老澳门六合彩开奖记录

Travel writer Sophy Roberts spent two years crossing the cold, harsh wilderness of eastern Russia in search of a piano鈥攁 gloriously absurd quest detailed in her absorbing modernist masterpiece, The Lost Pianos of Siberia. Now for the big question: why?

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Roberts with a piano near Kiaktha 漏 Michael Turek

He was murdered just after midnight. He鈥檇 been poisoned with potassium cyanide, shot several times, and he was then thrown in the icy Little Nevka river. That鈥檚 the killer鈥檚 account, anyway. His body was then embalmed 鈥 a privilege reserved for Russian leaders and Tsars 鈥 and he was buried in the imperial residence Tsarskoe Selo. Not bad for a Siberian peasant in the early 1900s. The embalming and the funeral didn鈥檛 long matter: two months later an uprising in St Petersburg would result in the abdication of Nicholas II. Revolution followed. Soldiers would later dig up Rasputin鈥檚 body, cart it off in a piano, and burn it in a nearby forest.

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Irkutsk was dubbed 鈥檛he Paris of Siberia鈥 in the nineteenth century 漏 Michael Turek

What stands out above? The brutal murder? Rasputin鈥檚 royal connection? Revolution? For journalist Sophy Roberts, it鈥檚 the piano. That the story features only as a footnote in her masterful travelogue .

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Sophy Roberts chronicles the rise and fall of the world鈥檚 biggest country through its relationship with the instrument. 漏 Michael Turek

The book follows Roberts on a two year search for any interesting pianos that remain in Siberia 鈥 from the instrument鈥檚 introduction by Catherine the Great in 1774 until the Red October state factory stopped its production in 2004.

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House of Culture, Kolyma 漏 Michael Turek

Over the centuries, many of the region鈥檚 instruments were stolen, used as firewood, sold for food, or last seen fleeing atop trains as revolution took hold. But in seeking out the few pianos that remain, Roberts cleverly chronicles the rise and fall of the world鈥檚 biggest country through its relationship with the instrument. It鈥檚 a beguiling blizzard of modernist travel literature and cultural conservation.

鈥淢y book is mad in so many ways,鈥 the 47-year-old journalist is explaining to 老澳门六合彩开奖记录 over Zoom from her home in Dorset, England. 鈥淭he money, the madness, it simply does not add up.鈥

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Sophy Roberts and Michael Turek on a Trans-Siberia train 漏 Michael Turek

It doesn鈥檛. It sounds more like a drunken bet: visit Siberia during the winter and try to find an instrument worthy of the talents of Odgerel Sampilnorov, a sublime young pianist from Mongolia. It鈥檚 an absurd premise. Gloriously absurd. Made even more so by Siberia's myths, its often untrusting locals, and Roberts鈥 insistence on working using traditional journalistic techniques. Just look: 鈥淚 backtracked a lot, a lot,鈥 Roberts says, 鈥淚 wasn't trying to write and report this book using telephones. I was trying to do it by knocking on doors and finding a human connection.鈥

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Leonid Kaloshin is a retired Aeroflot navigator, who moved to the Altaian village of Ust-Koksa in the late 80s. He is currently building a concert hall at the back of his house. 漏 Michael Turek

A long way from Moscow

Retracing your steps when you鈥檙e slow-pacing across an eleventh of the planet鈥檚 landmass 鈥 from Ekaterinburg to who knows where (to paraphrase Anton Checkov, whose quip Roberts鈥 uses as her own parameters of Siberia) 鈥 is difficult and demanding. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a long way from Moscow,鈥 the locals would often tell her, meaning both in temperament and distance.

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Sub-zero temperatures in the Altai mountains 漏 Michael Turek

Coldest place on earth

Wider than Australia and with forest fires that produce clouds larger than the EU, we鈥檙e told, this vast, snow-quilted region is home to some of the coldest cities on Earth 鈥 a harsh, unforgiving expanse of icy isolation. Ideal, some Tsars believed, for a penal exile system; a void from which few prisoners would ever return. But, as Roberts discovers, it鈥檚 a place where pianos still manage to wash up from 鈥渢he high-tide mark of nineteenth-century European romanticism鈥.

鈥淥ne moment when I was up in a place called Lake Numto, which it's hard to get to, properly hard,鈥 effuses Roberts. This is a journalist who鈥檚 filed stories from Papua New Guinea, Sao Tome and Principe and the fringes of Antarctica. 鈥淭here's no there's no bus, train or anything else in.鈥

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Chasing pianos by helicopter 漏 Michael Turek

Roberts had flown in by helicopter, chasing rumour of a piano. Shortly after arriving, however, she got a call from someone she had tried to track down two weeks earlier. She headed back, retracing the first 20-30 miles by snowmobile and then hitching rides with oil and gas workers to complete her journey.

Travels into Russian Far East

But by that point, Roberts was enchanted. Just as Russia had fallen under the spell of the piano through the 鈥渂rilliant, passionate, demonic鈥 performances of Hungarian virtuoso Franz Linzt, so Roberts seems unshakably snow-blinded by her own quest. 鈥淥nly when I started travelling deep into the Russian Far East did I realize I could no more unsnag the idea of Siberian lost pianos than set out coatless into cold so extreme it makes your tears freeze into the lines around your eyes,鈥 she writes. For the reader, it鈥檚 hard not to be drawn into her snowstorm too.

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The author on Lake Baikal 漏 Michael Turek

Travels of the imagination

Raised alongside two sisters on the west coast of Scotland, Roberts鈥 upbringing was a creative, bookish one. Her father was a writer and a fish farmer; her mother a painter. All three were brought up in such a way that they were encouraged to fill their own time. The family didn鈥檛 have the means or time to travel. They didn鈥檛 have a TV. But every night, without question, Roberts鈥 father would read to them. She fondly recalls stories like The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett and The Faraway Tree series by Enid Blyton. 鈥淭ravels of the imagination,鈥 as Roberts calls it. 鈥淚 definitely got my sense of adventure from books.鈥

Portra 400
The quest began following a conversation in a tent in Mongolia with a brilliantly talented young musician 漏 Michael Turek

There were other itchy-feet influences too: an errant uncle who disappeared whilst walking in the Pyrenees; a great-grandfather who crossed the Yukon. So it was somewhat inevitable that at 18, Roberts would use the 拢3000 her grandfather left her to travel across India and Nepal.

Becoming a travel writer

鈥淚t was a complete epiphany,鈥 Roberts says of the year-long trip, 鈥渁nd it was immediate.鈥 Encouraged by her father, Roberts would send home a letter each week via the Poste Restante system. It was this regular correspondence that is likely to have shaped Robert鈥檚 writing voice. 鈥淛ust be honest: write, write,鈥 her father had enthused. 鈥淒on't think of me as your father, just write and tell us how it is, tell us everything.鈥

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Novosibirsk State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre is the largest opera house in Russia. 漏 Michael Turek

Siberian labour camp musicians

Roberts does just that in The Lost Pianos of Siberia too. Fluid and unflinching, it鈥檚 an absorbing read; a book that deftly balances chiaroscuro, light and dark. One such instance is when Roberts is in Akademgorodok, searching for the last instrument of Vera Lotar-Shevchenko, a French-born pianist sent to a Siberian labour camp for 鈥渁nti Soviet agitation and propaganda鈥. In the Gulag, Lotar-Shevchenko was said to have pined for her piano so much that her fellow prisoners 鈥渃arved a keyboard into her wooden bunk with a kitchen knife so she could practise silently at night.鈥

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The young generation of indigenous reindeer herder, photographed in Khanty-Mansiysk. 漏 Michael Turek

The day she was released she walked straight to a nearby music school, still wearing 鈥渉er convict鈥檚 quilted pea coat鈥, and asked to play the piano. 鈥淰era sat at that instrument for one, maybe two hours,鈥 Roberts writes. 鈥淪he played without stopping, laughing and crying, the recall of her repertoire note-perfect as her stubby fingers behaved with the same exhilarating precision as they had before her arrest. [...] It was like every part of her was being lost to the music, as if she could see everything all at once.鈥 Roberts doesn鈥檛 shy away from the horrors that haunt 鈥淭he Gulag Archipelago鈥 either: we read in detail about the murders; the starvation; the convicts chained to prison walls; the enemies locked into rooms and sprayed with water so they鈥檇 freeze to death. It鈥檚 not a book for the soft of heart.

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The Trans-Siberian railway 漏 Michael Turek

Roberts is an assured storyteller and during our call she is fastidious with her replies 鈥 a number of times she reaches for a book to double check a quote, or asks her assistant Serena to look something up to confirm it. But, just as in the book, there are times when her answers bloom with poetry, like a murmuration of starlings swooping across the conversation.

Keeping piano playing alive

鈥淩oots matter whether where a tree or a human being. We're always looking for those things which stabilise us鈥攁nd that includes culture,鈥 Roberts says when asked whether pianos need to be played to be kept alive. 鈥淭hat is why I think these instruments matter: not just as a sort of dusty thing in a corner that you look at, even if it sounds bad, the act of playing it is taking that child back to the grandmother's story. We forget our stories too quickly, too easily, and it's only through history that we learn how to behave鈥攐r should.鈥

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A child playing in the snow in Tobolsk 漏 Michael Turek

After India and Nepal, Roberts鈥 own story took her to Oxford University where she read English literature, but by now, she knew she wanted to travel more. Roberts believed photography would be her ticket to freedom, so she undertook a postgraduate course at the London School of Photojournalism. Whilst studying there, she contacted Jessica Mitford 鈥 one of the Mitford sisters, the six aristocratic siblings that fascinated England between the two World Wars 鈥 for an interview. Mitford ended up hiring Roberts as a British researcher.

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Concert-goers in the lobby of the Novosibirsk State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre. 漏 Michael Turek

鈥淲orking for her, I actually discovered [...] that I was a writer, not a photographer. I just didn't have that magic dust that a photographer needs, but I had the sense of inquiry that a journalist needs,鈥 says Roberts. She formalised her career choice by studying journalism at Columbia University in New York City. It was Mitford, however, who had taught Roberts about her most vital journalistic tool. 鈥淚f you are gracious towards the people that you are interviewing, they respond to that first and foremost,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 still have in my files all these wonderful faxes that [Mitford] used to write 鈥 and she was going for the jugular 鈥 she was tough, she was real tough, but she always did it within the frame of grace.鈥

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Old Believers 漏 Michael Turek

Russia's historical timeline

She manages to reframe the vast tremors of Russia鈥檚 widescreen historical events 鈥 The Decembrist revolt; the execution of Tsar Nicholas II; the Siege of Leningrad; the millions killed in the Gulags 鈥 through the personal aftershocks still reverberating today. It's only by meeting the little-known piano tuners, the Nenets authors, the inquisitive geologists, the arguing twitchers, the local poets and the Old Believers that Roberts discovers that the story of the instrument popularised by Catherine the Great isn't over, there's just a fermata scrawled above the last note.


鈥溾楾o play the piano鈥欌, writes Roberts, 鈥渕eant having your fingerprints taken when you first arrived at [a Gulag] camp.鈥 But as her wonderful book suggests, pianos have left their fingerprints all over Siberia too. It鈥檚 just taken someone like Roberts to put everything on record.
The Lost Pianos of Siberia is available from .

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