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When the World Stopped to Listen by Stuart Isacoff
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When the World Stopped to Listen

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When the World Stopped to Listen by Stuart Isacoff
Paperback $18.00
Mar 06, 2018 | ISBN 9780804170239

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    Mar 06, 2018 | ISBN 9780804170239

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  • Apr 18, 2017 | ISBN 9780385352192

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Praise

“Not only is Isacoff’s prose evocative, he is both a pianist and a historian of the piano. His descriptions are often music lessons in themselves.” —The New York Review of Books

“If you want to know why Cliburn played the way he played—and how his distinctive style helped him win—then Mr. Isacoff is your man.” —The Wall Street Journal

“A vivid tale of politics and music in high places.” —Financial Times
 
“Riveting. . . . [Isacoff] approaches the subject with the seasoned eye of a classical music journalist.” —Gramophone

“I have never read a more beautiful or penetrating description of Cliburn’s Moscow triumph. . . . [A] deeply human portrait. . . . Through this book, it seems we can finally know Van Cliburn.” —Tim Madigan, Fort Worth Star-Telegram

“Stuart Isacoff is a music scholar, and a superb one. . . . This was a fascinating and important event. . . . A juicy book.” —The National Review

“A page-turner that resonates long after the final sentence. . . . Compelling, historically vivid. . . . You simply must read this book.” —American Music Teacher

“Detailed and vivid. . . . Isacoff brings both a pianist’s insights and a historian’s rigor to an event that shook the musical world—indeed, the world at large.” —Classical Voice North America

“A great book about a great American musician who, in the tensions of Cold War, helped move our world from war to peace, from direct confrontation to peaceful coexistence.” —Sergei Khrushchev, author of Khrushchev in Power

“Exciting, thorough, and deeply moving. . . . A most satisfying experience.” —Emanuel Ax, Musician

“Stuart Isacoff lets us relive the career-birth of an American musical hero and a politically momentous event as profound as the collapse of the Berlin Wall. Beautifully written, this is an insider’s report of the onstage and offstage drama.” —André Watts, Concert Pianist

“Extensively researched and illuminating . . . revisits the 1958 Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow from a broader perspective, providing new information about that event and its elusive winner.” —Barbara Jepson, President, Music Critics Association of North America

“Vivid. . . . An insider narrative. . . . Isacoff compellingly details the various backstage intrigues.” —Los Angeles Review of Books

“A polished, chatty retelling of the most consequential competition in the political history of classical music. Isacoff pulls aside the curtain on the competition. . . . He combines a sharp, unsparing biographical eye with a mastery of the musical and social history of the time.” —Book Reporter

“A rare look at one of the most inspiring events in the history of music. It is the story of artists’ struggle and their victory over political intrigues and conspiracies and political hate.” —The Washington Book Review

“Beautifully written, this will undoubtedly be the reference book about the life of a pianist who, not unlike the Russian Sputnik satellites which shot to world fame as fast as they burnt out, left a blinding light in piano history.” —Pianist (UK)

“Well-researched. . . . Recreates what seems like a time so long ago.” —New York Journal of Books

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