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Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975)

Veranstaltungen zu klassischer Musik, Oper, Ballett und Tanz finden | Shostakovich
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The leading Russian of the Soviet era, Dmitry Shostakovich was born into revolutionary times, but while his artistic course was contorted by the harassments of an authoritarian system, it never lost its moral or expressive integrity.

Born in St Petersburg, he was a gifted student who announced his talent and individuality to the public with his First Symphony at the age of 19. Less than a decade after the 1917 Revolution, the lively 1920s atmosphere of modernist experimentation was reflected in his brilliant, often satirical early scores. The mood changed, however, after musical activity was brought under state control; the grittily realistic opera Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District was denounced in Pravda in 1936 as ‘chaos instead of music’ and quickly disappeared from the repertoire. Shostakovich withdrew from performance the brooding Fourth Symphony he had just completed, offering up instead the more optimistic and conventional Fifth and presenting it as ‘a Soviet artist’s reply to just criticism’.

Thus, the cast for his subsequent troubled relationship with the system was set. To anger the authorities could be a fatal act, even for artists, and for the rest of his life Shostakovich would tread a fine line between the party orthodoxy of often-bland socialist realism on the one hand, and personal expression and cleverness (denounced as ‘formalism’) on the other. The two could be legitimately brought together in the patriotic fervour of the Second World War, especially in the Seventh Symphony, the ‘Leningrad’, whose grand-scale evocation of the besieged city’s resilience won international acclaim; yet a slip-up with the almost flippant mood of the Ninth, his first post-war symphony and considered not to be heroic enough, led to another round of criticism and withdrawal into irony and obfuscation as a method of self-preservation.

The death of Stalin in 1953 ushered in a period of relative artistic freedom, which Shostakovich began to exploit in works of stark outward expression such as the Thirteenth Symphony (1962), inspired by the wartime massacre of civilians at Babiy Yar, or the searing Fourteenth (1969). At the same time he invested intense intimacy of feeling into chamber music, above all in his string quartets – eleven out of his total of fifteen were composed after 1953.

Shostakovich’s output ranges acrsoss orchestral music (fifteen symphonies, plus six concertos), operas, ballets, film scores, chamber music, piano music and songs. But he will be remembered above all as one of the twentieth century’s greatest masters of the symphony – the genre whose broad human canvas seemed his natural idiom.

Profile © Lindsay Kemp 2025

Werkverzeichnis
24 Preludes24 Preludes for piano, Op.3424 Präludien und Fugen für Klavier, Op.8724 Préludes et Fugues pour piano, Op.87 : extraits24 Préludes pour piano, Op.34: extraits5 pieces for Two Violins and Piano7 Romances on Poems by Blok for soprano, violin, cello and piano, Op.127Anna KareninaAntiformalist Rayok, Satirical cantata for four voices, chorus, and pianoBallet Suite no. 1 for orchestra, Op.84aBallet Suite no. 4 for orchestra, Op.91eCellokonzert Nr. 1 in Es-Dur, Op.107Cellokonzert Nr. 2 in G-Dur, Op.126Cellosonate in d-Moll, Op.40Concertino for two pianos in A minor, Op.94Concerto DSCHDie NaseElegy and Polka for string quartet op. 36aFestouvertüre in A-Dur, Op.96Film music to The Gadfly, Op.97: RomanceFilmmusik zu Shakespeares Hamlet, Op.116Five Preludes for piano, Op.2cFrom Jewish Folk Poetry, song cycle, Op 79aHamlet: Suite für Orchester, Op.116aKammersymphonie in D-Dur (Arr. des Streichquartetts Nr. 4 von Rodold Barshai), Op.83aKammersymphonie in c-Moll (arr. Rudolf Barshai), Op.110aKlavierkonzert Nr. 2 F-Dur, Op. 102Klavierquintett g-Moll, Op. 57Klaviertrio Nr. 1 c-Moll, Op.8Klaviertrio Nr. 2 e-Moll, Op. 67Konzert Nr. 1 in c-Moll für Klavier, Trompete und Streichorchester, Op.35Lady Macbeth von MzenskMichelangelo Suite on Verses by Buonarroti for bass and piano, Op.145Moscow, Cheryomushki (Cherrytown)Music to the film The Gadfly, based on the novel by Voynich, Op.97October, symphonic poem in C minor for orchestra, Op.131Piano Sonata No. 1, Op.12Piano Sonata No. 2 in B minor, Op.61Prelude and Fugue in B major, Op.87 no.11Prelude and Fugue in C sharp minor, Op.87 no.10Prelude and Fugue in D major, Op.87 no.5Prelude and Fugue in D minor, Op.87 no.24Prelude in E flat minor, Op.34 no.14Präludium und Scherzo für Streichoktett, Op.11Scherzo in F sharp minor for orchestra, Op.1Six Poems by Marina Tsvetayeva, suite for contralto and piano, Op.143Sonata for violin and piano, Op.134Sonate für Viola und Klavier, Op.147Song of the Forests, oratorio after Dolmatovsky, Op.81Spanish Songs for (mezzo)soprano and piano, Op.100Streichquartett Nr. 1 in C-Dur, Op.49Streichquartett Nr. 10 in As-Dur, Op.118Streichquartett Nr. 11 in f-Moll, Op.122Streichquartett Nr. 12 in Des-Dur, Op.133Streichquartett Nr. 13 in b-Moll, Op.138Streichquartett Nr. 14 in Fis-Dur, Op.142Streichquartett Nr. 15 in es-Moll, Op.144Streichquartett Nr. 2 in A-Dur, Op.68Streichquartett Nr. 3 in F-Dur, Op.73Streichquartett Nr. 4 in D-Dur, Op.83Streichquartett Nr. 5 in B-Dur, Op.92Streichquartett Nr. 6 in G-Dur, Op.101Streichquartett Nr. 7 in fis-Moll, Op.108Streichquartett Nr. 8 in c-Moll "Malinconia", Op.110Streichquartett Nr. 9 in Es-Dur, Op.117Suite for Jazz Orchestra no. 2, Op.50b: Waltz no. 2Suite for Variety Stage OrchestraSuite from The Gadfly for orchestra, Op.97aSuite für Jazzorchester Nr. 2, Op.50bSymphonie Nr. 1 in f-Moll, Op.10Symphonie Nr. 10 in e-Moll, Op.93Symphonie Nr. 11 in g-Moll "Das Jahr 1905", Op.103Symphonie Nr. 12 in d-Moll "Das Jahr 1917", Op.112Symphonie Nr. 13 in b-Moll "Babi Jar", Op.113Symphonie Nr. 14, Op.135Symphonie Nr. 15 in A-Dur, Op.141Symphonie Nr. 4 in c-Moll, Op.43Symphonie Nr. 5 in d-Moll, Op.47Symphonie Nr. 6 in h-Moll, Op.54Symphonie Nr. 7 in C-Dur "Leningrad", Op.60Symphonie Nr. 8 in c-Moll, Op.65Symphonie Nr. 9 in Es-Dur, Op.70The Bolt for orchestra: suite, Op.27aTheme and Variations in B flat major for orchestra, Op.3Three Fantastic Dances for piano, Op.5Two Pieces for String Quartet: Adagio and AllegrettoTwo Pieces for string quartet "Elegy and Polka", Op.30bTwo pieces, Op.11Violinkonzert Nr. 1 in a-Moll, Op.77 oder Op.99Violinkonzert Nr. 2 in cis-Moll, Op.129