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Symphony No. 5 (Shostakovich)

The Symphony No. 5 in D minor, Op. 47, by Dmitri Shostakovich is a work for orchestra composed between April and July 1937. Its first performance was on November 21, 1937, in Leningrad by the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra under Yevgeny Mravinsky. The premiere was a "triumphal success"[1] that appealed to both the public and official critics, receiving an ovation that lasted well over half an hour.[2]

Form edit

First movement: Moderato edit

 

The first movement, in D minor, is in sonata form. The exposition opens with a "strenuous" string figure in canon of rising and falling minor sixths that quickly narrow to minor thirds.[3]

The opening's dotted rhythm persists as a lyrical first theme is played by the first violins.[4] This theme presents itself as a descending five-tone motif in bars 6-7, but Shostakovich had already used it in the second movement of his fourth symphony (bars 318-321), which was recognized there as a quotation from Gustav Mahler's song "Des Antonius von Padua Fischpredigt", from Des Knaben Wunderhorn; specifically, the line "He goes to the rivers and preaches to the fishes". In its original appearance, this Mahler quotation is juxtaposed with musical notation in the shape of a nose (on page 122 of the Sikorski score), the notes in the "nose" being a quotation from "The Internationale", which was also previously hidden in bars 25-30 of the first movement of the 4th symphony, with the effect of depicting the futility of the socialist "sermon".

For the appearance of this quotation in the fifth symphony, the five-tone Mahler motif occurs in a total of 15 variants in the first and third movements, and bears witness to the Shostakovich's secret triumph in being able to describe the party doctrine that had silenced his earlier work as a completely useless sermon. This provocative insight is therefore part of Shostakovich's "creative response of a Soviet artist to justified criticism". However, since the fourth symphony had been withdrawn before the premiere in 1936 and could only be presented to the public 25 years later, the extramusical context was lost when the 5th symphony was premiered in Leningrad. Only later has this connection between the fourth and fifth symphonies, which undermines the demands of "socialist realism", been uncovered.[5]

The first theme is repeated several times in combination with the opening motif, and greatly varied with new demarcations and penetrations. There is a great deal of variation and linking of all elements, giving the impression of a single continuous process.

 

The secondary theme (mm. 50-120) in E minor offers the greatest possible contrast to the main theme. The tempo is more fluid, and the sustained tones of the secondary theme are linked by wide intervals: octaves, fourths, sevenths instead of the dominant seconds found in the first theme. Simplicity prevails over complexity, as the far-reaching lyrical melody is accompanied by chords in a continuous, slightly lively rhythm.[3]

An accompanying figure takes the lead at the beginning of the powerful development. Only now does the tempo of this movement reach Allegro. Themes from the exposition appear in augmentation and diminution in contrapuntal conflicts with themselves. The thematic material is transformed into a grotesquely distorted quick march in a wide development with military drums and trumpets. After several false starts, from m. 157 the second theme intervenes in the action.

In the recapitulation, which is heavily reduced compared to the exposition, themes heard earlier on are brought back again either identically or somewhat varied. Near the end of the movement, the second subject is heard again in the form of a canon played by flute and horn, then the same material is played by the violin and piccolo. The movement ends with the celesta playing a rising figure, and slowly fading away.[6]

In general, the inner drama of the first movement can be described as an interplay between lamentation and mourning, contrasting with a "departure for battle" which reaches its climax with the entry of the recapitulation. In the end, the outcome of this conflict proves to be ambiguous, and the looming threats have not yet been resolved.

Second movement: Allegretto edit

 

The second movement is in a ternary scherzo form, or minuet and trio form, in A minor, but it more closely resembles a ländler than either a minuet or a scherzo.

The first section and its reprise consist of a rather loose and varied sequence of ländler melodies. The movement opens with a heavy, loud introduction in the cellos and basses,[7] followed by a softer solo on the E clarinet and the french horn, later oboes, and finally strings. At the end of this development, the ländler becomes grotesque and bloated.

The trio has a peculiar harmony. Degrees I and VII alternate in the basic position, so that parallel fifths constantly arise. The effect does not sound like folk music, but rather like "run-down" music.[according to whom?]

In the recapitulation, some of the material heard earlier is repeated piano and staccato, not loudly and sustained as at the start.

The movement closes in A minor with four canonically enriched fortissimo bars. Overall, the scherzo lacks innocence and humor; closer listening assures that the peace is not to be trusted, considering the numerous unusual modulations and occasional discords.[8]

Third movement: Largo edit

 

Shostakovich begins this movement with F minor violins in three sections, rather than the more usual two. The opening theme is played by the third violins. Second and first violins are slowly added and continue the melody. After the assertive trumpets of the first movement and the raucous horns of the second, this movement uses no brass at all, so there is a limited palette of sounds. This section yields to a pair of flutes in widely-separated counterpoint, the second of which makes reference to the first subject of the first movement. The solo is then passed on to the oboe with string accompaniment. The third movement ends like the first, with a celesta solo that slowly fades away. The strings are divided throughout the entire movement (3 groups of violins, violas in 2, cellos in 2; basses in 2).

This movement is a culmination of resignation, mourning and lamentation, which in the center of the movement increases to a passionate accusation with clarinet, xylophone and piano. Otherwise the movement is more chamber music-like and carried by the string orchestra. The tonality is floating and often not definable, free-floating and independent linearity of the individual voices prevails.

Fourth movement: Allegro non troppo edit

 

The D minor finale, also in sonata form, differs greatly from its predecessors, mostly with regard to melodic structure and motives. Various themes from earlier in the work are expanded until we get to a new theme played on the trumpet. This new theme is passed on to the strings and eventually the piece becomes quieter. The development section is much quieter and more tranquil, and is ultimately replaced by a march, where the melodies from earlier are played like a funeral dirge, accompanied by timpani. The music builds as the new accompaniment passes from timpani to woodwinds and then to strings, finally reaching a point where the piece changes from a minor key into a major key.

Instrumentation edit

The work is scored for two flutes and piccolo, two oboes, two clarinets and E clarinet, two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns, three B trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, snare drum, triangle, cymbals, bass drum, tam-tam, glockenspiel, xylophone, two harps (one part), piano, celesta and strings.[4]

Overview edit

Composition edit

The Symphony quotes Shostakovich's song Vozrozhdenije (Op. 46 No. 1, composed in 1936–37), most notably in the last movement; the song is a setting of a poem by Alexander Pushkin (find text and a translation here) that deals with the matter of rebirth. This song is by some considered to be a vital clue to the interpretation and understanding of the whole symphony.[9] In addition, commentators have noted that Shostakovich incorporated a motif from the "Habanera" from Bizet's Carmen into the first movement, a reference to Shostakovich's earlier infatuation with Elena Konstantinovskaya, who refused his offer of marriage; she subsequently moved to Spain and married the photographer and film director Roman Karmen.[10][11]

Reception edit

With the Fifth Symphony, Shostakovich gained an unprecedented triumph, with the music appealing equally—and remarkably—to both the public and official critics, though the overwhelming public response to the work initially aroused suspicions among certain officials. The then-head of the Leningrad Philharmonic, Mikhail Chulaki, recalls that certain authorities bristled at Mravinsky's gesture of lifting the score above his head to the cheering audience, and a subsequent performance was attended by two plainly hostile officials, V. N. Surin and Boris M. Yarustovsky, who tried to claim in the face of the vociferous ovation given the symphony that the audience was made up of "hand-picked" Shostakovich supporters.[12] Yet the authorities in due course claimed that they found everything they had demanded of Shostakovich restored in the symphony. Meanwhile, the public heard it as an expression of the suffering to which it had been subjected by Stalin. The same work was essentially received two different ways.[13]

 
Alexei Tolstoy's review set the official tone toward the Fifth Symphony.

Official edit

An article by the composer appeared in the newspaper Vechernyaya Moskva on January 25, 1938, a few days before the Moscow premiere of the Fifth Symphony:[14]

Among the reviews, which often analyzed the work in thorough detail, one that particularly delighted me stated that the Fifth Symphony was a Soviet artist's no-nonsense response to fair criticism.[15]

Official critics treated the symphony as a turnaround in its composer's career.[16] Like the Pravda attack at that time on the opera Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District, the political basis for extolling the Fifth Symphony was to show how the Party could make artists bow to its demands.[16]

The official tone toward the Fifth Symphony was further set by a review by Alexei Tolstoy, who likened the symphony to the literary model of the Soviet Bildungsroman describing "the formation of a personality"—in other words, of a Soviet personality.[13] In the first movement, the composer-hero suffers a psychological crisis giving rise to a burst of energy. The second movement provides respite. In the third movement, the personality begins to form: "Here the personality submerges itself in the great epoch that surrounds it, and begins to resonate with the epoch."[17] With the finale, Tolstoy wrote, came victory, "an enormous optimistic lift".[17] As for the ecstatic reaction of the audience to the work, Tolstoy claimed it showed Shostakovich's perestroyka to be sincere. "Our audience is organically incapable of accepting decadent, gloomy, pessimistic art. Our audience responds enthusiastically to all that is bright, clear, joyous, optimistic, life-affirming."[17]

Not everyone agreed with Tolstoy, even after another article reportedly by the composer echoed Tolstoy's views. Boris Asafyev wrote, "This unsettled, sensitive, evocative music which inspires such gigantic conflict comes across as a true account of the problems facing modern man—not one individual or several, but mankind."[18]

Public edit

During the first performance of the symphony, people were reported to have wept during the Largo movement.[19] The music, steeped in an atmosphere of mourning, contained echoes of the panikhida, the Russian Orthodox requiem. It also recalled a genre of Russian symphonic works written in memory of the dead, including pieces by Glazunov, Steinberg, Rimsky-Korsakov and Stravinsky.

Symphony as artistic salvation edit

After the symphony had been performed in Moscow, Heinrich Neuhaus called the work "deep, meaningful, gripping music, classical in the integrity of its conception, perfect in form and the mastery of orchestral writing—music striking for its novelty and originality, but at the same time somehow hauntingly familiar, so truly and sincerely does it recount human feelings".[20]

Shostakovich returned to the traditional four-movement form and a normal-sized orchestra. More tellingly, he organized each movement along clear lines, having concluded that a symphony cannot be a viable work without firm architecture. The harmonic idiom in the Fifth is less astringent, more tonal than previously, and the thematic material is more accessible. It has been said that, in the Fifth Symphony, the best qualities of Shostakovich's music, such as meditation, humor and grandeur, blend in perfect balance and self-fulfillment.[1]

Post-Testimony response edit

The final movement is declared in Testimony to be a parody of shrillness, representing "forced rejoicing". In the words attributed to the composer in Testimony (a work which has had its authenticity questioned[21][22]):

The rejoicing is forced, created under threat, as in Boris Godunov. It's as if someone were beating you with a stick and saying, "Your business is rejoicing, your business is rejoicing", and you rise, shaky, and go marching off, muttering, "Our business is rejoicing, our business is rejoicing."[23]

While most performances and recordings of the symphony have ended with a gradual acceleration of the coda, especially Leonard Bernstein's October 1959 Columbia Records recording with the New York Philharmonic (following a performance in Moscow in the presence of the composer), more recent renditions have reflected a different interpretation (though not clearly provable) of Shostakovich's intention.[citation needed] Shostakovich's friend and colleague Mstislav Rostropovich conducted the closing minutes in a much slower, subdued manner, never accelerating; he did this in a performance in Russia with the National Symphony Orchestra and in their commercial Teldec recording. He told CBS that Shostakovich had written a "hidden message" in the symphony, which is allegedly supported by the composer's words in Testimony.[citation needed]

Nowadays, the Fifth is one of Shostakovich's most popular symphonies.[24]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Schwarz 1980, p. 267.
  2. ^ Wilson 2006, p. 158: Ovation witnessed by the director of the Leningrad Philharmonic, Mikhail Chulaki.
  3. ^ a b Blokker 1979, p. 66.
  4. ^ a b Steinberg 1995, p. 546.
  5. ^ Jakob Knaus: Schostakowitsch dreht allen eine Nase. In: Neue Zürcher Zeitung, 28 August 2021, p. 36.
  6. ^ Blokker 1979, p. 68.
  7. ^ Blokker 1979, p. 69.
  8. ^ Jakob Knaus: A «Happy Birthday» for the Russian Revolution. The hidden musical quote was a secret weapon for Dmitri Shostakovich. In: Neue Zürcher Zeitung. 14 October 2017, page 47
  9. ^ BBC Radio 3 Discovering Music, retrieved on 25 April 2009.
  10. ^ Andrew Clark (2009-03-14). "A Liverpool orchestra at its peak". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10. Retrieved 2009-05-14.
  11. ^ Stephen Johnson. "Shostakovich: A Journey Into Light". BBC Radio 3. Retrieved 2009-05-14.
  12. ^ Wilson 2006, pp. 158–159.
  13. ^ a b Maes 2002, p. 353.
  14. ^ Hulme 2010, p. 190.
  15. ^ Shostakovich, Dmitri (25 January 1938). . Вечерняя Москва (in Russian). No. 19. p. 3. Archived from the original on 2 January 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2023. Среди отзывов, часто очень обстоятельно анализировавших это произведение, особенную радость доставил мне один, где говорилось, что пятая симфония — это деловой творческий ответ советского художника на справедливую критику
  16. ^ a b Maes 2002, p. 304.
  17. ^ a b c Taruskin 2006, p. 32.
  18. ^ Sollertinsky & Sollertinsky 1980, p. 84.
  19. ^ MacDonald 1990, pp. 123–124.
  20. ^ Sollertinsky & Sollertinsky 1980, pp. 82–83.
  21. ^ Basner, Veniamin; Karayev, Kara; Levitin, Yuri; Khachaturian, Karen; Tishchenko, Boris; Weinberg, Mieczysław (2005). "A Pitiful Fake ('Zhalkaia poddelka'): About the So-Called 'Memoirs' of D. D. Shostakovich (1979). Letter to the editor of Literaturnaia gazeta.". In Brown, Malcolm Hamrick (ed.). A Shostakovich Casebook. Indiana University Press. p. 80. ISBN 9780253218230.
  22. ^ Taruskin, Richard (26 August 2016). "Was Shostakovich a Martyr? Or Is That Just Fiction?". The New York Times. New York. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  23. ^ Volkov 1979, p. 183.
  24. ^ Wright 2010, p. 353.

References edit

External links edit

  • Sample recordings of the first and second movements by the New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein conducting.
  • Keeping Score: Shostakovich Symphony No. 5 Multimedia website produced by the San Francisco Symphony
  • PBS Video: (Full Episode) Publicly condemned Shostakovich's 5th Symphony saved his life. Was there a hidden meaning

symphony, shostakovich, symphony, minor, dmitri, shostakovich, work, orchestra, composed, between, april, july, 1937, first, performance, november, 1937, leningrad, leningrad, philharmonic, orchestra, under, yevgeny, mravinsky, premiere, triumphal, success, th. The Symphony No 5 in D minor Op 47 by Dmitri Shostakovich is a work for orchestra composed between April and July 1937 Its first performance was on November 21 1937 in Leningrad by the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra under Yevgeny Mravinsky The premiere was a triumphal success 1 that appealed to both the public and official critics receiving an ovation that lasted well over half an hour 2 Contents 1 Form 1 1 First movement Moderato 1 2 Second movement Allegretto 1 3 Third movement Largo 1 4 Fourth movement Allegro non troppo 2 Instrumentation 3 Overview 3 1 Composition 3 2 Reception 3 2 1 Official 3 2 2 Public 3 3 Symphony as artistic salvation 3 4 Post Testimony response 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksForm editThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message First movement Moderato edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The first movement in D minor is in sonata form The exposition opens with a strenuous string figure in canon of rising and falling minor sixths that quickly narrow to minor thirds 3 The opening s dotted rhythm persists as a lyrical first theme is played by the first violins 4 This theme presents itself as a descending five tone motif in bars 6 7 but Shostakovich had already used it in the second movement of his fourth symphony bars 318 321 which was recognized there as a quotation from Gustav Mahler s song Des Antonius von Padua Fischpredigt from Des Knaben Wunderhorn specifically the line He goes to the rivers and preaches to the fishes In its original appearance this Mahler quotation is juxtaposed with musical notation in the shape of a nose on page 122 of the Sikorski score the notes in the nose being a quotation from The Internationale which was also previously hidden in bars 25 30 of the first movement of the 4th symphony with the effect of depicting the futility of the socialist sermon For the appearance of this quotation in the fifth symphony the five tone Mahler motif occurs in a total of 15 variants in the first and third movements and bears witness to the Shostakovich s secret triumph in being able to describe the party doctrine that had silenced his earlier work as a completely useless sermon This provocative insight is therefore part of Shostakovich s creative response of a Soviet artist to justified criticism However since the fourth symphony had been withdrawn before the premiere in 1936 and could only be presented to the public 25 years later the extramusical context was lost when the 5th symphony was premiered in Leningrad Only later has this connection between the fourth and fifth symphonies which undermines the demands of socialist realism been uncovered 5 The first theme is repeated several times in combination with the opening motif and greatly varied with new demarcations and penetrations There is a great deal of variation and linking of all elements giving the impression of a single continuous process nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The secondary theme mm 50 120 in E minor offers the greatest possible contrast to the main theme The tempo is more fluid and the sustained tones of the secondary theme are linked by wide intervals octaves fourths sevenths instead of the dominant seconds found in the first theme Simplicity prevails over complexity as the far reaching lyrical melody is accompanied by chords in a continuous slightly lively rhythm 3 An accompanying figure takes the lead at the beginning of the powerful development Only now does the tempo of this movement reach Allegro Themes from the exposition appear in augmentation and diminution in contrapuntal conflicts with themselves The thematic material is transformed into a grotesquely distorted quick march in a wide development with military drums and trumpets After several false starts from m 157 the second theme intervenes in the action In the recapitulation which is heavily reduced compared to the exposition themes heard earlier on are brought back again either identically or somewhat varied Near the end of the movement the second subject is heard again in the form of a canon played by flute and horn then the same material is played by the violin and piccolo The movement ends with the celesta playing a rising figure and slowly fading away 6 In general the inner drama of the first movement can be described as an interplay between lamentation and mourning contrasting with a departure for battle which reaches its climax with the entry of the recapitulation In the end the outcome of this conflict proves to be ambiguous and the looming threats have not yet been resolved Second movement Allegretto edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The second movement is in a ternary scherzo form or minuet and trio form in A minor but it more closely resembles a landler than either a minuet or a scherzo The first section and its reprise consist of a rather loose and varied sequence of landler melodies The movement opens with a heavy loud introduction in the cellos and basses 7 followed by a softer solo on the E clarinet and the french horn later oboes and finally strings At the end of this development the landler becomes grotesque and bloated The trio has a peculiar harmony Degrees I and VII alternate in the basic position so that parallel fifths constantly arise The effect does not sound like folk music but rather like run down music according to whom In the recapitulation some of the material heard earlier is repeated piano and staccato not loudly and sustained as at the start The movement closes in A minor with four canonically enriched fortissimo bars Overall the scherzo lacks innocence and humor closer listening assures that the peace is not to be trusted considering the numerous unusual modulations and occasional discords 8 Third movement Largo edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Shostakovich begins this movement with F minor violins in three sections rather than the more usual two The opening theme is played by the third violins Second and first violins are slowly added and continue the melody After the assertive trumpets of the first movement and the raucous horns of the second this movement uses no brass at all so there is a limited palette of sounds This section yields to a pair of flutes in widely separated counterpoint the second of which makes reference to the first subject of the first movement The solo is then passed on to the oboe with string accompaniment The third movement ends like the first with a celesta solo that slowly fades away The strings are divided throughout the entire movement 3 groups of violins violas in 2 cellos in 2 basses in 2 This movement is a culmination of resignation mourning and lamentation which in the center of the movement increases to a passionate accusation with clarinet xylophone and piano Otherwise the movement is more chamber music like and carried by the string orchestra The tonality is floating and often not definable free floating and independent linearity of the individual voices prevails Fourth movement Allegro non troppo edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The D minor finale also in sonata form differs greatly from its predecessors mostly with regard to melodic structure and motives Various themes from earlier in the work are expanded until we get to a new theme played on the trumpet This new theme is passed on to the strings and eventually the piece becomes quieter The development section is much quieter and more tranquil and is ultimately replaced by a march where the melodies from earlier are played like a funeral dirge accompanied by timpani The music builds as the new accompaniment passes from timpani to woodwinds and then to strings finally reaching a point where the piece changes from a minor key into a major key Instrumentation editThe work is scored for two flutes and piccolo two oboes two clarinets and E clarinet two bassoons and contrabassoon four horns three B trumpets three trombones tuba timpani snare drum triangle cymbals bass drum tam tam glockenspiel xylophone two harps one part piano celesta and strings 4 Overview editComposition edit The Symphony quotes Shostakovich s song Vozrozhdenije Op 46 No 1 composed in 1936 37 most notably in the last movement the song is a setting of a poem by Alexander Pushkin find text and a translation here that deals with the matter of rebirth This song is by some considered to be a vital clue to the interpretation and understanding of the whole symphony 9 In addition commentators have noted that Shostakovich incorporated a motif from the Habanera from Bizet s Carmen into the first movement a reference to Shostakovich s earlier infatuation with Elena Konstantinovskaya who refused his offer of marriage she subsequently moved to Spain and married the photographer and film director Roman Karmen 10 11 Reception edit With the Fifth Symphony Shostakovich gained an unprecedented triumph with the music appealing equally and remarkably to both the public and official critics though the overwhelming public response to the work initially aroused suspicions among certain officials The then head of the Leningrad Philharmonic Mikhail Chulaki recalls that certain authorities bristled at Mravinsky s gesture of lifting the score above his head to the cheering audience and a subsequent performance was attended by two plainly hostile officials V N Surin and Boris M Yarustovsky who tried to claim in the face of the vociferous ovation given the symphony that the audience was made up of hand picked Shostakovich supporters 12 Yet the authorities in due course claimed that they found everything they had demanded of Shostakovich restored in the symphony Meanwhile the public heard it as an expression of the suffering to which it had been subjected by Stalin The same work was essentially received two different ways 13 nbsp Alexei Tolstoy s review set the official tone toward the Fifth Symphony Official edit An article by the composer appeared in the newspaper Vechernyaya Moskva on January 25 1938 a few days before the Moscow premiere of the Fifth Symphony 14 Among the reviews which often analyzed the work in thorough detail one that particularly delighted me stated that the Fifth Symphony was a Soviet artist s no nonsense response to fair criticism 15 Official critics treated the symphony as a turnaround in its composer s career 16 Like the Pravda attack at that time on the opera Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District the political basis for extolling the Fifth Symphony was to show how the Party could make artists bow to its demands 16 The official tone toward the Fifth Symphony was further set by a review by Alexei Tolstoy who likened the symphony to the literary model of the Soviet Bildungsroman describing the formation of a personality in other words of a Soviet personality 13 In the first movement the composer hero suffers a psychological crisis giving rise to a burst of energy The second movement provides respite In the third movement the personality begins to form Here the personality submerges itself in the great epoch that surrounds it and begins to resonate with the epoch 17 With the finale Tolstoy wrote came victory an enormous optimistic lift 17 As for the ecstatic reaction of the audience to the work Tolstoy claimed it showed Shostakovich s perestroyka to be sincere Our audience is organically incapable of accepting decadent gloomy pessimistic art Our audience responds enthusiastically to all that is bright clear joyous optimistic life affirming 17 Not everyone agreed with Tolstoy even after another article reportedly by the composer echoed Tolstoy s views Boris Asafyev wrote This unsettled sensitive evocative music which inspires such gigantic conflict comes across as a true account of the problems facing modern man not one individual or several but mankind 18 Public edit During the first performance of the symphony people were reported to have wept during the Largo movement 19 The music steeped in an atmosphere of mourning contained echoes of the panikhida the Russian Orthodox requiem It also recalled a genre of Russian symphonic works written in memory of the dead including pieces by Glazunov Steinberg Rimsky Korsakov and Stravinsky Symphony as artistic salvation edit After the symphony had been performed in Moscow Heinrich Neuhaus called the work deep meaningful gripping music classical in the integrity of its conception perfect in form and the mastery of orchestral writing music striking for its novelty and originality but at the same time somehow hauntingly familiar so truly and sincerely does it recount human feelings 20 Shostakovich returned to the traditional four movement form and a normal sized orchestra More tellingly he organized each movement along clear lines having concluded that a symphony cannot be a viable work without firm architecture The harmonic idiom in the Fifth is less astringent more tonal than previously and the thematic material is more accessible It has been said that in the Fifth Symphony the best qualities of Shostakovich s music such as meditation humor and grandeur blend in perfect balance and self fulfillment 1 Post Testimony response edit The final movement is declared in Testimony to be a parody of shrillness representing forced rejoicing In the words attributed to the composer in Testimony a work which has had its authenticity questioned 21 22 The rejoicing is forced created under threat as in Boris Godunov It s as if someone were beating you with a stick and saying Your business is rejoicing your business is rejoicing and you rise shaky and go marching off muttering Our business is rejoicing our business is rejoicing 23 While most performances and recordings of the symphony have ended with a gradual acceleration of the coda especially Leonard Bernstein s October 1959 Columbia Records recording with the New York Philharmonic following a performance in Moscow in the presence of the composer more recent renditions have reflected a different interpretation though not clearly provable of Shostakovich s intention citation needed Shostakovich s friend and colleague Mstislav Rostropovich conducted the closing minutes in a much slower subdued manner never accelerating he did this in a performance in Russia with the National Symphony Orchestra and in their commercial Teldec recording He told CBS that Shostakovich had written a hidden message in the symphony which is allegedly supported by the composer s words in Testimony citation needed Nowadays the Fifth is one of Shostakovich s most popular symphonies 24 Notes edit a b Schwarz 1980 p 267 Wilson 2006 p 158 Ovation witnessed by the director of the Leningrad Philharmonic Mikhail Chulaki a b Blokker 1979 p 66 a b Steinberg 1995 p 546 Jakob Knaus Schostakowitsch dreht allen eine Nase In Neue Zurcher Zeitung 28 August 2021 p 36 Blokker 1979 p 68 Blokker 1979 p 69 Jakob Knaus A Happy Birthday for the Russian Revolution The hidden musical quote was a secret weapon for Dmitri Shostakovich In Neue Zurcher Zeitung 14 October 2017 page 47 BBC Radio 3 Discovering Music retrieved on 25 April 2009 Andrew Clark 2009 03 14 A Liverpool orchestra at its peak Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Retrieved 2009 05 14 Stephen Johnson Shostakovich A Journey Into Light BBC Radio 3 Retrieved 2009 05 14 Wilson 2006 pp 158 159 a b Maes 2002 p 353 Hulme 2010 p 190 Shostakovich Dmitri 25 January 1938 Moj tvorcheskij otvet Vechernyaya Moskva in Russian No 19 p 3 Archived from the original on 2 January 2023 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Sredi otzyvov chasto ochen obstoyatelno analizirovavshih eto proizvedenie osobennuyu radost dostavil mne odin gde govorilos chto pyataya simfoniya eto delovoj tvorcheskij otvet sovetskogo hudozhnika na spravedlivuyu kritiku a b Maes 2002 p 304 a b c Taruskin 2006 p 32 Sollertinsky amp Sollertinsky 1980 p 84 MacDonald 1990 pp 123 124 Sollertinsky amp Sollertinsky 1980 pp 82 83 Basner Veniamin Karayev Kara Levitin Yuri Khachaturian Karen Tishchenko Boris Weinberg Mieczyslaw 2005 A Pitiful Fake Zhalkaia poddelka About the So Called Memoirs of D D Shostakovich 1979 Letter to the editor of Literaturnaia gazeta In Brown Malcolm Hamrick ed A Shostakovich Casebook Indiana University Press p 80 ISBN 9780253218230 Taruskin Richard 26 August 2016 Was Shostakovich a Martyr Or Is That Just Fiction The New York Times New York Retrieved 12 April 2017 Volkov 1979 p 183 Wright 2010 p 353 References editBlokker Roy 1979 The Music of Dmitri Shostakovich The Symphonies with Robert Dearling Cranbury New Jersey Associated University Presses ISBN 0 8386 1948 7 Hulme Derek C 2010 Dmitri Shostakovich Catalogue 4th ed Lanham The Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 7264 6 MacDonald Ian 1990 The New Shostakovich Boston Northeastern University Press ISBN 1 55553 089 3 Maes Francis 2002 A History of Russian Music FromKamarinskayatoBabi Yar Translated by Arnold J Pomerans and Erica Pomerans Berkeley Los Angeles and London University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21815 9 Rothstein Edward November 12 1968 A Labour of Love Independent Magazine pp 49 52 Schwarz Boris 1980 Sadie Stanley ed The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians Vol 17 London MacMillan ISBN 0 333 23111 2 Schwarz Boris 1983 Music and Musical Life in Soviet Russia Enlarged Edition 1917 1981 Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 33956 1 Sollertinsky Dmitri Sollertinsky Ludmilla 1980 Pages from the Life of Dmitri Shostakovich Translated by Graham Hobbs and Charles Midgley New York and London Harcourt Brace Jovanovich ISBN 0 15 170730 8 Steinberg Michael 1995 The Symphony A Listener s Guide Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512665 3 Taruskin Richard 2006 Public lies and unspeakable truth interpreting Shostakovich s Fifth Symphony In Fanning David ed Shostakovich Studies Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 02831 8 Volkov Solomon 1979 Testimony The Memoirs of Dmitri Shostakovich Translated by Antonina W Bouis New York Harper amp Row ISBN 0 06 014476 9 Volkov Solomon 2004 Shostakovich and Stalin The Extraordinary Relationship Between the Great Composer and the Brutal Dictator London Little Brown ISBN 0 316 86141 3 Wilson Elizabeth 2006 Shostakovich A Life Remembered 2nd ed Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691128863 Wright Craig 2010 Listening to Western Music Cengage Learning ISBN 978 1 4390 8347 5 External links editSample recordings of the first and second movements by the New York Philharmonic Leonard Bernstein conducting Keeping Score Shostakovich Symphony No 5 Multimedia website produced by the San Francisco Symphony PBS Video Full Episode Publicly condemned Shostakovich s 5th Symphony saved his life Was there a hidden meaning Portal nbsp Classical Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Symphony No 5 Shostakovich amp oldid 1206027026, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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