Originally posted by Richard Barrett
View Post
Shostakovich 15
Collapse
X
-
-
-
amateur51
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat's true, but the narrative is still a little one-sided - numerous prominent intellectuals and artists managed to leave the USSR for the West, and I don't think it's beyond the realms of possibility that Shostakovich could have done so if he had so wished. Since he didn't, we'd have to assume that there was something other than the KGB that kept him there - an attachment to the place and its culture, for example; maybe even a feeling that the West (heaven forfend!) wasn't as attractive as it was supposed to be, or (ditto) that the respect and success accorded to his work in the USSR would perhaps not be reproduced there. It may have been subject to repressive cultural policy in the USSR, at least until after Stalin's death, but still that country was a place where culture was regarded with an importance it didn't have (which is even truer today) in the commercially-oriented West.
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.
At that time it was not unknown for gay men to keep a spare bed made up so that a partner or visitor could slip neath its covers in the hope of appearing 'decent'.
So why didn't people leave UK in this period? Some did of course, others weren't able to but I think that others wanted to stay because they wanted to resist this persecutory phase and work for the social change that was needed. To leave might also have been seen as capitulating to the proselytising/seducing/corrupting narrative that Home Secretary David Maxwell Fyfe meant when he referred to the plague over England that needed to be wiped out.
Perhaps Shostakovich and others in his position saw themselves, like the gay men in UK, as witnesses of repression, feeling that one day their record and testimony of that repression would be useful in a world as yet only seen in dreams?
Comment
-
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostThe similar position for people in the West would have been the situation facing gay men in Britain (and the rest of the world, I guess) in the 1950s and 1960s where the knock at the door might be the local constabulary mounting a raid on your home, hoping to catch you in flagrante delicto with a another man, as a result of a tip-off from the local stasi (aka your neighbour).
At that time it was not unknown for gay men to keep a spare bed made up so that a partner or visitor could slip neath its covers in the hope of appearing 'decent'.
So why didn't people leave UK in this period? Some did of course, others weren't able to but I think that others wanted to stay because they wanted to resist this persecutory phase and work for the social change that was needed. To leave might also have been seen as capitulating to the proselytising/seducing/corrupting narrative that Home Secretary David Maxwell Fyfe meant when he referred to the plague over England that needed to be wiped out.
Perhaps Shostakovich and others in his position saw themselves, like the gay men in UK, as witnesses of repression, feeling that one day their record and testimony of that repression would be useful in a world as yet only seen in dreams?
Comment
-
-
amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhilst I accept what you say insofar as it goes, I suspect that the threats made against Shostakovich and some of his colleagues were considerably worse than any issued against gay composers in post-WWII Britain, deeply uncomfortable though their lives were nevertheless made.
Afterthought - I wonder if the realisation of this, thought-through or subliminal, was in any way important in Shostakovich's and Rostropovich's friendship with Britten & Pears
Comment
-
Richard Barrett
Originally posted by amateur51 View Postfeeling that one day their record and testimony of that repression would be useful in a world as yet only seen in dreams?
Comment
-
amateur51
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostComposers think about posterity a great deal less than many people seem to think they would! And also, I don't think one needs to have been gay in the 1950s or living under Stalinism for one's creative work to confront the existence of repression in the world and the way it dehumanises everyone, all it takes is the ability (or inability not) to look unflinchingly around oneself.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI don't think it's beyond the realms of possibility that Shostakovich could have done so if he had so wished. Since he didn't, we'd have to assume that there was something other than the KGB that kept him there - an attachment to the place and its culture, for example; maybe even a feeling that the West (heaven forfend!) wasn't as attractive as it was supposed to be
It may have been subject to repressive cultural policy in the USSR, at least until after Stalin's death, but still that country was a place where culture was regarded with an importance it didn't have (which is even truer today) in the commercially-oriented West.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostComposers think about posterity a great deal less than many people seem to think they would! And also, I don't think one needs to have been gay in the 1950s or living under Stalinism for one's creative work to confront the existence of repression in the world and the way it dehumanises everyone, all it takes is the ability (or inability not) to look unflinchingly around oneself.
Comment
-
-
amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostExactly. Most composers are far too busy thinking about undertaking their work to be bothered even to think about its reception during their lifetimes, let alone by future generations! Since composers generally have no idea in front of whom their work might be performed, such concerns on their part would indeed be a waste of their time. Just as Shostakovich did not, I think, seek to portray or even moralise about such repression in his music, what he wrote could not possibly have been unaffacted by his experience of it.
However, was Shostakovivh perhaps a special case in that commentators, journalists (from what I've read) seemed to be asking constantly about these issues related to his output, and his answers seemed to change according to who was wanting to know. He's always seemed to me to be a shape-shifter, pragmatically so, and I can't blame him.
Comment
Comment