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Anton Rubinstein was more controversial in his day as a composer and educator than he was as a pianist

and conductor. Consensus in the nineteenth century ranked him with Liszt and von Bülow in the
keyboard realm, and even if his works stirred debate, they were more widely performed than in the
twentieth century, when his reputation as a composer went into decline. Rubinstein wrote in most
genres, turning out hundreds of solo piano pieces, as well as several concertos for piano, violin and cello,
various chamber compositions, operas, ballets, and choral and vocal works. His output in many ways
parallels that of Tchaikovsky, and recent reexamination of Rubinstein's compositions augurs well for
rehabilitation of many of them and a favorable reassessment of his standing. Among his more important
works are his operas The Demon and Nero, his oratorios Paradise Lost and Tower of Babel, his "Ocean"
Symphony and Piano Concerto No. 4.

When Rubinstein was five years old, the family moved from the village of his birth to Moscow, and by
that time he was taking piano lessons from his mother. About two years later, he began study with
Alexander Villoing and by the age of ten had given his first concerts. In 1840, Villoing took the youth on a
successful three-year concert tour throughout Europe and England.

In 1844, young Anton, along with his sister Luba and brother Nikolai, both of whom also showed great
musical talent, traveled to Berlin for advanced studies. Anton took instruction in composition from
Siegfried Dehn until 1846, when his father, who had remained in Russia, died suddenly. After spending
two years in near-poverty teaching in Vienna, Anton returned to Russia to join his mother and siblings.

Around 1850, Rubinstein's talents drew the attention, then the patronage, of Duchess Elena Pavlovna,
sister-in-law of the Tsar. He lived in comfortable quarters at one of her palaces until 1854 and often
performed for her and her guests, including the Tsar. During his years there, he composed many works,
including the first three piano concertos, nearly fifty songs, and five operas, among them Stenka Razin
and Tom the Fool.

In 1854, Rubinstein went on a highly successful European concert tour. Five years later, he and the
duchess founded the Russian Musical Society, and, in 1862, the St. Petersburg Conservatory. Rubinstein
was its director for the first five years and regularly led concerts sponsored by the Russian Musical
Society. His views on a Russian nationalist style in both composition and performance led to conflicts
with Balakirev and the Mighty Handful composers.

Rubinstein remained busy in composition throughout these years, though he wrote no opera between
1862 and 1869. In the period 1867-1870, he made several successful concert tours of Europe and the
United States. He composed what is probably his best-known opera, The Demon, in 1871, its premiere
coming four years later. This so-called "fantastic opera" was a far cry from the 1869 sacred opera, with
German texts, Der Thurm zu Babel, and other similar works, possibly written by Rubinstein as if to
reinforce his Christian credentials -- the Rubinstein family had converted to Christianity from Judaism
some years before.

Until 1887, Rubinstein maintained a fairly active concert schedule, both as pianist and conductor. He
took up the directorship of the St. Petersburg Conservatory once again, that year. From 1891 to 1894 he
lived in Dresden and briefly taught Josef Hofmann. He returned to Russia in January, 1894, gravely ill
with heart disease. Later that year he died in Peterhof, a summer retreat where Rubinstein owned a
dacha.

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