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March 10, 2013Cliburn and Gagarin were victims as well as heroes of the cold war they helped to thawThe gangly young American Van Cliburn's victory in the inaugural International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow in 1958, six months after the first Sputnik went into orbit, was more than just a pianistic event. The innocent Texan (who died last month) suddenly became one of the key players in the cold war - or a cold war anti-warrior, an American emissary in a counter-war of peace and culture. While nuclear submarines and missiles squared up to each other across the Bering Strait, Van Cliburn's sensitive fingers became one of the prime instruments of American soft power, matching or even outdoing the Soviets at what they thought they did best.Posted by Jim Zellmer at March 10, 2013 2:40 AM Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas Comments
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