Originally posted by Caliban
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Shostakovich 15
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostOK, but to what extent do they have their origins in Wagner and to what extent might the have been drawn from the rhythm of the melody that opens the scherzando section from the Fourth Symphony?"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostOh they are direct quotes from Wagner. My point is that having heard them in Shostakovich years and years before I heard them in their original context, they always make me think of No 15 - even if I'm listening to the Ring!
I'm reminded of someone - I think that it might have been Graham Johnson but can't now be sure - who years ago wrote a spoof essay about Tippett's influence on Beethoven when I suggest that it might be high time for you to write one on the influence of Shostakovich on Wagner...
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Originally posted by johnb View PostI've always thought of the 15th as very much a valedictory piece and rather atypical. (Parallels with Prokofiev's 7th?) Gone, or greatly diluted, is that excoriating sardonic passion that is so characteristic of most of the symphonies.
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostI do believe it is the best of Shostakovich and, like the best of Bach, I never tire of hearing it"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by edashtav View Postallusion that may no longer be sardonic
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Agree completely with edashtav. A complex masterpiece indeed and still a riddle wrapped inside an enigma over 40 years after I heard the UK premiere (courtesy of R3) which was my first exposure to Shostakovich.
To me it is a birth to death piece and the many self quotations (Gerard McBurney has suggested that every one of the symphonies is alluded to at some point) underscores the view that it is an autobiographical work. The Rossini and Wagner quotes seem to puzzle some but while the Wagner quote could hardly be more explicitt he first movement quote from William Tell, I think, is equally so. Surely Shostakovich is referring to himself as a 'freedom fighter' like Tell?
Testimony refers to Chekov's The Black Monk in connection with the 15th. Does anyone know this play and what relevance it has?
The ending of the 15th is one of to most moving in all music, the last chord sounds and life is snuffed out."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBut was it ever? I often find myself wondering what the word "sardonic" means when (often somewhat glibly) applied to the music of Shostakovich and particularly to its referential aspects. "Sardonic" implies some kind of derision directed towards the music cited or alluded to. Is it ever as simple as that?
I'm not putting this very well at all, as I relise only too well as I write - but I hope that I've made my point, however inadequately.Last edited by ahinton; 24-09-13, 21:46.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post"Sardonic" implies some kind of derision directed towards the music cited or alluded to. Is it ever as simple as that?
In general I agree with other comments though and like Petrushka's description: " A complex masterpiece indeed and still a riddle wrapped inside an enigma".
I wonder whether someone coming to Shostakovich through the 15th will have a different feeling about the composer than someone who first knew his music through, say, one of the so called "war symphonies".
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Originally posted by johnb View PostI certainly never thought of "sardonic" in those terms but as a bitter mocking of .... the Soviet system ... Stalin ... life .... who knows ...
In general I agree with other comments though and like Petrushka's description: " A complex masterpiece indeed and still a riddle wrapped inside an enigma".
I wonder whether someone coming to Shostakovich through the 15th will have a different feeling about the composer than someone who first knew his music through, say, one of the so called "war symphonies".
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by johnb View Posta bitter mocking of .... the Soviet system ... Stalin ... life .... who knows ...
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWho knows indeed. I wonder why it seems to be so difficult to discuss Shostakovich's music without immediately making reference to his biography in general, and the fact that he spent his entire creative life in the USSR in particular. Obviously, a composer's work is going to be influenced by the circumstances in which he/she works, but there's no reason to assume that composers think about their political environment most or even much of the time.
I think it is almost impossible for us in the cosy west to appreciate what it was like to live through those times.
Having said that I do agree that sometimes (often?) DDS's music is viewed too much through a Cold War lense - his work is much too universal to be so narrowly defined.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWho knows indeed. I wonder why it seems to be so difficult to discuss Shostakovich's music without immediately making reference to his biography in general, and the fact that he spent his entire creative life in the USSR in particular. Obviously, a composer's work is going to be influenced by the circumstances in which he/she works, but there's no reason to assume that composers think about their political environment most or even much of the time.
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Originally posted by johnb View PostVery true. But if you have gone through a period where you kept a packed bag by the door for when the authorities came to take away, or if you had an "appointment" with an "investigator" and were only saved because the investigator himself was victim of the current purge, when one of your patrons also fell victim to the purge - all that must leave some impact and can't be just ignored.
I think it is almost impossible for us in the cosy west to appreciate what it was like to live through those times.
Having said that I do agree that sometimes (often?) DDS's music is viewed too much through a Cold War lense - his work is much too universal to be so narrowly defined.
Anyway - happy birthday, Dmitry Dmitryevich!
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by johnb View PostVery true. But if you have gone through a period where you kept a packed bag by the door for when the authorities came to take away, or if you had an "appointment" with an "investigator" and were only saved because the investigator himself was victim of the current purge, when one of your patrons also fell victim to the purge - all that must leave some impact and can't be just ignored.
I think it is almost impossible for us in the cosy west to appreciate what it was like to live through those times.
So I think it's sometimes useful to see Shostakovich's music, like that of any other composer (and of course so many of his generation witnessed or were victims of repression, displacement and atrocity), as not just a document of his personal circumstances but to see it in something more like its full complexity.
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