

Quote from: Alan Howe on Tuesday 17 September 2024, 10:25it's all very distasteful. A good way of registering our distaste might be to cease all discussion of his music.

Agreed.

Christopher

Glad to see that Private Eye shares our view:

THE [sic] Yehudi Menuhin School in Surrey is famous for educating children of advanced musical
talent; and for the past two years it has had an "associate composer" called Alexey Shor, described
by the school's music director, pianist Ashley Wass, as an artist of "exceptional craftsmanship"
whose involvement with the school was an "exciting opportunity".

Not everyone would agree. A Times reviewer in January 2020 described Shor as a "self-taught
composer" writing "would-be melodious 19th-century pastiches lacking all guts and spine". But
there's more to it than banal music, as pointed out in a recent investigation by online magazine VAN.
"Shor" was actually born Alexey Kononenko in the old Soviet Union and grew up not as a musician
but as a mathematician and eventual hedge-fund analyst who made a great deal of money - which
he has since used to pay for performances of works composed in his spare time.

In 2014 Shor obtained Maltese citizenship, a standard way for Russians to gain access to the EU,
and got involved with Konstantin Ishkhanov, an oil and gas baron who set up something called the
European Foundation for Support of Culture (EFSC), based in Malta. This funded a Malta
International Festival - to which western critics were shipped out expecting something Maltese, only
to find it run by Russians, featuring Russian or Armenian artists who played interminable amounts
of music by yes, er... Alexey Shor.

With bizarre quantities of money splashing around for such a niche classical music event, and half
the audience arriving in dark glasses and black limousines, it was, to say the least, er, an
atmospheric event. Just over two years ago the EFSC relocated to Dubai under the name Classical
Music Development Initiative, from where it now promotes music competitions with immense
prizes as well as performances of music by Shor and concert tours by pianist Wass.

It's all most... unusual. The Yehudi Menuhin School might do well to reconsider the "exciting
opportunity" of its ongoing connection.


(from Issue No.1635, 25 October-7 November 2024, in the "Music & Musicians" column on page 20...I wonder who writes that column?)

Mark Thomas

Thanks, Christopher. It's all very murky and, musically, moribund. Best avoided.