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Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1

The Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 (Russian: Сюита для эстрадного оркестра № 1, romanizedSyuita dlya estradnogo orkestra nomer 1) is a suite in eight movements arranged by Levon Atovmyan [ru] after 1956, based on music by Dmitri Shostakovich.[1] An editorial error in the tenth volume of the Shostakovich collected works edition published by Muzyka in 1984 resulted in the Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 being misidentified as the "Suite for Jazz Orchestra No. 2" or "Jazz Suite No. 2". The score was first published with the correct name in 2001.

Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1
by Dmitri Shostakovich and Levon Atovmyan
Dmitri Shostakovich in 1958
Composedafter 1956
Durationc. 20 minutes
Movements8
ScoringPops orchestra
Premiere
DateDecember 1, 1988
LocationBarbican Hall
London, United Kingdom
ConductorMstislav Rostropovich
PerformersLondon Symphony Orchestra
Previously misidentified as "Suite for Jazz Orchestra No. 2"

Atovmyan, who arranged and assembled the suite, was a close friend of Shostakovich, and was regularly tasked with arranging concert suites of his film music. He also made numerous other transcriptions and arrangements, often without the composer's involvement and only his tacit approval. The Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 includes arrangements of excerpts from Shostakovich's ballet, theatre, and film music. It has not been precisely dated, but is believed to have been composed after 1956.

The first documented performance took place on December 1, 1988, at the Barbican Hall, played by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Mstislav Rostropovich. The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Riccardo Chailly made a successful recording of the suite in 1991. In 1994, André Rieu released a recording of the suite's "Waltz II" that broke into the top 5 of the Dutch Mega Top 50 and sold over 50,000 copies. It was later included in the soundtrack to Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut.

Misidentification edit

The Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 is often mistaken for the unrelated Suite for Jazz Orchestra No. 2 from 1938.[1] This resulted from an error in an editorial footnote printed in volume 10 of the Shostakovich collected works edition published by Muzyka in 1984,[2] which misidentified the Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 as the "Suite for Jazz Orchestra No. 2".[3] The editor-in-chief of the collected works edition, Konstantin Titarenko, inserted the footnote without informing his editorial staff. When Manashir Yakubov, the uncredited editor of volume 10's critical commentary, called to inform him of his mistake and demanded an explanation, Titarenko hung up.[4]

Background edit

Despite being commonly attributed to Shostakovich and based on his music, the Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 was arranged by Levon Atovmyan [ru]; a composer, arranger, and artistic administrator born in Russian Turkestan. They met at a meeting of Vsyeroskomdram [ru], the All-Russia Society of Composers and Dramatists, in the early 1930s.[5] Atovmyan subsequently became part of Shostakovich's circle of close friends;[6] later, he was regularly entrusted with arranging concert suites of his film music.[7] In addition, Atovmyan also made transcriptions and arrangements of Shostakovich's other music.[8] Although incorporating extensive revisions of the base musical material, including passages of Atovmyan's own invention, these often were made without the composer's involvement and only his tacit approval.[9]

No manuscript score of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 exists in Shostakovich's hand. Its instrumentation, movement arrangement, and generic titling of movements also do not correspond with Shostakovich's style.[10] No precise date for the suite's composition can be ascertained, but it is believed to have been composed in the late 1950s,[11] some time after 1956.[1] The unusual scoring, which includes three sections of violins and two pianos, suggests that the suite may have been assembled for a specific ensemble.[12]

Music edit

 
Mstislav Rostropovich conducted the first documented performance of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 in 1988

The Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 consists of eight movements:[1]

  1. March (Giocoso. Alla marcia)
  2. Dance I (Presto)
  3. Dance II (Allegretto scherzando—Poco meno mosso—Tempo I)
  4. Little Polka (Allegretto)
  5. Lyrical Waltz (Allegretto)
  6. Waltz I (Sostenuto—Tempo di valse—Poco più mosso)
  7. Waltz II (Allegretto poco moderato)
  8. Finale (Allegro moderato)

Each of the suite's movements is arranged from Shostakovich's scores for the ballet, theatre, and cinema. The first and last movements are based on the "March" from the 1940 comedy film Adventures of Korzinkina [ru];[11] the "Waltz I" is an arrangement of a cue that had been cut from the film. "Dance I" is based on the "Marketplace" cue from the 1955 film The Gadfly,[1] which is alternatively known as "National Holiday" in Atovmyan's concert suite of the film music. "Dance 2" is an arrangement of the "Invitation to a Rendezvous" number from The Limpid Stream, itself an arrangement of the number "Pantomime and Dance of a Priest" from The Bolt.[11] The "Little Polka", "Lyrical Waltz", and "Waltz II" are arrangements of cues composed for the soundtrack to The First Echelon; the first two cues had been discarded from the final version of the film score.[1][11]

A typical performance of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 lasts approximately 20 minutes.[1]

Instrumentation edit

The instrumentation for the Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 is as follows:[13]

The original score divided the violins into three sections. These were reduced to two in the 2001 New Collected Works edition of the score; this was accomplished by combining the first and second violin parts, which frequently played unison. Portions of the score's parts for two pianos were given ossia for piano duet. None of these changes resulted in any substantial alterations to the musical text.[11]

Premieres edit

The first documented performance of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1 was on December 1, 1988. It referred to as "Jazz Suite No. 2" and was played at the Barbican Hall by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Mstislav Rostropovich. The performance was broadcast by the BBC on December 4.[14] The first recording was made in 1991 for Decca by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Riccardo Chailly.[15]

In 2001, the score was published for the first time.[15]

Reception edit

 
André Rieu's 1994 recording of the "Waltz II" became a hit in Europe

Nicholas Kenyon in his review of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No. 1's premiere for The Observer wrote that the music was "Shostakovich at his most unbuttoned and jovial":[16]

The LSO played the Second Suite for Jazz Orchestra or Dance Band [sic] with its four blaring saxophones, accordion and guitar, as if to the manner born... The music is tripe, and not very well planned tripe at that—three waltzes in succession!—but Rostropovich lifted it along with such panache that it worked.[16]

He also called the work "fairly cynical pieces of writing-to-order".[16]

Chailly's Decca recording was a popular and critical success;[17] his recording of the "Waltz II" was included in the soundtrack to Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut.[18] Roger Covell in the Sydney Morning Herald praised Chailly's "elegantly played" recording and compared Shostakovich's music favorably with William Walton's Façade.[19]

In 1994, Philips issued a single of the "Waltz II" from the suite performed by André Rieu and his orchestra. It reached 5 in the Dutch Mega Top 50 and sold over 50,000 copies. The recording was included in the album From Holland With Love in 1996.[20]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g McBurney 2023, p. 230.
  2. ^ Yakubov 2000, pp. 329–330.
  3. ^ Shostakovich, Dmitri (1984). Rozhdestvensky, Gennady; Shostakovich, Irina (eds.). D. Shostakovich: Collected Works in Forty-Two Volumes, Volume Ten. Moscow: Muzyka. p. xi, n. 11.
  4. ^ Yakubov 2000, pp. 332–331.
  5. ^ Kravetz 2012, pp. 194–196.
  6. ^ Kravetz 2012, pp. 201–205.
  7. ^ Kravetz 2012, p. 280.
  8. ^ Kravetz 2012, p. 293.
  9. ^ McBurney 2023, p. 198.
  10. ^ Yakubov 2000, p. 334.
  11. ^ a b c d e Shostakovich & Atovmyan 2001, p. 269.
  12. ^ Shostakovich & Atovmyan 2001, p. 270.
  13. ^ Shostakovich & Atovmyan 2001, p. 6.
  14. ^ Hulme 2010, p. 198.
  15. ^ a b Hulme 2010, p. 199.
  16. ^ a b c Kenyon, Nicholas (December 4, 1988). "Old flame rekindled". The Observer. p. 44. Archived from the original on May 16, 2023. Retrieved May 16, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ "Shostakovich Jazz Suites Nos 1 and 2". Gramophone. Archived from the original on May 16, 2023. Retrieved May 16, 2023.
  18. ^ Eyes Wide Shut: Music From the Motion Picture (booklet). Reprise Records. 1999. p. 1. 9 47450-2.
  19. ^ Covell, Roger (March 8, 1993). "A tilt at the old two for teaski". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 56. Archived from the original on May 16, 2023. Retrieved May 16, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  20. ^ Hulme 2010, p. 200.

Cited sources edit

  • Hulme, Derek C. (2010). Dmitri Shostakovich: The First Hundred Years and Beyond. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810872646.
  • Kravetz, Nelly (2012). Рядом с великими: Атовмьян и его время (in Russian). Moscow: ГИТИС. ISBN 978-5-91328-104-3.
  • McBurney, Gerard (March 2023). "Shostakovich: Work List" (PDF). Boosey & Hawkes. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 24, 2023. Retrieved April 24, 2023.
  • Shostakovich, Dmitri; Atovmyan, Levon (2001). Yakubov, Manashir (ed.). Dmitri Shostakovich: New Collected Works. IInd Series: Orchestra Compositions. 33rd Volume: Suite for Variety Stage Orchestra. Moscow: DSCH Publishers.
  • Yakubov, Manashir (2000). "Сюита для эстрадного оркестра или Сюита для джаз-оркестра № 2?". In Wulfson, Alexei (ed.). Шостакович: между мгновением и вечностью. Документы, материалы, статьи (in Russian). St. Petersburg: Композитор. ISBN 5-7379-0094-0.

External links edit

suite, variety, orchestra, russian, Сюита, для, эстрадного, оркестра, romanized, syuita, dlya, estradnogo, orkestra, nomer, suite, eight, movements, arranged, levon, atovmyan, after, 1956, based, music, dmitri, shostakovich, editorial, error, tenth, volume, sh. The Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 Russian Syuita dlya estradnogo orkestra 1 romanized Syuita dlya estradnogo orkestra nomer 1 is a suite in eight movements arranged by Levon Atovmyan ru after 1956 based on music by Dmitri Shostakovich 1 An editorial error in the tenth volume of the Shostakovich collected works edition published by Muzyka in 1984 resulted in the Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 being misidentified as the Suite for Jazz Orchestra No 2 or Jazz Suite No 2 The score was first published with the correct name in 2001 Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1by Dmitri Shostakovich and Levon AtovmyanDmitri Shostakovich in 1958Composedafter 1956Durationc 20 minutesMovements8ScoringPops orchestraPremiereDateDecember 1 1988LocationBarbican HallLondon United KingdomConductorMstislav RostropovichPerformersLondon Symphony OrchestraPreviously misidentified as Suite for Jazz Orchestra No 2 Atovmyan who arranged and assembled the suite was a close friend of Shostakovich and was regularly tasked with arranging concert suites of his film music He also made numerous other transcriptions and arrangements often without the composer s involvement and only his tacit approval The Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 includes arrangements of excerpts from Shostakovich s ballet theatre and film music It has not been precisely dated but is believed to have been composed after 1956 The first documented performance took place on December 1 1988 at the Barbican Hall played by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Mstislav Rostropovich The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Riccardo Chailly made a successful recording of the suite in 1991 In 1994 Andre Rieu released a recording of the suite s Waltz II that broke into the top 5 of the Dutch Mega Top 50 and sold over 50 000 copies It was later included in the soundtrack to Stanley Kubrick s Eyes Wide Shut Contents 1 Misidentification 2 Background 3 Music 3 1 Instrumentation 4 Premieres 5 Reception 6 References 6 1 Cited sources 7 External linksMisidentification editThe Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 is often mistaken for the unrelated Suite for Jazz Orchestra No 2 from 1938 1 This resulted from an error in an editorial footnote printed in volume 10 of the Shostakovich collected works edition published by Muzyka in 1984 2 which misidentified the Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 as the Suite for Jazz Orchestra No 2 3 The editor in chief of the collected works edition Konstantin Titarenko inserted the footnote without informing his editorial staff When Manashir Yakubov the uncredited editor of volume 10 s critical commentary called to inform him of his mistake and demanded an explanation Titarenko hung up 4 Background editDespite being commonly attributed to Shostakovich and based on his music the Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 was arranged by Levon Atovmyan ru a composer arranger and artistic administrator born in Russian Turkestan They met at a meeting of Vsyeroskomdram ru the All Russia Society of Composers and Dramatists in the early 1930s 5 Atovmyan subsequently became part of Shostakovich s circle of close friends 6 later he was regularly entrusted with arranging concert suites of his film music 7 In addition Atovmyan also made transcriptions and arrangements of Shostakovich s other music 8 Although incorporating extensive revisions of the base musical material including passages of Atovmyan s own invention these often were made without the composer s involvement and only his tacit approval 9 No manuscript score of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 exists in Shostakovich s hand Its instrumentation movement arrangement and generic titling of movements also do not correspond with Shostakovich s style 10 No precise date for the suite s composition can be ascertained but it is believed to have been composed in the late 1950s 11 some time after 1956 1 The unusual scoring which includes three sections of violins and two pianos suggests that the suite may have been assembled for a specific ensemble 12 Music edit nbsp Mstislav Rostropovich conducted the first documented performance of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 in 1988The Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 consists of eight movements 1 March Giocoso Alla marcia Dance I Presto Dance II Allegretto scherzando Poco meno mosso Tempo I Little Polka Allegretto Lyrical Waltz Allegretto Waltz I Sostenuto Tempo di valse Poco piu mosso Waltz II Allegretto poco moderato Finale Allegro moderato Each of the suite s movements is arranged from Shostakovich s scores for the ballet theatre and cinema The first and last movements are based on the March from the 1940 comedy film Adventures of Korzinkina ru 11 the Waltz I is an arrangement of a cue that had been cut from the film Dance I is based on the Marketplace cue from the 1955 film The Gadfly 1 which is alternatively known as National Holiday in Atovmyan s concert suite of the film music Dance 2 is an arrangement of the Invitation to a Rendezvous number from The Limpid Stream itself an arrangement of the number Pantomime and Dance of a Priest from The Bolt 11 The Little Polka Lyrical Waltz and Waltz II are arrangements of cues composed for the soundtrack to The First Echelon the first two cues had been discarded from the final version of the film score 1 11 A typical performance of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 lasts approximately 20 minutes 1 Instrumentation edit The instrumentation for the Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 is as follows 13 Woodwinds piccolo doubling flute flute oboe 2 clarinets 2 alto saxophones 2 tenor saxophones 2nd doubling soprano saxophone bassoon Brass 3 French horns 3 trumpets 3 trombones Percussion timpani bass drum Charleston cymbals suspended triangle tambourine glockenspiel xylophone vibraphone Keyboards accordion celesta 2 pianos or piano duet Strings harp 1st violins 2nd violins violas cellos double basses The original score divided the violins into three sections These were reduced to two in the 2001 New Collected Works edition of the score this was accomplished by combining the first and second violin parts which frequently played unison Portions of the score s parts for two pianos were given ossia for piano duet None of these changes resulted in any substantial alterations to the musical text 11 Premieres editThe first documented performance of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 was on December 1 1988 It referred to as Jazz Suite No 2 and was played at the Barbican Hall by the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Mstislav Rostropovich The performance was broadcast by the BBC on December 4 14 The first recording was made in 1991 for Decca by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Riccardo Chailly 15 In 2001 the score was published for the first time 15 Reception edit nbsp Andre Rieu s 1994 recording of the Waltz II became a hit in EuropeNicholas Kenyon in his review of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 s premiere for The Observer wrote that the music was Shostakovich at his most unbuttoned and jovial 16 The LSO played the Second Suite for Jazz Orchestra or Dance Band sic with its four blaring saxophones accordion and guitar as if to the manner born The music is tripe and not very well planned tripe at that three waltzes in succession but Rostropovich lifted it along with such panache that it worked 16 He also called the work fairly cynical pieces of writing to order 16 Chailly s Decca recording was a popular and critical success 17 his recording of the Waltz II was included in the soundtrack to Stanley Kubrick s Eyes Wide Shut 18 Roger Covell in the Sydney Morning Herald praised Chailly s elegantly played recording and compared Shostakovich s music favorably with William Walton s Facade 19 In 1994 Philips issued a single of the Waltz II from the suite performed by Andre Rieu and his orchestra It reached 5 in the Dutch Mega Top 50 and sold over 50 000 copies The recording was included in the album From Holland With Love in 1996 20 References edit a b c d e f g McBurney 2023 p 230 Yakubov 2000 pp 329 330 Shostakovich Dmitri 1984 Rozhdestvensky Gennady Shostakovich Irina eds D Shostakovich Collected Works in Forty Two Volumes Volume Ten Moscow Muzyka p xi n 11 Yakubov 2000 pp 332 331 Kravetz 2012 pp 194 196 Kravetz 2012 pp 201 205 Kravetz 2012 p 280 Kravetz 2012 p 293 McBurney 2023 p 198 Yakubov 2000 p 334 a b c d e Shostakovich amp Atovmyan 2001 p 269 Shostakovich amp Atovmyan 2001 p 270 Shostakovich amp Atovmyan 2001 p 6 Hulme 2010 p 198 a b Hulme 2010 p 199 a b c Kenyon Nicholas December 4 1988 Old flame rekindled The Observer p 44 Archived from the original on May 16 2023 Retrieved May 16 2023 via Newspapers com Shostakovich Jazz Suites Nos 1 and 2 Gramophone Archived from the original on May 16 2023 Retrieved May 16 2023 Eyes Wide Shut Music From the Motion Picture booklet Reprise Records 1999 p 1 9 47450 2 Covell Roger March 8 1993 A tilt at the old two for teaski Sydney Morning Herald p 56 Archived from the original on May 16 2023 Retrieved May 16 2023 via Newspapers com Hulme 2010 p 200 Cited sources edit Hulme Derek C 2010 Dmitri Shostakovich The First Hundred Years and Beyond Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810872646 Kravetz Nelly 2012 Ryadom s velikimi Atovmyan i ego vremya in Russian Moscow GITIS ISBN 978 5 91328 104 3 McBurney Gerard March 2023 Shostakovich Work List PDF Boosey amp Hawkes Archived from the original PDF on April 24 2023 Retrieved April 24 2023 Shostakovich Dmitri Atovmyan Levon 2001 Yakubov Manashir ed Dmitri Shostakovich New Collected Works IInd Series Orchestra Compositions 33rd Volume Suite for Variety Stage Orchestra Moscow DSCH Publishers Yakubov Manashir 2000 Syuita dlya estradnogo orkestra ili Syuita dlya dzhaz orkestra 2 In Wulfson Alexei ed Shostakovich mezhdu mgnoveniem i vechnostyu Dokumenty materialy stati in Russian St Petersburg Kompozitor ISBN 5 7379 0094 0 External links editBoosey amp Hawkes page for the score Boosey amp Hawkes page for the 2001 New Collected Works edition Performance of the Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 on YouTube by the New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Inoue Michiyoshi 1994 recording of the Waltz II on YouTube by Andre Rieu and his orchestra Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Suite for Variety Orchestra No 1 amp oldid 1174318763, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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