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Shostakovich's Symphony No.8

This listing is in the past
Ulster HallBelfast, Northern Ireland, BT2 7FF, United Kingdom
Dates/times in London time zone
Performers
Tamás KocsisViolin
Rafael PayareConductor
Ulster Orchestra

Written with a strong Baroque flavour, the romantic and comic misadventures of M. Jourdain’s desperate attempts at social climbing are humorously depicted in this charming work.

In February 1943, the German army was defeated at Stalingrad, causing huge pride and celebration across Russia. Shostakovich wasn’t entirely sure this was cause for joy – rather, he feared it would give Stalin licence to wield his terrible power more than before. The Eighth Symphony was written in September of that year and in public, Shostakovich described it as "an attempt to reflect the terrible tragedy of war". However, in private he described it as a poem of suffering, stating that "the war brought much new sorrow and much new destruction, but I haven’t forgotten the terrible pre-war years".

Despite a positive reaction from audiences, the authorities attacked it for being anti-Soviet, and ultimately in 1948 it led to Shostakovich’s second denunciation. The work starts in suff­ering and anguish, but Shostakovich was an optimist at heart and by its end, as he said himself: "All that is dark and evil rots away, and beauty triumphs.

Children under 16 go free!* £2 discount for those aged 65+ & Great group discounts! Under 26s, mature students and unemployed only £5!
The Box Office will allocate seats subject to availability.

** Proof of age or valid full-time student card must be shown when paying for your tickets.
* Maximum 2 per paying adult.
Additional under 16s £5
** Seating area restrictions may apply to some discounts.

Ulster Orchestra
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