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 here
is something engaging about Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975), that
bespectacled, chain-smoking gentleman who looked perpetually ill at
ease (as his many photographs attests), which many people aren’t
always aware of. The doom and gloom that he wears on his sleeve in
his 15 symphonies and equal number of string quartets is only one
view of the multi-faceted Soviet-era Russian composer. While these
most personal and painful of utterances, borne of years of emotional
and mental (rather than physical) privations, formed a private
chapter in his life, his popular and populist side came through
publicly in his film scores and music for the stage.
My first exposure
to this side of Shostakovich was in his affable pair of piano
concertos and the ballet The Age of Gold. “Avoid the late
symphonies,” cautioned my late grand-uncle who was an avid record
collector. Anyone with a complete set of 15 Shostakovich symphonies
on LP had to be taken seriously! So it was candy for the ears and
harmless entertainment for a bit, which made the subsequent
discovery of the First and Sixth Symphonies all the
more palatable, even if these do not exactly constitute the
proverbial bitter pill.
The truth is that
Shostakovich was comfortable writing in all sorts of different
styles. His stint as a teenager playing the piano for silent movies
made him aware of popular styles, including that elusive and rather
widely-encompassing genre called jazz. But there isn’t very much
that’s jazzy in the two Jazz Suites other than the music
employs popular idioms commonly heard in 1920s dancehalls, cabarets
and nightspots. For instance, could Kurt Weill, whose style can be
identified in Shostakovich’s Jazz Suites, be called a jazz
composer? The same applies to Shostakovich.
Saxophones, wind
and brass instruments, sine qua non in jazz bands, all make
their inevitable appearance. An electric guitar can be heard in the
Foxtrot (Blues) movement of the First Jazz Suite. The
8-movement Second Jazz Suite (with the subheading Suite
for Variety Stage Orchestra) – with its parade of marches,
polkas, gallops and waltzes - has more of the same and inspiration
does wear thin after a while. Much of this was probably hackwork to
the dead serious composer, but it kept the masses happy, his status
as Soviet artist of the people secure, and paid for his electric
bills. Notably, the 6th movement, Waltz 2, a first
cousin to the Waltz in the First Jazz Suite, is that
same zany tune that opens Stanley Kubrick’s movie Eyes Wide Shut.
Improvisation there certainly isn’t.
Then there is
that oddity called Tahiti Trot, a rather colourful
orchestration of Vincent Youman’s Tea for Two. Its strophic
form lends possibilities for all sorts of variations, many involving
the percussion including glockenspiel. As an encore, it’s a scream.
It is certain that Shostakovich never visited Tahiti (the closest he
got was most likely New York City), but the title must have appealed
to him, sounding incredibly hip and exotic for the cloistered
Leningrader.
The Ballet
Suites date from the post Second World War period and assembles
Shostakovich’s earlier music for the stage and screen. The sources
include the ballets The Limpid Stream and The Bolt, a
documentary, a cartoon, a feature movie, incidental music to a play,
and a couple of movements recycled from the First Jazz Suite.
Ballet Suite No.5 is devoted wholly to music from The Bolt,
a comedic Socialist-Realist ballet set in a communist factory where
patriotic and hardworking employees triumph (what else?) over the
slackers and bourgeois types. Again, this is hardly his best music,
sounding largely generic but still bearing the inimitable and witty
Shostakovich stamp.
Of the two CDs
listed above, I would recommend to start listening with the first as
it offers slightly more variety and music from The Bolt gives
a better overview to Shostakovich’s work in this genre. The
completist tendency in the curious listener will naturally lead to
the next recording, which offers more or less the same insouciant
fare. Naxos has an earlier CD – of the New Zealand Symphony
Orchestra with Christopher Lyndon-Gee in both Piano Concertos
(with Michael Houstoun), Festive Overture and The Age of
Gold Suite - that completes the picture. Musical diabetics –
those with a low threshold of tolerance for the sugary sweet -
beware!
Both the Russian
orchestras – the long-established Russian State Symphony and the
post-Cold War created Russian Philharmonic – certainly have the
pedigree to perform this music. The conductor Dmitry Yablonsky, a
cellist by training and son of pianist Oxana Yablonskaya, keeps a
tight rein on the proceedings. A plus point is that recording
standards have come a long way since those dirt-cheap Melodiya discs
when shrill blaring brass regularly threaten to do damage to your
ear drums and speakers. The asking price for these Naxos discs is
equally dirt-cheap, so they are definitely worth taking the risk
on.
But do check out
the competition.
Neeme Jarvi's Royal Scottish National Orchestra (on Chandos) has the
five Ballet Suites, Katerina Ismailova Suite and Festive Overture
neatly packaged in a mid-priced 2 CD box set. For the
complete ballets of The Bolt and The Limpid Stream,
there are no alternatives to veteran baton-wielder Gennady
Rozhdestvensky and his Swedish forces, also on Chandos. Naxos’
stiffest competition will arrive when Decca eventually reissues
Riccardo Chailly’s three Shostakovich CDs – The Jazz Album,
The Dance Album and The Film Album – with the
ultra-slick Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra at budget price.
Shostakovich Lite has never had it so good!
TOU LIANG
played the slow movement of Shostakovich’s Second Piano Concerto
at his
brother’s church wedding, and has yet to ask for forgiveness!
In Singapore, Naxos CDs may be bought most cheaply from Sing Music
at #02-75 Lucky Plaza . Call Doris for help at (+65)62358960. They
also take multiple orders and can supply Hyperion and many other
small labels. 10% discount if you mention The Flying Inkpot.
Readers' Comments
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365:
12.12.1998 © Chia Han-Leon
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