Rachmaninoff should have composed much much more -and the world would have been all the richer for it.
I know he suffered from depression -but I don't understand why -he had everything going for him -??
leading me to think it was mental illness related.
Well depression is a mental illness.
Depression could be a mental illness, but sometimes it's a natural adaptation process(life lessons), something that is experienced as pain, but in retrospect necessary to improve. People without any selfreflection are less to suffer from 'mental illnesses'. Prozac is keeping people happy but at what cost?
But ANYWAYS, the reason why he was depressed was because when he composed his first Symphony, it was performed by a drunk conductor who's name was like Alexander Glasnov or something.
Yes and no. If your mom dies and you get depressed and stay that way for a few weeks, that's not a mental illness. That's a reaction to something that happened. Depression is a mental illness when it doesn't have a definite reason. When your mom dies, if someone asks you why you're sad, you say, "My mom just died ", but when you have depression as a mental illness, if someone asks you why you're sad, you just don't know.
Alexander Glazunov I think you mean, and in my book a better composer (even when drunk).
If you say so
According to the DSM (diagnostic statistical manual for mental disorders), after about two weeks it's considered a mental disorder. But of course it's not like a fine line or anything.
That's just spouting bullshit. Depression isn't a necessary part of life, and telling someone that it's better for them to be depressed and create beautiful music than to be happy and maybe not is just ridiculous. It's better for you, maybe, because you don't have to pay the cost of the art. But Rachmaninoff didn't owe anyone anything. Assuming the only reason Rachmaninoff was such an amazing composer is because he was depressed, I would still, if given the chance, go back and give him some Prozac, even if that meant he never composed anything ever again. I'd be sad, yes, that his music was gone, but his happiness is more important than him creating music.Now, that's making the assumption that he wouldn't have composed if he hadn't been depressed, which I disagree with. He might've had a slight happier tone to his music, in general, but the ability he had could express any emotion, not just grief.
Which would I rather be? Bipolar (which I am) or chemically "cured"? I'll take the bipolar, thank you -- and fortunately my family is supportive of my choice.
My two cents is that I believe that Rach would not have been the composer he was without the mental challenges and makeup he had. Those things influenced him and it came out in spades in the music.