excerpt from 'Testimony- The memoirs of Shostakovich, as related to & edited by Solomon Volkov' pp. 25 (117 words)

excerpt from 'Testimony- The memoirs of Shostakovich, as related to & edited by Solomon Volkov' pp. 25 (117 words)

part of

Testimony- The memoirs of Shostakovich, as related to & edited by Solomon Volkov

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

25

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text excerpt

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It’s quite strange, but my tastes keep changing, and rather radically. Things that I liked quite recently I now like less, considerably less, and some I don’t like at all. So how can I speak of music that I heard for the first time several decades ago? For instance, I remember Shcherbachev’s piano suite, Inventions, written long ago in the early twenties. At the time it seemed rather good to me. I recently heard it by accident on the radio. There’s no inventiveness there at all. / And it’s the same with Prokofiev. So many of his works that I liked once upon a time seem duller now.

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excerpt from 'Testimony- The memoirs of Shostakovich, as related to & edited by Solomon Volkov' pp. 25 (117 words)

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