Quote Originally Posted by dondublon View Post
I have a lot of things to explain, and, nevertheless, you may disagree with me.
In 1917 two revolutions happens in out country, in February and October. This mean social and economic catastrophe.
After this foreign invasion begins - american, english, french, chezh.
So, the music wasn't very important question at this time.
Stalin understood, that new war isn't very far, and began industrialization. The jazz music wasn't important again.

So, you wrote the truth, but not all the truth.

Also, you wrote:
In 1932, after a period of terror, jazz was finally rehabilitated.
Terror just begins. And the terror wasn't applied to musicians - it was against priests, aristocracy, rich peasants.

If you interested, there is a russian artistic film about jazz at this time - We Are from Jazz - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hello,

Thanks for your answer and for mentioning this film. I wish we could discuss together about this topic. I never meant that terror only targeted musicians, but my post focuses on musicians, that's why I stressed this point. Anyway I posted the second part of my post and wrote about the Great Purge of the late 40's : The Golden Age of Soviet Jazz (2/2) : Alexander Tsfasman (Александр Цфасман) on 78 rpm record
Your comments are welcome, they are really useful for me. Thanks.