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Carnegie Hall Sound Insights - The Songs of Shostakovich
“I consider that every artist who isolates himself from the world is doomed. I find it incredible that an artist should wish to shut himself away from the people…I always try to make myself as widely understood as possible; and if I don’t succeed, I consider it my own fault.” —D.D. Shostakovich
SYMPHONY NO. 5 NEXT: Shostakovich
and His World

WHAT is it about Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony that makes it one of the most hotly disputed pieces of the twentieth century? Although it is very popular and frequently performed, it is not a piece that broke new ground, as so many in that century did. There were no riots at its premiere; it was neither shocking nor outrageous. Instead, it marked Shostakovich’s turn away from the experimental music he had been writing to a straightforward, more accessible style.

Indeed, it is this more direct style that has sparked the controversy. What did Shostakovich mean by it? What was he trying to say? We are always interested in great composers’ motives for the music they wrote. But for Shostakovich those motives had grave, life-or-death consequences. That is because the Fifth Symphony, premiered in 1937, was written at the height of Stalin’s terror.

Just a year before, Stalin, outraged by Shostakovich’s avant-garde opera Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District, had publicly set the challenge: Change the way you write music, Shostakovich, or your voice will be silenced.

Shostakovich responded with his Fifth Symphony. It was nothing less than a peace offering. With it, Shostakovich hoped to save his life. It seemed to work. Stalin was pleased; he liked that the symphony was direct—even tuneful. What’s more, it ended in a march, Stalin’s favorite type of music.

The Fifth Symphony was Shostakovich’s first artistic attempt to try to survive in Stalin’s oppressive system. Terrorized audiences found consolation, comfort and hope in this piece. Was Shostakovich outwardly satisfying Stalin while inwardly speaking to them? Explore the history during the creation of Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony in this interactive timeline.




Discovery Concert: Michael Tilson Thomas and The New World Symphony
The Shostakovich Fifth: On the Trail of the Truth
WED, FEB 28, 2007 at 8 PM
Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage



A Shostakovich Timeline
Click on a date below to learn more. Many of the images for this timeline were provided by The Wolfsonian-FIU and by Lebrecht Music and Arts Photo Library.

1905
The Sunday becomes bloody On Sunday, January 9, over 100,000 Russians gathered in front of the Tsar’s Winter Palace in order to deliver a petition. The police opened fire and killed a thousand people, including women and children. Although the Tsar, who was not at the Palace, did not order the shooting, he was subsequently blamed for it, earning the name “Bloody Nicholas.” Russia erupted in violence that would continue to escalate into the next year, when Shostakovich was born.

1905 1917 1918 1919 1921 1925 1928 1930 1932 1934 1936 1937


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