Legendary Russian cellist and emblem of resistance to the Soviet system Mstislav Rostropovich died on April 27, his spokesperson said. He was 80.
“He died in hospital today,” Natalya Dolezhal said.
Rostropovich had been ill for some time and had been receiving treatment at a Moscow cancer clinic.
He was born in Baku and studied in Moscow under the celebrated composers, Dmitry Shostakovich and Sergei Prokofiev. He went on to a glittering international career, much of it spent abroad after he was persecuted, then expelled in 1974 by the Soviet authorities.
He was hospitalised in February for a reported operation on a liver tumour and appeared pale and tired during television footage of his 80th birthday celebrations in Moscow.
Rostropovich was considered one of the greatest cellists of all time. His exploration of the tonal range of the instrument was unrivalled and he entered productive collaborations with some of the 20th century’s finest composers.
But Rostropovich will be equally remembered for his battle against the Soviet authorities, ending with his exile, and his dramatic return to the democratic new Russia.
Born on March 27 1927, to a musical family in Baku, capital of then-Soviet Azerbaijan, Rostropovich gave his first concert at the age of 13.
By the 1960s he was already on his way to winning over the rest of the world.
Then on October 31 1970, the cellist wrote an open letter to the newspaper Pravda defending author Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who had become the target of official abuse after receiving the Nobel Prize for literature.
Decades later, the cellist would declare: “The best thing I produced was not music, but that letter to Pravda. Since then I have had a clean conscience.”
But the letter, which was never published in the state-controlled press, made Rostropovich a marked man.
He was banned from the prestigious Bolshoi Theatre, barred from touring abroad and forbidden to conduct full orchestras. In 1974 he fled the Soviet Union with his wife and two daughters to settle in the United States.
From there, the musician began a campaign to win freedom for another larger-than-life Soviet dissident, Andrei Sakharov, who was confined to internal exile.
In 1978, Rostropovich was stripped of his Soviet citizenship for “systematic acts bringing harm to the prestige of the Soviet Union”.
In August 1991, just months from the collapse of Soviet power, he flew to Moscow to help oppose a coup by Communist hardliners.
A famous photograph showed him in front of Parliament along with other pro-democracy supporters, a rifle instead of his beloved cello in hand. — AFP