Shostakovich 15
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post
I do wish that someone, Gerard McBurney for example, would undertake a thematic analysis of the 15th. It is stuffed full of quotes, more, I think, than is generally acknowledged. I hear a Mahler 2 quote and there is what I feel to be one from Beethoven's Egmont overture near the close. Some of it may be coincidental but it all lends credence to the view that, as ER says above and I pointed out further upthread, that the 15th is basically autobiographical. The final ping is death itself but not just any death, it's his own."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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The 15th sounds for so many reasons as though destined to be DDS's final symphonic utterance (which of course it is) but, for all its autobiographical content, was it really so intended? It was followed by his last two completed two quartets, several vocal works and the viola sonata, but we know that he'd started work on a 16th quartet before his death, so who knows whether he might have begun to conceive a 16th symphony had he survived just a little longer?...
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Roehre
Originally posted by ahinton View PostThe 15th sounds for so many reasons as though destined to be DDS's final symphonic utterance (which of course it is) but, for all its autobiographical content, was it really so intended? It was followed by his last two completed two quartets, several vocal works and the viola sonata, but we know that he'd started work on a 16th quartet before his death, so who knows whether he might have begun to conceive a 16th symphony had he survived just a little longer?...
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThe ending of the 15th is one of to most moving in all music...
Originally posted by Petrushka View Post....the last chord sounds and life is snuffed out."...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 Post...but I'm not sure the phrase 'snuffed out' is the one I would use. Had it been a dark, 'clod of earth on the coffin' last chord, yes - but that chime isn't like that. It seems like a final epiphany, to me, fleeting and final, but positive... like a last smile, that can make all the difference to the rest of the lives of those around.Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 28-09-13, 07:46.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostSome of it may be coincidental but it all lends credence to the view that, as ER says above and I pointed out further upthread, that the 15th is basically autobiographical.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWhich makes me wonder why one might think that the presence in a composition of quotes from other music makes it "autobiographical". (To take an extreme example, Berio's Sinfonia is clearly not intended to come across as autobiographical, despite probably containing more quotations than Shostakovich's 15th symphony.)
By the way, no one has answered my query regarding Chekov's Black Monk. What relevance does this have for the 15th or is it a red herring?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWhich makes me wonder why one might think that the presence in a composition of quotes from other music makes it "autobiographical". (To take an extreme example, Berio's Sinfonia is clearly not intended to come across as autobiographical, despite probably containing more quotations than Shostakovich's 15th symphony.)
By the way, I knew that he'd started work on a 16th quartet but was unaware that he'd begun to sketch out a 16th symphony...Last edited by ahinton; 28-09-13, 11:47.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostBy the way, I knew that he'd started work on a 16th quartet but was unaware that he'd begun to sketch out a 16th symphony...[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Petrushka View PostGerard McBurney has pointed out that all of the other 14 symphonies are quoted.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostHe has, but I feel that might be a little fanciful. Nobody seems to be able to point out where all these quotes actually are, to my knowledge. I suppose one thing I'm trying to say is that I'm suspicious of the application of the word "autobiographical" to music. In a sense all composition is autobiographical. In another sense, since music isn't a language in terms of its elements having precise meanings, no composition without a text could be autobiographical. The fact is that many people have claimed to know what this or that Shostakovich piece is "about", but they often disagree diametrically with one another so that the truth (if that's a word that can usefully be applied to music) could be "none of the above", or "all of the above". This is what personally I find one of the most fascinating things about his music - that it confronts head-on the contradictoriness of musical "expression" and turns this from something to avoid into something powerful and, well, meaningful.
Other than that, the mystery continues."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostHe has, but I feel that might be a little fanciful. Nobody seems to be able to point out where all these quotes actually are, to my knowledge. I suppose one thing I'm trying to say is that I'm suspicious of the application of the word "autobiographical" to music. In a sense all composition is autobiographical. In another sense, since music isn't a language in terms of its elements having precise meanings, no composition without a text could be autobiographical. The fact is that many people have claimed to know what this or that Shostakovich piece is "about", but they often disagree diametrically with one another so that the truth (if that's a word that can usefully be applied to music) could be "none of the above", or "all of the above". This is what personally I find one of the most fascinating things about his music - that it confronts head-on the contradictoriness of musical "expression" and turns this from something to avoid into something powerful and, well, meaningful.
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