Rachmaninoff made his first tour of the
United States as a pianist in 1909, an event for which he composed the
Piano Concerto No. 3 (Op. 30, 1909) as a calling card. This successful tour made him a popular figure in America.
Following the
Russian Revolution of 1917, which meant the end of the old Russia, and the loss of his estate, on
22 December 1917, Rachmaninoff with his wife and two daughters left
Saint Petersburg for
Helsinki on an open sledge, having only a few notebooks with sketches of his own compositions. Then he took a train to
Stockholm, arriving there for Christmas. They never returned to their homeland. Rachmaninoff then settled in
Denmark and spent a year giving concerts in
Scandinavia. He left from
Kristiania (
Oslo) to
New York on
1 November 1918, which marked the beginning of the American period of the composer's life. After Rachmaninoff's departure, his music was banned in the
Soviet Union for several years. His compositional output slowed, partly because he was required to spend much of his time performing to support his family, but mainly because of
homesickness; he felt that, when he left Russia, it was as if he had left behind some of his inspiration. A more obvious reason to cut down on composing was that he was in great demand as a concert pianist, and touring took most of his time and energy. While still in Russia, he had had about ten pieces in his piano repertoire (that is, of other composers; in Russia he mostly performed his own compositions). When he came to the US, he re-invented himself as a concert pianist; in fact he became one of the top pianists of his generation, the generation that is now referred to as the Golden Age of Piano Playing.
Rachmaninoff played most of his public performances on
Steinway & Sons pianos. He owned two New York Steinways D-274 in his Beverly Hills home on Elm Drive, he also owned a New York D in his New York home, however, in 1933, he chose a Hamburg D for his new home,
villa Senar, in
Switzerland.
After emigration, Rachmaninoff had an extremely busy concert schedule. He played over a thousand solo piano concerts in America, in addition to his tours in Europe. He made over one hundred studio recordings of his own music as well as the music of his favorites,
Chopin and
Beethoven, among others. Due to his busy concert career, Rachmaninoff had a decreased output as composer. Between 1892 and 1917 (living mostly in Russia), Rachmaninoff wrote thirty-nine compositions with
opus numbers. Between 1918 and his death in 1943, while living in the U.S. and Europe, he completed only six. His revival as composer became possible only after he built himself a new home,
Villa Senar on
Lake Lucerne, Switzerland, where he spent summers from 1932 to 1939. There, in the comfort of his own villa which reminded him of this family estate
Ivanovka back in Russia, Rachmaninoff composed the
Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini.
Settling in the U.S., Rachmaninoff began making recordings for
Thomas Edison in 1919, recording on an upright piano that the inventor admitted was below average; however, the discs provided the composer with some much-needed income. The next year he signed an exclusive contract with the
Victor Talking Machine Company and continued to make recordings for Victor until February 1942.
In 1931, together with other Russian exiles, he helped found a music school in Paris which would later bear his name, the
Conservatoire Rachmaninoff. His
Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, today one of his best-known works, was written in his home, Villa Senar,
Switzerland in 1934. He went on to compose his
Symphony No. 3 (Op. 44, 1935–36) and the
Symphonic Dances (Op. 45, 1940), his last completed work.
Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra premiered the
Symphonic Dances in 1941 in the Academy of Music. Rachmaninoff fell ill during a concert tour in late 1942, and was subsequently diagnosed with advanced
sarcoma.
Rachmaninoff and his wife became American citizens on
1 February 1943. His last recital, given on
17 February 1943 at the Alumni Gymnasium of the
University of Tennessee in
Knoxville, prophetically featured
Chopin's Piano Sonata No. 2 in B flat Minor, which contains the famous
Funeral March. A statue called "Rachmaninoff: The Last Concert", designed and sculpted by Victor Bokarev, now stands in World Fair Park in Knoxville as a permanent tribute to Rachmaninoff.
As Rachmaninoff became more and more aware of the fact that he would never again return to his beloved homeland, he was overwhelmed with
melancholia. Most people who knew him later in life described him as the saddest man they had ever known. In a 1961 interview, conductor
Eugene Ormandy declared:
"Rachmaninoff was really two people. He hated his own music and was usually unhappy about it when he performed or conducted it in public so that the public saw only this side of him. But, among his close friends, he had a very good sense of humor and was in good spirits." http://www.compactdiscoveries.com/CompactDiscoveriesArticles/Ormandy.html