Symphony No. 15 (Shostakovich)

The Symphony No. 15 in A major, Op. 141, Dmitri Shostakovich's last, was written in a little over a month during the summer of 1971 in Repino, outside St. Petersburg. It was first performed in Moscow on 8 January 1972 by the All-Union Radio and Television Symphony Orchestra under Maxim Shostakovich.

Symphony No. 15
by Dmitri Shostakovich
Dmitri Shostakovich in the audience at the Bach Celebration of 28 July 1950
KeyA major
OpusOp. 141
FormSymphony
Composed1971
DurationAbout 44 minutes
MovementsFour
Premiere
Date8 January 1972 (1972-01-08)
LocationMoscow
ConductorMaxim Shostakovich
PerformersAll-Union Radio and Television Symphony Orchestra

Form

The work has four movements,[1] the middle two being played without interruption, with a duration of approximately 45 minutes:

Analysis

Shostakovich originally subtitled the first movement "The Toyshop",[2] referring to a superficial sense of childlike innocence and naiveté which is soon corrupted. It opens with two chimes on the glockenspiel and a lengthy passage for the solo flute, growing out of a quirky five-note motif which flits between A major and A minor (connected by a C), accompanied by slow-changing but lively chords for pizzicato strings. A being As in German notation, these five notes, E-A-C-B-A, spell out the name "SASCHA", the name of his grandson who was nine years old at the time (compare this to the "Elmira" theme in Symphony No. 10). Whooping off-beat horn chords, use of the clarinet's altissimo register, regular glockenspiel interjections, lusty trumpet fanfares, drum rolls, and solo passages for bassoon and xylophone make up the brightly coloured, infantile sound world of this movement; yet the bizarre harmonic ambiguity and unpredictable employment of variable tempi shatter any sense of real innocence. Though Shostakovich often quotes rhythms from Gioachino Rossini's William Tell Overture, in this movement he quotes the tune as well (see the Quotations section below). Two particularly striking passages make use of the device of prolation canon, first in the strings and later in the woodwind. Both these passages create complex textures: at rehearsal figure 29, he makes use of an 8:6:5 polyrhythm. All these features contribute powerfully to the strange and enigmatic atmosphere of the movement.

The second movement (opening in the far-removed key of F minor) opens with an eerie chorale for the brass alone. Chromatic thirds move simultaneously in three octaves in the trumpets, tenor trombones and bass trombone and tuba, against a pedal C in the horns. A sense of pathos is achieved by the despairing rises and falls in the dynamics, and the solo cello plays a languorous and meandering lament, exploiting an enormous tessitura from the lowest open string to the thirteenth position. Low register flutes play a simple motif (in sixths, accompanied by cello trills) which is eventually taken over and expanded upon by the solo trombone. A side-drum roll brings the entire brass section to a fortissimo statement of the initial flute theme, and a crashing chorale for brass (without trumpets), timpani, bassoons and double basses sounds against an impassioned chromatic melody for strings and high woodwind, derived from material used in the first movement, to create a colossal, distorted, organ-like effect. After a selection of quieter instrumental groupings and a recapitulation of the trombone melody (this time accompanied by pulsating timpani semiquavers), an adagio celesta solo is ingeniously imitated by the combination of cello string harmonics and vibraphone, eventually used to accompany a solo double bass, before a final reference to the opening brass chorale.

The third movement begins with parallel fifths in the bassoons that eventually settle on a G and D double pedal, against which the woodwind section is showcased through an agitated clarinet melody built on the diminished chord, chromatic flourishes for flutes and piccolo, low clarinet murmurings, and two oboes in canon in sevenths. This is imitated by the string section (up-bows are specified for the solo violin to re-create the sound of the staccato clarinet tonguing). A trombone glissando across a minor third and a clattering interjection from the timpani contribute to the humorous character (although the movement is not termed a scherzo by the composer), and the movement ends with a cold percussive ticking that foreshadows the close of the finale, as well as a rising fourth in the piccolo, xylophone and pizzicato second violins that ends the movement firmly in G minor.

The final movement is notable for many things, among them its eerie coda on a sustained pedal point in the strings supporting an astonishing percussion toccata featuring castanets, snare drum, wood block, xylophone, and triangle. This recalls the final moments of the scherzo from the Fourth Symphony, as well as those of a much later and similarly morbid work, the Second Cello Concerto. The long-held note is similar to the ending of the Fourth, which ends on a long (app. 2 minutes) C minor chord. Through this fascinating melee the timpani plays the movement's main passacaglia idea, which may stem from the "invasion" theme from the Seventh Symphony. Finally the glockenspiel and celesta strike a single, sustained, C to close on an A major chord, thus ending the symphony in the major variant of the opening chord ("Picardy third") and with a very similar orchestration (hinting to the possibility of a new beginning?).

It is worth noting that Shostakovich, as he often does in his late scores, includes certain aspects of twelve-tone writing in the music. He is not interested in the structural implications of the technique; he just constructs some melodies in this style. [3]

Use of quotations

Ever the humourist, Shostakovich delighted in placing allusions to the works of himself and other composers in his work, and his Fifteenth symphony is particularly rich in quotations. In addition to the cryptic references to his own music, it includes an outburst of Rossini's William Tell Overture in the first movement (rehearsal figure 12); allusions to Mikhail Glinka, Sergei Rachmaninov and Gustav Mahler; and the use of Richard Wagner's Fate leitmotif from the Ring Cycle.

Most skilful is his manipulation of the longing leitmotif from Wagner's Tristan und Isolde at the end of the fourth movement. Beginning at rehearsal figure 113 in the first violin part, Wagner's famous motif of a rising minor sixth followed by a two-note chromatic descent[4] grows organically out of Shostakovich's own theme: a quirky and grotesque reference to the composer's own sense of suffering at his late stage of life, stated towards the close of this semi-autobiographical work.

The composer said in conversation with his friend, Isaac Glikman : "I don't myself quite know why the quotations are there, but I could not, could not, not include them".[5]

Instrumentation

The symphony is scored for the following instruments:

Percussion aside, the score is remarkably restrained in its use of instrumental forces. Shostakovich's Fourth Symphony requires six flutes, six clarinets, eight horns, two tubas, six timpani and as many as fourteen double basses as part of its orchestra; his Seventh six trumpets and six trombones. Yet here, the composer is content with far more economical means: his woodwind and brass sections are of early Romantic proportions (and indeed very similar to the orchestra for his Ninth Symphony), and he does not call for the E clarinet, the bass clarinet, the contrabassoon, the harp or the piano, which so many of his large-scale works use.

Though written for a conventional orchestra with augmented percussion, the symphony is sparingly scored, making use of various chamber music groupings, both typical (such as the use of the brass, woodwind or string sections as units) and atypical (such as the passage for vibraphone, cello harmonics, and solo double bass). The large battery of percussion is used to add flavour to these instrumental colorings.

Shostakovich utilizes several modern techniques for the percussionist, such as striking the rim of the snare drum in addition to the drum head, and triple-malleting for the glockenspiel. He has the snare drummer play several instruments at once: wood block, castanets and snare drum. This technique of scoring for multiple percussion instruments for one performer is now considered a standard method of writing in modern orchestral, solo, and ensemble literature.

Recordings

Recordings of this symphony include:

Orchestra Conductor Record Company Year of Recording Format
Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra Maxim Shostakovich Melodiya 1972 LP only World Premiere Recording
Philadelphia Orchestra Eugene Ormandy RCA Red Seal Records 1972 CD
Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra Kirill Kondrashin Melodiya 1974 CD
USSR Symphony Orchestra Maxim Shostakovich Melodiya LP only
Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra Yevgeny Mravinsky Melodiya 1976 CD
London Philharmonic Orchestra Bernard Haitink Decca Records 1978 CD
Berlin Symphony Orchestra Kurt Sanderling Eterna Music 1978 CD
Czech Philharmonic Orchestra Frantisek Vaynar Supraphon 1980 LP
USSR Ministry of Culture Symphony Orchestra Gennady Rozhdestvensky Melodiya 1983
London Symphony Orchestra Maxim Shostakovich Collins Classics CD
Prague Symphony Orchestra Maxim Shostakovich Supraphon CD
Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra Neeme Järvi Deutsche Grammophon 1989 CD
London Symphony Orchestra Mstislav Rostropovich Teldec 1989 CD
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Vladimir Ashkenazy Decca Records 1990 CD
Czecho-Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra Ladislav Slovak Naxos Records CD
Cleveland Orchestra Kurt Sanderling Erato Records 1991 CD
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra Kurt Sanderling Berlin Classics CD
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Jesús López-Cobos Telarc 2001 CD
London Philharmonic Orchestra Mariss Jansons EMI Classics 1997 CD
Chicago Symphony Orchestra Sir Georg Solti Decca Records 1997 CD
Montreal Symphony Orchestra Charles Dutoit Decca Records CD
Gurzenich Orchestra, Cologne Dmitri Kitajenko Capriccio SACD
Russian Federal Orchestra Vakhtang Jordania[6] Angelok1 CD
WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne Rudolf Barshai Brilliant Classics 1998 CD
Duisburg Philharmonic Jonathan Darlington ACOUSENCE CD
Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra Valery Gergiev Mariinsky 2008 CD
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Bernard Haitink RCO Live 2010 SACD
National Youth Orchestra of Canada Jonathan Darlington 2011 CD
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra Vasily Petrenko Naxos 2010 CD

Recordings of modified works of this symphony include:

Orchestra Record Company Year of Recording Format
Kremerata Baltica (version for piano, violin, cello, and percussion) Deutsche Grammophon CD

Influence

According to filmmaker David Lynch, the symphony was a major influence on his film Blue Velvet (1986): "I wrote the script to Shostakovich: No. 15 in A major. I just kept playing the same part of it, over and over again".[7]

gollark: I can also catch and also also AR.
gollark: I wonder if it actually does vary by time.
gollark: Okay, ARing starts now.
gollark: 787wz.
gollark: xx:53:49. Autorefreshing starts at xx:51:49 this time.

References

  1. http://en.scorser.com/I/Sheet+music/200239322.html
  2. Cummings, Robert. "Dmitry Shostakovich – Symphony No. 15 in A major, Op. 141". AllMusic. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  3. Elphick, Daniel (2019-10-03). Music behind the Iron Curtain: Weinberg and his Polish Contemporaries. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-49367-3.
  4. "Tristan and Isolde". www.laits.utexas.edu. Retrieved 2017-02-21.
  5. Shostakovich, Dmitri and Glikman, Isaak (2001). Story of a Friendship: The Letters of Dmitry Shostakovich to Isaak Glikman. Cornell Univ Press. ISBN 0-8014-3979-5. Page 315.
  6. C. H. Loh (July 2006). "Review in DSCH Journal No. 25" (PDF). James Arts. Retrieved 18 August 2010.
  7. Lynch on Lynch. ISBN 0-571-22018-5. Page 135.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.