The best classical music book releases 2019 - BBC Music MagazineIn 2023, in the context of war and mass emigration of artists protesting against Russias invasion of Ukraine, this book needs to be recognised as an important historical and social study. It reopens the question of whether to stay means to collaborate and whether it is possible for a musician to stay honest despite the regime. Can the artist separate themselves from the country they live in? The editor of the book, Maria Matalaev, Berlinskys granddaughter, compiled a balanced volume comprising Berlinskys own memoirs, as well as accounts of him by his family and friends. - Dr Darya Protopopova, London Group of Multilingual Writers - Read the full reviewOn so many levels, this is one of the most fascinating books I have ever read: a history of the legendary Borodin Quartet, not coincidentally packed with musical wisdom enlightening, or at least food for thought, to any musician. Furthermore, it's a memoir of the extraordinary talent among both teachers and students of the Moscow Conservatory in the 1940s (Shostakovich, David Oistrakh and Rostropovich just some of the most famous); and - perhaps most intriguing of all - a candid portrait of the Borodin's long-standing cellist, Valentin Berlinsky. Conjured from a rich mix of sources - Berlinsky's diary, reviews, interviews published for the first time - what emerges from the book is a profound musician fanatically dedicated to the quartet and the repertoire it excelled in. 5 stars - Daniel Jaffe, BBC Music MagazineThe more I read, the more absorbed and touched I was. - Steven IsserlisHere is a book created with such passion that even those who question the place of music in today's world will have their faith restored. The Borodin Quartet was to the string quartet what Richter was to the piano, Oistrakh to the violin, Rostropovich to the cello. But the story of this Soviet ensemble - the first to come out of the USSR to give concerts abroad - was inextricably linked to the personality of its founder, the cellist Valentin Berlinsky. - Franck Mallet, ClassicaDespite the diversity of the contents, the book reads like a novel, plunging the reader into the daily constraints in which Soviet musicians were obliged to function. Berlinsky does not evade the multiple difficulties that constantly confront the Quartet but shows no bitterness towards his country which he always refused to leave. - Sebastien Foucart, Concertonet.comEnriched by numerous annexes and a discography, this book throws new light, remarkably well documented, on both an individual and a collective experience, undoubtedly unique in the history of the string quartet. - Patrick Szersnovicz, Diapason No.640Siberian childhood, musical apprenticeship in Moscow, war, the funeral of Stalin, greatness and subjugation, exceptional figures, tours abroad, requirements, success, advice from Shostakovich in person, all are abundantly reproduced here, but also ethics, pedagogy and thoughts on the profession. Certainly the most captivating document on the art of interpretation that we have seen in the last several years. - Frederic Gaussin, Lettre du musicien No.462