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Unit5--txst-II.doc

1、TEXT II Her World on a string Debra Gordon1. It was hot that day in June 1999so hot that musicians inside Moscow Conservatorys Great Hall wrapped themselves in wet sheets during breaks to stay cool. But even before the last echoes of their music faded away, they knew theyd done justice to the Russia

2、n-born beauty whod come home to record her debut album.12. After the taping the orchestra and crew quickly fled to their air-conditioned hotel rooms. Now the magnificent hall was quiet.3. The 29-year-old cellist walked through the empty seats, her back straight as a dancers. She climbed onto the sta

3、ge and stood beneath the great domed ceiling. Closing her eyes, she listened. Through the silence she heard the musicRachmaninoff2,Tchaikovsky3.Then,soaring above them, she heard the deep, sonorous tones of her fathers virtuoso double bass.4. Ivan Kotov had been dead 14 years now. But standing where

4、 he had studied and performed, Nina sensed that he was near. She could feel his energy, along with the energy of all the great masters who had played here. Then she knew, at last, that the strange, whirlwind course of her life had a purpose after all.5. Ivan Kotov was a big man, both physically and

5、emotionally; it was said he handled the enormous double bass as though it were a violin.6. When Nina was three, she delighted her father by dropping candy through the holes of his bass. A few years later she discovered the sweet sound of the cello, an instrument , much like her fathers but closer to

6、 her own size.7. Invited to study cello at the Moscow Conservator at age seven, Nina practiced endlessly, until her fingers bled and her head pounded. She pushed furniture against her bedroom door to keep her mother and other distractions out. In her mind , “the music was the only thing that existed

7、,” she recalls in softly accented English.8. Yet even as Nina lost herself in the world of music, her father found more and more doors in that world closed to him. Proud and independent, Ivan fell out of favor with the Soviet authorities. Though he was widely regarded as a virtuoso, his reputation a

8、s a troublemaker interfered with his career and kept him from fulfilling the promise of his talent. Still, through it all, Nina idolized her father and deeply resented what she took to be signs of his rejection and increasing isolation.9. In 1985, when 15-year-old Nina won the prestigious Prague Int

9、ernational Competition, her joy was dampened by new of her fathers declining health. Hospitalized with a lung condition, Ivan died at the age of 35.10. To Nina, the cause of death was clear: her fathers spirit had been crushed under the that after Ivan was gone, she was made to suffer for his freewh

10、eeling behavior.11. Ninas triumph in Prague should have been her ticket to a glorious musical career. Instead, there were no accolades, no concerts scheduled. “ Only a few of my co-students would even consider to greet me,” she says. Her cello teacher arranged to meet her mother would even consider

11、to greet me,” she says. Her cello teacher arranged to meet her mother in the subway to avoid being overheard.”Get Nina out,” he whispered.” She has no future here.”12. Two years would pass before Nina got her chance. When her instructor heard she had been invited to visit friends in Germany, he gave

12、 her a letter of introduction to a colleague at the Cologne Conservatory. But before she could travel, she had to face the KGB4 and request visa.13. “What could there be anywhere else that does not exist here?” the government agents asked.14. Freedom! Thought Nina. Then, in a sweet voice, she answer

13、ed , “I just want to see another part of the world. Ill be back in a month.” Unbelievably, they let her go.15. And so, in the spring of 1989,Nina gave her state-owned cello back to the Moscow Conservatory. She packed a suitcase, took some Russian nesting dolls5 and a bottle of v0dka for gifts, grabb

14、ed her fathers beloved bass and, on a sunny spring afternoon, boarded a train for Germany.16. By now, Glasnost6 was beginning to spread a sense of hope and greater freedom across the Soviet Union. Nina was accepted at the Cologne Conservatory and studied there until 1990. Returning to Russia, she wa

15、s struck by the changes already sweeping the country7. Still, even in this new political climate, she realized her future lay elsewherein America.17. In 1992 she accepted a full tuition scholarship at Yale University8. But her days in the Ivy League9 were short-lived; after only two months the littl

16、e money shed saved ran out, forcing her to leave Yale. Living in New York, she became increasingly desperate as she searched for a job.18. One day a friend suggested that Nina , a natural beauty with high cheekbones and beguiling eyes, go to an open call at the Ford modeling agency . Nina rejected t

17、he idea at first; music alone was her love.19. But she had no money, no cello. She did, however , have her looks. So she dabbed on a bit of mascara for the first time in her life and reluctantly headed down to the tryout.20. The agency signed her up, and before long she was dashing from one photo sh

18、oot to another. After a short while with Ford, she left to join an agency called Click.21. Yet even with all the attention, Nina never too well to the world of haute couture10. This is nonsense, she thought as the cameras clicked and whirred. She felt embarrassed that her body had become simply a ha

19、nger for fancy clothes.22. “Ninka ,” as she called herself briefly, hardly recognized the glamorous creature that began to appear in America and European fashion magazines. “That girl is not really me,” she once told an autograph seeker.”Shes my twin sister.”23. With her first paycheckall of $300Nin

20、a bought a cheap cello, and from then on it was as much a part of her life as her makeup box. When she traveled she bought a second airline ticket for “Mr. Cello.”24. And when she wasnt sashaying down the catwalk or posing for the camera, she was practicing , losing herself in the music she could no

21、w cerate with her hands , not just hear in her head.25. Gradually, the musical side of her life took over, and in 1995 Nina quit modeling and moved to London to join her mother and stepfather. Her modeling friends were shocked. How could she simply quit?26. Nina, on the other hand , was exuberant. S

22、he never doubted she would return to music . “Id been a musician sine I was seven years old,” she says , “It possesses you.”27. Month after month she worked to get in shape for her new life. Then, in the spring of 1996, her mother and stepfather decided to give Ninas career a fitting send-off with a

23、 parity at their London home.28. There was champagne, caviar and, as the main attraction, a performance by Nina in the familys private concert hall. The event , held on Ivan Kotovs birthday, marked Ninas re-emergence in the world of music.29. It turned out to be a prelude for grander things to come.

24、 Four months after her musical “coming out ” party ,Nina got a call from her manager. As he explained, one of the musicians that scheduled to perform at an upcoming concert in Londons prestigious Wigmore Hall had suddenly dropped out. The show was only two weeks away. Could Nina fill in ?30. Dressed

25、 in a silk gown her mother had designed, Nina looked dazzling as she sat with her cello on the stage at Wigmore Hall. It was July 22,1996, and she was about to debut her own composition in the auditorium that had hosted the London debuts of nearly every major musician of the past 90 years.31. Lookin

26、g calm and relaxed, she touched her bow to the strings and launched into one demanding piece after another. Sergei Prokofiev11, Tchaikovskyand then, Nina Kotova: Sketches from the Catwalk”, a musical interpretation of her two dizzying years as a fashion model.32. The performance launched Nina on a w

27、hole new trajectory. Suddenly a media darling, she became the subject of articles not only in music magazines, but in the same slick glossies whose pages shed graced as a model.33. In the struggling classical-music business, Nina was a marketers dream. Photos on her 1999 debut album, recorded under

28、the domed ceiling in Moscow where her father had performed, show Nina draped in richly patterned silks and satins, makeup highlighting her gazelle eyes, Buyers found her irresistible: her first CD sold some 46,000copies, and amazing figure for a classical recording.34. Since she left modeling, Nina

29、has performed in major concert halls all over the world . She has lovingly retied Mr. Cello and now plays a $1-million 1696 Guarnri12. Shes living in a cavernous town house in Dallas and renovating another house not far away, where she will move after her upcoming marriage.35. For Nina ,through, her

30、 greatest triumph is that ,finally she as found happiness in a world of music.36. Wearing jeans and a gray silk kimono ,Nina glides into a spare bedroom at home and sits on a straight-backed chair. She pulls her cello close and begins to play.37. Now soaring, now tripping and dancing, the music weav

31、es a tale of delight and wonder. Nina closes her eyes as her mind floods with memoriesof Russia, of her childhood, of her father.38. She plays for him still. And somewhere ,she knows, Ivan Kotov is listening. 1,587 words Notes1. debut album (Paragraph1) the record of the music one played during his/

32、her debut And the word debut refers to the first public appearance of someone such as an entertainer or a sports player or of something new and important.2. Rachmaninoff (Paragrph4) Rachmaninoff, Sergei Vassilievich (1873-1943) was a Russian composer and conductor and one of the greatest pianists in

33、 history.3. Tchaikovsky (Paragraph4) Tchaikovsky, Peter Ilich (1840-1893) was the first Russian composer whose music became part of the standard concert program in western Europe. Tchaikovsky had a gift for creating memorable lyric melodies and for contrasting instrumental sounds, particularly those

34、 of wind instruments , in his orchestrations.4. KGB(Paragraph13) (State Security Committee the government agency of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) in charge of the Soviet political police from 1954 to 1991 5. Russian nesting dolls (Paragraph16) a traditional set of Matryoshka dolls,

35、which is open to reveal smaller dolls nested inside one another6. Glasnost (Paragraph17) (a Russian term often translated as “openness”) a key aspect of the policies introduced by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in 1985 to help win popular support for reform and change the Soviet system7. The change

36、s already sweeping the country (Paragraph17) here what is mentioned refers to the breakup of the USSR.8. Yale University (paragraph18) the third oldest institution of its kind in the United States .9. Ivy League (paragraph18) a group of eight highly competitive, traditional eastern schools in the Un

37、ited States with Prestigious academic and social reputations. Yale University is a member of the Ivy League.10. Haute couture (Paragraph22) fine dressmaking11. Sergei Prokofiev (Paragraph32) Prokofiev(1891-1953) was a major Russian composer. His first symphony, the Classical (1918), symphonic fairy

38、tale Peter and the Wolf (1936) , and cantata Alexander Nevsky (1939 ) are among the most popular classical works of the 1900s. Prokofievs music contains sharp humor, lyric melodies, and percussive use of instruments.12. Guarneri(Paragraph35) the name of a famous family of violinmakers who lived in C

39、remona, Italy Questions for discussion1. Why is music so important for Nina ?2. What was the cause of her fathers death ?3. Why did she finally quit modeling ?4. Nina appears to be well versed in music. What are the main causes of her success?5. In what way does the passage end with regard to the relationship between Nina and her father?

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