UN Orchestras Pull Tchaikovsky From Concerts Over Russia's War on Ukraine


Orchestras Pull Tchaikovsky From Concerts Over Russia's War on Ukraine​

By Emma Mayer On 3/9/22 at 5:33 PM EST

Several orchestras have recently announced changes to their concert programs, removing the legendary Romantic-era composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky from their lineups amid the Russian war on Ukraine.
Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine at the end of February, and several large companies and corporations have since cut ties with Russia in response. Even more support for Ukraine has been shown as citizens across the world have personally boycotted Russian-based goods or services, but some internet users say that the banning of 19th-century classical music might be taking it a step too far.
On Wednesday, Wales' Cardiff Philharmonic Orchestra announced it would be removing Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture" from a March 18 concert.
Tchaikovsky was a Russian composer of the Romantic Period, best known for his ballets, "The Nutcracker," "Swan Lake," and "Sleeping Beauty," as well as several more famous concertos and symphonies, including "1812 Overture." The composer died in 1893 in St. Petersburg, Russia.

A statement on the orchestra's official website said, "In light of the recent Russian invasion of Ukraine, Cardiff Philharmonic Orchestra, with the agreement of St. David's Hall, feel the previously advertised programme including the 1812 Overture to be inappropriate at this time."
The "1812 Overture" was written to celebrate Russia's defense against the invasion of Napoleon, and is notable for featuring a barrage of cannon fire in its composition.
The director for the orchestra, Martin May, told Newsweek, "The decision on this concert was very much based on here and now. A member of the orchestra has family directly involved in the Ukraine situation and we are trying to respect that situation during the immediate term. There were also two military themed pieces as part of the programme (Marche Slave and 1812) that we felt were particularly inappropriate at this time."
May added that another piece of Tchaikovsky's "Symphony No. 2," titled "Little Russian," was deemed offensive to Ukrainians. There are currently no plans to change any of the summer and autumn concerts featuring other Russian composers. "This is a one off decision made with the best of intentions," he said.

On Twitter, users have voiced their concerns about the move. YouTuber and podcaster Steven Crowder tweeted, "I get it. You don't like Putin. I don't, either. But why cancel Tchaikovsky? He's been dead for over 100 years. I guess even the dead aren't safe from being canceled."
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Another called out the cultural boycott, saying, "Tchaikovsky died 129 years before Putin decided to invade Ukraine. He was gay, liberal and ultimately rejected Russian nationalism. We must not allow our righteous hatred of the invasion turn into disgust at all things Russian or the Russian people."

In place of Tchaikovsky's work, the Cardiff Philharmonic will be playing John Williams' "The Cowboys Overture" and Czech composer Antonín Dvořák's "Symphony No. 8, Op. 88."
The Chubu Philharmonic Orchestra in Japan also announced that it will be replacing Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture" in its concert in central Japan this month, according to the Japanese newspaper, The Mainichi.
The Chubu Philharmonic also cited the war as the reason for the change. The orchestra's office told The Mainichi, "We stand with Ukraine by following the example of this piece, which is a wish for the freedom and independence of Finland, then under Russian rule."
It is reported it will add a different piece by Tchaikovsky from "The Nutcracker" ballet.
Newsweek reached out to the Cardiff Philharmonic Orchestra for further comment, but did not hear back in time for publication.


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Nothing is beautiful, sacred, or special to Current Year Philistines. If it isn't Fashionable Current Thing ooga booga jajaja, it must be thrown into the Memory Hole.

Liberals are nothing but barbarian animal neanderthals beneath their smug smartass skinvelope. They despise beauty, goodness, honesty, and truth. They worship hideousness, decadence, poison, and death.

The concepts of mercy and goodwill are as alien to them as quantum physics to a roach.

They are enemies of your mere existence. Act and prepare accordingly.
 
His music was very Western by Russian standards. I believe he was trained in Paris, so he was never considered a "Russian" composer per se.
To be fair, pre-Revolution the Russian elite and bourgeoisie were obsessed with everything French. You can see references to it in Tolstoy's work. In Ivan Ilyich, he specifically called it out. I'm assuming that's why Russians like ballet so much.
 
To be fair, pre-Revolution the Russian elite and bourgeoisie were obsessed with everything French. You can see references to it in Tolstoy's work. In Ivan Ilyich, he specifically called it out. I'm assuming that's why Russians like ballet so much.
Yep. French was even the language of the Czarist court. The Russian language was for filthy serfs and other assorted things.
 
People calling this freedom fries 2.0. I think that will be when Borscht gets called "freedom/liberty soup".
Wikipedia is going all in at saying borscht is AKSHUALLY Ukrainian because centuries ago back when the word "Ukrainian" just meant "borderlander" ("Ukraine" comes from Okraina, "borderland"), someone wrote that around Kiev the people ate what they call borscht. Never mind that even the Wikipedia article states that people in modern Poland, Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia alike ate borscht, no, it MUST be Ukrainian!

Damn, I love how these westerners are now rewriting history to spout the Ukrainian nationalist viewpoints on fucking everything, right down to using slogans like "Slava geroyim" which was mostly used by Ukrainian nationalists but now is promoted by globohomo megacorpations. Even now they try and minimize the role of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists in Nazi collaboration, mass murder of Polish people, and the Holocaust.
Are they trying to gin up hate for Russian people and culture so they have an easier time going to war with them in the future? This seems like something you'd do before/during a war. Internment of people with Russian ancestry when?
Very possibly, this is almost parodic levels of Russophobia. The neocon types embedded at the heart of the Western establishment hate Russia with the fury of a thousand suns, because many of their thought leaders (or their parents) are either literal Ukrainian Nazis who escaped after WWII thanks to the CIA or are Trotskyists/other people kicked out of pro-Moscow communist parties during the Cold War. Bill Kristol is a great example, so is that one neocon from the Bush administration who was at the Trump impeachment. All of them abandoned communist/fascist economics, but kept their belief in militarism, warfare, and hatred of Russia.
 
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