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Saturday, 11th November 2000
Concert given at St Cyprian's Church, Glentworth Street, London NW1.
Programme notes: copyright Kristian Hibberd 2001.
For Dmitri Dmitryevich Shostakovich the year 1963 was one of
relative compositional inactivity. The previous year had seen
perhaps his most overtly dissident work, the Thirteenth
Symphony (`Babi Yar'), premiered, and the resurrection of his
infamous opera Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District under the
new title Katerina Ismailova. The Fourth Symphony (composed in
1935-36), another work whose fate was directly affected by the
scathing 1936 article in Pravda `Muddle instead of Music', had
been premiered a year earlier in 1961. Together with the
composer's marriage to his third wife, Irina Supinskaya, in
December 1962, 1963 may well have been embarked upon with a
feeling of rejuvenation and hope. Yet, apart from the re-
orchestration of the Schumann Cello Concerto for Mstislav
Rostropovich and the orchestration of his song cycle of 1948,
From Jewish Folk Poetry, Shostakovich's only original
composition of that year was the Overture on Russian and
Kirghiz Folk Themes.
On a recent visit to the Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic to
commemorate the centenary of the republic's `voluntary
incorporation into Russia', Shostakovich had promised to write a
work to celebrate the occasion. During his visit the composer
witnessed at first hand the artistry of at least one of
Kirghizstan's distinguished folk musicians, and later recalled that
the Kirghiz S.S.R. was a place `where everyone sings'. The
experience of the folk music tradition of Kirghizstan appears to
have inspired Shostakovich to employ Kirghiz folk melodies in
this overture. That he also used a Russian theme perhaps
represents, musically, Kirghistan's integration with Russia.
Despite his personal interaction with Kirghiz folk musicians,
Shostakovich was no ethnomusicologist and took both the
Russian and Kirghiz themes from published collections; the main
Russian theme had been recently collected from the Omsk region
of Siberia.
The overture was completed in early October 1963 and received
its premiere in the Frunze Theatre of Opera and Ballet (Frunze
is the capital of Kirghiz S.S.R.) on 2nd November. The Moscow
premiere followed eight days later.
I Adagio - Allegro non troppo II Allegretto III Allegro non troppo - IV Largo - V Allegretto
Shostakovich's Seventh Symphony, the Leningrad, penned amidst
the Nazi siege of Leningrad in 1941, was an instant hit with
Soviets and the other Allied countries. Conductors such as
Toscanini and Henry Wood propagated the work internationally
and the composer's image (decorated with a fireman's helmet)
made the front cover of Time magazine on 20th July 1942.
Shostakovich became a national and international hero,
generating great expectations for the next symphony.
2nd February 1943 saw the eventual defeat of the German army
at Stalingrad and signalled a major turning point in the war.
Despite the gigantic losses suffered by the Red Army during the
battle a sense of great achievement and pride spread across the
Soviet Union - Stalin had defeated the Nazis. It was amidst this
atmosphere that Shostakovich began his Eighth Symphony.
This symphony, one of the largest works of the composer's
entire output, was written in only two months. The piano
sketches for the work appear to have been written in just one
day - 7th July 1943 - with Shostakovich remarkably finding time
to jot down a melody to enter in the competition for a new USSR
national anthem. This competition took up a substantial amount
of the composer's time; he collaborated with Khachaturian on an
anthem (Song of the Red Army) and also, as a member of the
judging panel, was forced to listen to every entry a number of
times and in a number of different arrangements. Yet despite
these interruptions the first movement of the new symphony was
completed by 1st August 1943.
A few days later Shostakovich took his family to the recently
established Composer's Retreat at Ivanovo, northeast of
Moscow. Here he continued work on the symphony - interrupted
only by the mandatory 5 o'clock game of volleyball with the other
composers at the retreat. By 5th September 1943 the entire
score was complete.
At this time the principal conductor of the Leningrad
Philharmonic Orchestra, Yevgeni Mravinsky, visited
Shostakovich. The composer showed Mravinsky the score of the
Eighth Symphony and the conductor resolved to perform it
immediately. The work was premiered in Moscow on 4th
November 1943 and, perhaps partly because of the eagerness of
the conductor to perform the work, is dedicated to Yevgeni
Alexandrovich Mravinsky.
The work was received with indifference by the public and a
growing sense of outrage by the critics. (The Eighth Symphony
was later to be used against the composer in the 1948 Zhdanov
decree, the second time that Shostakovich and his music were
held up to public criticism and ridicule). The successor to
Shostakovich's Seventh Symphony was expected to be the
second instalment of a symphonic war trilogy, and thus the sense
of bleakness that pervades the work was incomprehensible,
especially when `the People' were deemed to require only uplifting
and celebratory music. However, due to the international
success of the Leningrad Symphony the cultural apparatchiks
were unable to openly criticise Shostakovich, and therefore they
propagated the notion that the Eighth Symphony was a memorial
to the Soviet victims of the Battle of Stalingrad, adopting, in
the Soviet Union at least, the tag `Stalingrad Symphony'. The
symphony's tepid reception meant that it was soon dropped from
the concert repertoire both at home and abroad, having to wait,
as with a number of other controversial works, until the 1960s
for its revival.
The symphony is one of Shostakovich's symphonic masterpieces.
Cast in an unconventional five-movement form, the influence of
Mahler is particularly evident in thematic processes. In the key
of C minor this symphony joins a legacy of famous C minor
symphonies from Beethoven's Fifth to Bruckner's Eighth and
Mahler's Second (Resurrection), all with the general plot
archetype of `tragedy to triumph'.
The work opens with an extended adagio section, which seems
out of balance with the brutally truncated allegro that follows.
This allegro reaches a climax with deafening percussion
crescendi that eventually gives way to an extended cor anglais
monody - perhaps the hero of the `tragedy to triumph' plot
identifying himself. Shostakovich, infamously reticent when
questioned about his music, described the second movement, in a
published interview at the time of the symphony's premiere, as `a
march with elements of a scherzo'.
The third movement - written in just one week - opens with an
agitated solo for the viola section which sets the precedent for
the entire movement, whose inexorable motor-rhythm comes to
rest only with the advent of the fourth movement, a slow moving
and pensive passacaglia. The opening theme of the final
movement is presented by a solo bassoon, reawakening the `hero'
last encountered in the first movement. This movement contains
solos for other instruments also (including violin and 'cello), and
concludes with a subdued flute in the lower reaches of its
register. Far from celebratory, the conclusion of this symphony
with the solo flute suggests that perhaps the lone `hero' has not
triumphed but merely survived.
Last modified by Martin Watts,
18:25:31 07-Sep-2003
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