Symphony No. 12 "The Year 1917" op. 112 (1961)
Back in 1997, I wrote a programme note for two performances
(and cracking performances they were too, I might add) of this symphony
given by the Slaithwaite PO under the baton of their redoubtable (and
now alas retired) conductor Adrian Smith. The first paragraph is worth
quoting here, to set the scene: "In 1960, at the frozen heart of
the Cold War, Shostakovich finally became a member of the Communist
Party, subsequently ‘contributing’ to Pravda a series of articles
condemning bourgeois western music. At that time, the West, not comprehending
the consequences of the alternative, understandably damned Shostakovich
with the rest of the Soviet Union. When the Twelfth Symphony
was first heard at the 1962 Edinburgh Festival, the critics were appalled
at this crude piece of blatant, poster-painted Soviet propaganda. After
all, that was exactly what it sounded like, lacking even the one redeeming
feature of the much-maligned Second Symphony, that extraordinary,
undisciplined crucible in which Shostakovich forged his mature style.
[Whilst] the Second was seen as experimental, the Twelfth
seemed merely excremental."
After having held out for so many years, why did Shostakovich
chuck in the towel and meekly pick up his Party membership card? Was
he going soft? Not a bit of it! He joined up because he was forced
to (think of "the consequences of the alternative"), by a
Soviet State that was dispassionately measuring the propaganda value
of his burgeoning international reputation. I observe those cosseted
pop and film "stars" who whinge on about the excessive media
attention that they attract, when it is nothing more than "the
price of fame", a price that’s clearly enough displayed on the
goods they so desire, and if they think it’s too much it they can simply
walk away. Perhaps the tale of Shostakovich’s "price of fame"
ought to be compulsory reading?
Ah, but had he chucked in the towel? Those critics
who heard the Twelfth Symphony clearly thought so, and the music
certainly sounded like it - as a piece of blatant agitprop, the
Twelfth left even the Eleventh gasping in its wake. In
recent years, though, a different view is emerging, a view that finds
in the Twelfth possibly the pinnacle of Shostakovich’s achievement
as a two-faced subversive, a view that sets up Shostakovich as the epitome
of the fabled "white man speak with forked tongue". If it’s
true, then it’s an incredible feat, which makes this an incredible piece
of music.
The one argument that it doesn’t settle is whether
this is a "proper" symphony. That apart, the only question
is this: is it true? Well, I can’t tell you one way or
the other, but in all honesty I can say that I think it is true.
Even disregarding both what preceded and what followed the Twelfth,
the evidence and arguments are strong enough to cast severe doubts regarding
the simple "agitprop" postulate, and that alone makes this
symphony deserving of our attention. The good news in this respect is
that Barshai and the WDRSO deliver an outstanding performance, with
excellent recorded sound, to maximise the pleasure of our labours!
To get back to the tale: that "price", in
addition to the compulsory subscription and his signing his name to
those articles (it’s certain that he didn’t write them himself. I get
the impression that nobody ever did - there’s nowt new about "spin
doctors", is there?), he was required to produce a new symphony
dedicated to the memory of Lenin. The prospect filled him with dreadful
dismay. Sure, he had on previous occasions put out the word that he
was working on such a project, but this time the jackboot was on the
other foot, and he was faced with the daunting prospect of "forced
labour". The crux of his problem was Lenin. In the officially atheistic
Soviet Union, Lenin was as near to a "god" as they got. Shostakovich
had to be extra careful. In the past, the risk had been that of "merely"
upsetting the Party. But to be caught out criticising Lenin, whom apparently
he hated almost as much as Stalin, would be tantamount to "blasphemy".
He could, of course, have copped out and simply given them what they
demanded, and punched home the glorification of Lenin with a choir singing
a suitable text. It goes without saying that his technical skills would
have been up to it, but by this time the stoic resistance which had
built up over the years simply would not allow him to stoop to such
a genuflectory gesture, which would have in any event ruined his international
reputation. He struggled for inspiration and, it would seem, made progress
only when he had committed himself to producing what was on the face
of it the most agitprop work ever, whilst bending his subversive powers
to the limit - and it would have to be instrumental. His hope,
forlorn as it turned out, was surely that someone in the West would
"get the message".
His basic method was simple: a code to represent Lenin
(basically phrases with even numbers of beats), a code to represent
"the People" (odd numbers of beats), and a lot of creative
thought to marry symphonic form, surface impression, and "true"
subtext. Even this brought problems, with toffee-nosed pundits declaring,
"This symphony is almost devoid of ideas". So what? Following
that kind of logic, so is Sibelius’ Seventh, to name but the
most obvious! You may shoot me for being biased, but I’m going to stick
my neck out anyway: I think this is a terrific piece of music, by any
standards, and no, you don’t need to know the underlying politics to
get the message - invent your own storyline if you wish, and so long
as it’s properly consistent with the musical ideas and their
abstract adventures, I am fairly convinced that your tale will be as
riveting as the one Shostakovich had in mind when he wrote the work.
Surprisingly, the catalogue boasts well over a dozen
recordings of this symphony - not that I’ve been worried about that:
I’ve lived quite happily for years with my old Classics for Pleasure
LP featuring the Philharmonia under Georges Pretre. But, because it
was one I had only on LP, this disc happened to be the first onto the
CD tray when I received the review set. Right at the start of the first
movement (Revolutionary Petrograd), I was struck by the extraordinary
quality of the WDRSO bass strings, a full bodied, dark brown sound with
some unruly, growling resonances that (it seemed to me) betokened playing
more concerned with musical effect than technical refinement. If these
chaps had been short of rehearsal time, they’d made economies in all
the right places!
This black-browed opening subject, brimming with two-note
phrases, we must perforce associate with the "subject" of
the symphony. This lunges from looming menace into purposeful action,
crisply articulated at speed, with bags of fire and momentum. The second
subject also first appears on bass strings. Gentle, flowing, and of
course brimming with three-note phrases, this blossoms into an aspiring
climax whereupon it is beset by two-note thuds. This is but the first
example of how Shostakovich works these two elements against one another,
augmented by significant quotations from the Eleventh Symphony
and Lady MacBeth (the "betrayal" motive!), to underline
"Lenin" as a cynical manipulator of the naive and trusting
" People" (and, to cap it all, at 9'48 I’ve also just spotted
a reference to the aggressive climax of the first part of the finale
of the Seventh!). I was mightily impressed by the utter conviction
with which Barshai drives his WDRSO forces, bringing out these interactions
between the "driver" and the "driven", interactions
which the unwary can easily lose behind the gaudy curtain of orchestral
pyrotechnics. Sure, there is a fair bit that can be described as "mechanical
movie action music", but Barshai never lets us forget that even
this is part of the overall "message".
The music slips into the brooding beginning of the
second movement with a seamless ease that belies the degree of judgement
required for such a transition (only the CD display switching from "1"
to "2" betrays it!). Shostakovich’s title, Razliv, drops
a massive hint that here he is concerned with Lenin hatching his master
plan. Throughout, Barshai maintains a wonderful veiled quality, strings
velvety, wind solos cold and soul-less. He balances to a "T"
the active bass-line, so that the "People" really do seem
to creep into Lenin’s mind from "below", providing the basis
for Lenin’s self-deification in the ironic "holy music" that
Shostakovich floats aloft. As the solo trombone announces the Plan,
shivers run through the orchestra like lances of ice. Ian MacDonald
said of this movement, "Thus, with infinite finesse, Shostakovich
lays at Lenin's door the ultimate guilt for the fifty million victims
of his Glorious Revolution", and with equal finesse the WDRSO and
Barshai would have us believe every word of that.
In basing the furtive flurryings of the start of the
third movement, Aurora, on the second movement theme betokening
Lenin’s inspiration, Shostakovich neatly suggests "plan" becoming
"action". If Barshai seems to underplay this first part of
the movement, it’s because he’s aware that there’s only one real climax.
Through restraint, the tension is if anything increased: in the calm
before the storm you could cut the air with a knife. Then the strings
start crawling like guerrillas in the undergrowth, and the "People"
rise up with a tremendous rallying-cry - a beautifully-engineered crescendo,
by both composer and performers. The cynical will observe that now the
bullets are flying, there’s no sign of the Glorious Leader himself!
The problem for performers with this "battle music" is that
there is only a hairline between too clog-footedly slow and too frenetically
fast - in both cases it ends up sounding just plain silly. Barshai splits
the hair with a scalpel, right down the middle, and the impact is mesmerising.
The battle music spills into victory music, though
Shostakovich might well have been hanged for it, as the horns announce
The Dawn of Humanity by gloriously intoning the theme of his
early, abortive work Funeral March for the Victims of the Revolution.
This theme had appeared fleetingly in the second movement, as a sly,
caustic rejoinder to Lenin’s "inspiration", but here he replaces
that former finesse with seemingly suicidal blatancy. I presume he must
have known that only his nearest and dearest would actually be aware
of the connotation. I presume also that Barshai is privy to the connotation,
bearing in mind his friendship with its composer and judging by his
handling of the theme - he encases its feet in concrete overshoes! The
subsequent dizzy "dancing in the streets" (c.f. Eighth
Symphony!), loosely based on the "People" is made to chitter
cheerfully by the strings and woodwind, with the "Lenin" theme
drifting amiably in the crowds.
It’s at the end of this development that Barshai brilliantly
delivers Shostakovich’s coup de grace. Winding up the tempo,
he plunges into a gaily lilting rendition of the "People",
immediately recognisable as being in the style of Rimsky Korsakov, who
was (of course) well known as a revolutionary sympathiser. Shostakovich
thereby associates the victorious people with the Narodniks, the "proper"
People’s Revolutionaries of 1905, and delivers a right old poke in the
eye to Lenin and his Bolsheviks. "Lenin" is naturally furious,
becoming a militaristic bulldozer before rising in his true colours,
as per the very beginning of the symphony. Barshai caps his superb interpretation
with a massive, grinding coda. Taking a deliberate tempo, and ramming
it home with power and passion, just as he did at the ends of the Fifth
and Seventh he negates the sense of triumph: while "Lenin"
is not heard, his presence is felt - the "People" and the
"Funeral March" themes in pointed juxtaposition under a dead
weight, as the long suffering ordinary folk of Russia jump out of the
frying pan . . .
As you may have guessed, I’m with MacDonald on this
one: Shostakovich’s Twelfth is, under its propagandist clown’s
mask a damned fine symphony that doesn’t deserve to be as damned as
it has been. Rudolf Barshai’s reading may not be the most physically
exciting, but he does do the music justice, gets some very fine playing
from the WDRSO, and is well-recorded in a very convincing,
beautifully balanced sound field.
Symphony No. 13 "Babi Yar" op. 113 (1962)
The Twelfth seemed to find favour with (that
is, "fool") the Soviet authorities, because they proceeded
to take advantage of Shostakovich’s reputation abroad. Shostakovich
however must have been all too aware of the derision with which the
symphony was met in the West. He must have been in a turmoil, for apparently
nothing of his "secret message" had got through (to be fair,
the West had no inkling of what was really going on at the time behind
that Iron Curtain), and the work had thus if anything damaged the international
reputation that he needed as "insurance". He had to do something
quickly to repair the damage, bringing him onto yet another knife-edge.
Now, in addition to satisfying his own artistic imperatives, he had
to "appease" two different masters: both the tyrannical
regime at home and (if anything the greater challenge) the fickle cultural
establishment of the West. He had to find something that would have
international appeal.
The one silver lining amongst all these clouds was
the Fourth Symphony, which had finally been resurrected in 1961.
At the second time of asking, and under an admittedly less deadly regime
than Uncle Joe’s, it had gone straight to No. 1, so to speak (what’s
the Russian for "I told you so"?). More importantly, it had
also been well received abroad. Nevertheless, this silver lining had
its cloud, because the West pointed to the Fourth, then to the
Twelfth, and observed (probably not unreasonably, given the extent
of its understanding of the circumstances), "Of course, that
was twenty five years ago, but this shows Shostakovich has gone
right down the pan since then".
Shostakovich turned to the young poet Evgeni Yevtushenko,
whose fairly critical works had (odd though it might seem) been allowed
by the relatively liberal regime to penetrate to the outside, where
they had met with considerable acclaim. Shostakovich, with impeccable
logic, concluded that he could boldly go where Yevtushenko had gone
before. In deciding to set Yevtushenko’s words, he moved on several
fronts at once. Firstly, he was moving from the shady world of subversive
coded messages into the bright light of explicit texts. Secondly, these
were not the propagandist texts he had previously set in the Second
and Third Symphonies, but something much more personal. Thirdly,
he was free to cherry-pick the poems with which he found particular
empathy. Fourthly, being deeply expressive of real personal feelings
and moreover critical of those things Shostakovich himself despised,
the poetry was anyway right up his street. Fifthly (and finally!), the
import and atmosphere of the words fitted right in with the direction
he wanted to take in his music.
In view of his enforced change of direction following
the Fourth, I don’t think I’d be far wide of the mark to suggest
that the relationship of the Thirteenth Symphony to the Fourth
feels like that of the mature child to the delinquent father! Both are
vast, dark-shrouded musical worlds encompassing extremes of comic and
cataclysmic, reaching out and connecting across the span of the intervening
symphonies. In the Thirteenth, it is as if the Fifth to
the Twelfth had been squeezed like oranges, their dessicated
rinds binned, and only their essential juices distilled and sprinkled
onto the bones of the Fourth. Then, with eye of toad and wing
of bat and diabolical incantations courtesy of Yevtushenko, Shostakovich
worked his unique magic to produce music ranging from stark to sarky,
and from monumental to intimate. For the first time since the Fourth,
he was speaking without let or hindrance, and seized the long-awaited
opportunity to express what amounted to a "credo", slamming
a royal flush of hearts onto the table for all to see and wonder at.
The work gets its title, and to a large degree its
overall tenor, from the poem Shostakovich sets in the first movement.
Yevtushenko’s Babi-Yar is a "protest song" of blood-curdling
intensity, condemning the Nazi mass-murder of a sizeable proportion
of Kiev’s Jewish population, railing mightily against anti-semitism
and, pointedly, against the nasty anti-semitic underbelly of the Soviet,
which mirrors the tyrannical regime itself - all, I’m sure, very embarrassing
to the Soviet leadership. Small wonder, then, that as soon as the work
had seen the light of day, that noble leadership tried to suppress it,
even though it should have perhaps been obvious even to them that such
things were getting less easy to do.
If you listen to Haitink’s magisterial recording with
the Concertgebouw, the recording that I myself have, you can’t fail
to be impressed by the colossal, leaden weight of Shostakovich’s musical
vision. Yet Barshai, with his "provincial" forces, finds something
that Haitink misses in the cosy surroundings of the Grote Zal
- something that I can best describe as Shostakovich’s equivalent to
that "Russian primitivism" that Stravinsky immortalised in
Le Sacre du Printemps. Maybe this is no more than an accidental
by-product of the WDRSO playing, more rough-hewn and bristling with
appropriately nasty splinters than the likes of the Concertgebouw. It
doesn’t matter - what matters is that it sounds just right. That
much is apparent right from the bell - literally so, for the first sound
we hear is a "funeral" bell, whose tolling stalks through
the whole symphony. The WDRSO make this sound no louder than the Concertgebouw,
but instead of a rounded, sonically integrated "bong" we get
a real, spine-chilling "clang". The woodwind and brass of
the orchestral exposition, underlaid by the bleak buzz of the bass clarinet,
possess an acrid stench that you can almost smell. The strings, entering
with the men’s choir to the words "There is no memorial above Babi
Yar", are dismally grey and shrouded (in passing, I might mention
that a memorial was finally erected, in 1974). This sets the tone of
the entire movement, of almost unimaginable bleakness that persists
right through until the final stanza, where Yevtushenko delivers a passionate
promise that Shostakovich reinforces through an emergent nobility forcing
its way up through, but not quite freeing itself of, the glutinous mire
of tragedy. This bleakness is projected with awesome power by Barshai:
the quieter music bristles with tension, and the heaving climaxes at
the heart and the end have colossal impact (try after the words "No!
It’s the ice breaking!"). Incidentally, I must especially commend
the WDRSO tamtam for its incredible expressive range! Barshai
and the WDRSO also score in the contrasting faster passage, pungent
with acid woodwind, brutal percussion and burping brass - music of the
most vicious humour.
But it’s not just down to the instrumental textures;
there’s the small matter of the vocal forces to consider. Where Haitink
has the "Gentlemen from the Choir of the Concertgebouw Orchestra"
(and that’s exactly what it says on the CD!), Barshai simply
has the "Choral Academy Moscow", and these are no "gentle"
men. The Russian male singing voice is one of Nature’s miracles - this
lot sound as though their voices are rising from the very bowels of
the Earth, and and by ‘eck it really does sound like there’s
a lot of them! That’s not a trivial comment; far too often these
days we hear pitifully small choral forces struggling manfully (and
womanfully) to sound BIG. Maybe the companies will get away with it
when the engineers have the technology, but right now if you tweak your
mics. and mixers to favour a small choir doing a large choir’s job,
it ends up sounding exactly as if you’d tweaked (etc.), and it simply
sounds cheapskate. You only have to listen to Berlioz to know the difference
between a real large choir and a pretend one! So, three cheers - no
such problems here, the Choral Academy Moscow project a satisfying weight
and uniformity of tone, without the slightest hint of the "accidental
soloist syndrome".
Standing at the front is the real soloist, Sergei Aleksashkin,
another pukka Russian whose voice I think would have reduced Mussorgsky
to tears of joy! With effortless authority he covers the entire spectrum
demanded by Shostakovich (who clearly was writing with a Russian, as
opposed to Western, bass in mind), taking in the whole gamut from pitch-black
declamation through to tremulous near-whispering ("I feel that
I am Anne Frank, as tender as a shoot in April"). Not only does
he know just how to use his voice, acting the part without undue exaggeration,
but also (joy of all joys) there’s precious little evidence of any wobble!
At first glance, Shostakovich’s choice of a poem entitled
"Humour" as the text of his second movement might seem like
simply an attempt, and a hugely successful one, at Mahlerian mega-contrast.
However, as the opening lines - ". . . rulers of all the world
have commanded parades, but couldn’t command humour" - immediately
betray, these far from still waters run much deeper than that. As I
suggested earlier, Shostakovich’s wicked sense of humour must have helped
him hold on to his sanity through the bitter years. I would now suggest
that his choice of this poem, celebrating the victory of Humour over
Tyranny, proves the point! Yevtushenko’s "Humour" comes straight
from the belly, bursting with red-cheeked "ho, ho, ho!" Shostakovich
marks it allegretto, and scores it with plenty of well-fed oomph,
suggesting the sort of grandiloquent guffawing that would belch
happily from a slightly inebriate, cossack-booted Santa Claus. Aleksashkin
takes the point, with relish (dare I say?), and the chorus steer
dangerously, deliciously close to the rugby club or students’ union
of a Saturday night. The orchestra revel in their many "solo"
bits, starting with a portentous opening that seems to mock the corresponding
moment of the Tenth, then veering cheerfully from tipsy to rumbustious
(and back again). At the centre of all the mayhem is Barshai, paradoxically
ensuring that everything is in its proper place, everything is heard
to its proper effect, including the enigmatic quote from the second
movement of the Eighth Quartet that launches the brief coda ("Three
cheers for Humour!"). As the movement crunches to its conclusion,
on a music-hall cadence, I’m left thinking, "That’s the wackiest
‘victory hymn’ I’ve ever heard!"
The third and fourth movements together can be regarded
as a "slow movement". Entitled "In the Store", the
third is an utterly heart-rending combination of words and music concerned
with the self-effacing stoicism of the ordinary Russian housewife. From
the simple scene of women quietly queuing in the shop, the poet draws
a touching image: "I’m shivering as I queue . . . but . . . from
the breath of so many women a warmth spreads round the store".
In describing what they endure, how they endure it, and for whom, Yevtushenko
seems to sanctify them, justifying his feeling of outrage in the words,
". . . They have been granted such strength! It is shameful to
short-change them! It is sinful to short-weight them!"
Shostakovich sets this poem with overwhelming empathy,
the basic continual creeping motion of his music echoing the slow shuffling
of the queue, the occasional "tock-tocking" of a castanet
seeming to underline the almost mechanical progress of the queue. Starting
with the darkest string-sounds (those fabulous WDRSO basses!), soon
joined by violas caressing the line with the utmost poignancy, he gradually,
almost imperceptibly lightens the texture until sanctification is achieved
in violins and harp. Barshai controls it all exquisitely, coaxing from
the orchestra playing of infinite tenderness. My hackles rose as Aleksashkin
solemnly intoned "They have endured everything": about here
comes a weird thrilling of slurring strings which is done to spine-tingling
perfection. The outraged climax, by contrast, is colossal in its impact,
ending on hard, stamped-out chords (not the only pointer in this symphony
to the forthcoming Execution of Stepan Razin). Aleksashkin and
the chorus are equally as impressive when it comes to expressing tenderness
and remorse for the living as they were when venting their spleen over
the murdered masses.
While the third movement relates to continuing hardship,
the fourth is sort of complementary, dealing as it does with "Fears
are dying out in Russia". Nevertheless, the poem’s vivid recollection
of those Fears "that slithered everywhere" - of speaking,
of remaining silent, of being alone, of mixing with others - must have
struck white-hot sparks inside Shostakovich’s head. It’s no wonder,
when Yevtushenko seemed to be "getting away" with such incandescent
candour, that Shostakovich felt free to join him on the bandwagon: this
was what he had been fighting against for most of his life. Yet the
poem is in two parts: after a rallying-call proclaiming victory over
these Fears, the poet goes on to list new Fears, fears that are "good"
to have, like fear of being disloyal, or of humiliating others, or "of
not writing with all my strength".
Shostakovich was quite literally inspired. His music
for the first part dripped and drooled, reeking of evil. The suffocating
sump-oil of bass drum and tamtam coupled with murky strings and a grisly
solo tuba, realised with blood-curdling realism by the WDRSO, in an
earlier time and place would have evoked the bloated figure of a somnolent,
self-satisfied, and imminently doomed dragon - and, come to think of
it, that image is still fairly germane! Aleksashkin, for that matter,
delivers his remembrances of "Fears" like some latter-day
Wotan. He could have burdened his declamatory lines with all kinds of
vocal expression, but instead made them the more chilling through reserve
(though I’d stop short of saying "dead pan delivery") and
leaving the orchestra to provide the colouring in. I’ve noted appreciations
of "doleful horns", "glowering basses", and especially
the graduated approach of fanfares in trumpets, flutes, trombones, bassoons
and bass clarinet - but particularly impressive are the appearance of
whirring strings (as per the Sixth Symphony) plus tympani and that
bell in response to "the secret fear of a knock at the door",
and the col legno rhythm that subsequently ushers in the "victory
march", a really nifty bit of footwork from the chorus. At the
end of this section, the violas pointedly recall the ostinato
from the third movement of the Eighth. In the closing section
concerning the "new Fears", Aleksashkin allows just the right
degree of agitation to creep in, corresponding to the appearance of
glittering glockenspiel and woodwind. Tremendous stuff.
In setting Yevtushenko’s "A Career" for his
finale, Shostakovich finishes the job in something of a confessional
manner. The gist of the poem is that throughout history men like Galileo
have been pilloried for their beliefs or discoveries, yet it is these
who become "great men" while the mud-slingers end up forgotten,
buried in the mucky silt of the past. The nub of the argument is that
it is the suffering strivers who are the real careerists. Sung
with real warmth by the soloist, Yevtushenko’s closing words - "I
believe in their sacred belief, and their belief gives me courage. I’ll
follow my career in such a way that I’m not following it!" - could
have been written specifically for Shostakovich. In setting these words
here, at the very end of this "Outspoken Oratorio", he as
good as tells the world exactly what he’s been up to all these years.
But does he say so in music quivering with outrageous
indignation? Not on your Nelly! The music attains such a lustre of sheer
relief that I can’t help but think that this finale could well
be the Eighth’s abortive "dancing in the streets" come
to fruition. Perhaps, although the music and the jaunty, "twinkle
in their eyes" way that Aleksashkin and the chorus perform it suggest
a slightly different scenario: a cosy late-night gathering in some hospitable
hostelry, at which a merry raconteur is holding court. A dizzy, lazy
woodwind waltz sets the scene, then a bibulous bassoon launches a jolly
recounting of Galileo’s case. The sociable singers are aptly supported
by the musicians, chuntering and chortling cheerfully around, with the
trumpets providing some admirably acrid "motor-horn" squawks
at the words "[He] was no more stupid than Galileo". We even
get "Now that’s what I understand by a ‘careerist’" as a pub-style
punchline, punched home pub-style by the assembled company.
The opening waltz, delightfully pecked by pizzicato
strings, returns whilst the comrades ponder the inner meaning of the
tale. Glasses recharged, the assembly roars approval of such "careers"
then, bolstered by some looming trombone glissandi, turns to
railing at the mud-slingers. The matter is settled (in the time-honoured
tradition of such discussions!) with a robust and decisive fugue,
ruggedly dispatched by the orchestra. The waltz, on intimately whispering
solo strings, now becomes a blissful, vaguely alcoholic haze. The bassoon
theme is taken by the celeste, an angel that nevertheless dithers and
gropes without success for a resolution (there’s always one who doesn’t
get it!). Help is at hand, and from an unexpected quarter: that bell,
which doesn’t seem to have budged a semitone right through the symphony,
just happens to be sitting on the necessary note! Thus, it seems to
me, in this first wholly untroubled conclusion to a Shostakovich symphony,
are all the threads of the past drawn together and tied off in the present,
leaving us all feeling rather more optimistic about the future.
It strikes me that Barshai is fully the equal of Haitink
when it comes to management of the long-term architecture of this long
work, but surpasses Haitink and is fully the equal of the likes of Mravinsky
when it comes to juggling the hot coals at the heart of the music. The
playing of the WDRSO is astonishingly idiomatic, like a real Russian
orchestra without the wibbly-wobbly brass tone, and can rear up from
confidentiality to cataclysm with nerve-shattering impact. It’s a credit
to the engineers that they seem to have captured this with a full, detailed
and, most significantly, wide-ranging recording - which makes it all
the more a pity that they couldn’t do the same for the Eleventh!
My one cavil is that there seems to be a bit of a phase mismatch between
the microphones covering the choral battalions, though only hardened
headphone freaks like me are likely to notice the slight "corkscrewing"
effect this produces. But the the singing of Aleksashkin and the legions
of lads from Moscow, who can (though hardly surprisingly!) wrap their
gobs round the funny phonemes of the Russian tongue with effortless
ease, is unreservedly superb, and in spite of my marginal cavils I can
only conclude that this is a seriously desirable
CD.
Symphony No. 14 op. 135 (1969)
The last two symphonies are the ones with which I’m
least familiar, and the Fourteenth, sad to relate, wins the less
than prestigious Sore Thumb Award in this respect. Happily, doing this
review has provided me with a belated opportunity to put that somewhere
in the region of right.
It’s well enough known that Shostakovich had developed
a close association with Benjamin Britten in the years following their
first meeting. Quite how they wangled it I’m not sure, as even with
his greater freedom (both of expression and for travel abroad) Shostakovich
was far from off the leash. Another English composer who enjoyed a cordial,
if less obviously productive, relationship with Shostakovich during
this period was Malcolm Arnold, who relates how they were never allowed
to meet in private - in Arnold’s case, the Party-patsy Kabalevsky was
the omnipresent gooseberry. Lots of Shostakovich rubbed off onto Britten,
but rather less Britten rubbed off onto Shostakovich. My immediate impression
of the Fourteenth Symphony is that it is not so much influenced
by Britten as a deliberate adoption of elements of Britten’s style,
and thus part and parcel of the tribute to a friend implicit (or even
explicit, for that matter) in the work’s dedication. "Immediate"
is the word! I don’t think anybody’s going to miss, in the very opening
violin line, the allusion to Peter Grimes - it breathes the very
same bleak, chill air that drifts in from the grey North Sea in the
first Interlude.
Much the same holds in relation to the "influence"
of Mussorgsky’s Songs and Dances of Death, which Shostakovich
had orchestrated not long before writing the symphony. Then again, there
is a supposed parallel with another "symphony of songs", Mahler’s
Das Lied von der Erde. With all due respect to David Doughty,
whose notes are otherwise exemplary, his suggestion that "it is
indeed the close relationship of the texts which give a symphonic structure
of a kind to what is otherwise a song cycle in the manner of [the Mahler]"
strikes me as an uncharacteristic splodge of bovine excrement. I’m not
suggesting here that Shostakovich’s work is anything but symphonic -
that much is plain enough from Shostakovich’s motivic writing and the
reprise of the opening bars, higher, thinner and bleaker, in the penultimate
song - but by golly I disagree most strongly with the implication that
Mahler’s work is not symphonic - the whole point about
Mahler’s crowning masterpiece is that he finally achieved what has to
be the ultimate goal of a composer of only songs and symphonies, namely
the reconciliation through fusion of those two, diametrically opposed
forms.
Where Shostakovich’s and Mahler’s paths coincide is
that they were both suffering from undeniable intimations of mortality.
Shostakovich, who had never enjoyed the rudest of health, was (if you
take my meaning) becoming alarmingly polite, which conspired with his
recent preoccupation to put the fear of death into him. The good thing
about this is that, a number of years down the line from the cathartic
Thirteenth, Shostakovich felt sufficiently free to express in
his music such "negative" sentiments without worrying unduly
about getting a rollocking for "formalist tendencies" or some
such. The downside, if it can be called such, is that for once Shostakovich
was writing a symphony devoid of any subversive undertones, coded messages
and the like. If you’ve got used to treating Shostakovich symphonies
as the musical equivalent of the Times crossword, the Fourteenth
might seem a bit "penny plain" - only "might", mind!
Doughty, along with plenty of others (including myself!),
suggests that this is "perhaps the grimmest of all his works".
Fair enough, but let’s not forget that the subject of death is one of
endless fascination for practically anyone suckered with the label "mortal",
and right down through the ages the practitioners of all the Arts have
turned this fascination into some of the greatest, and often ultimately
most uplifting, works. While we’re at it, let’s not forget either that
not one of the poems Shostakovich chose was about "death"
plain and simple: he was less concerned about those who "fell",
and more about those who were "shoved". There was clearly
life in the old dog yet.
Rudolf Barshai was entrusted with the first performance.
I’ve observed that plenty of folk tend to speak in tones of hushed reverence
about recordings made by persons so-privileged. Why? The bloke who first
performed a work isn’t necessarily the best man for the job, even if
he happened to be that at the time. Composers select "premiere
performers" for all sorts of reasons - and being the best-qualified
for the task is rarely the top of the list. In Barshai’s case, though,
it is true that friendship and mutual respect had a lot to do with it.
But we still shouldn’t let that colour our judgement, should we?
Shostakovich chose eleven poems, in movement order
two by the Spaniard Federico Garcia Lorca, six by Guillaume Appolinaire,
one by Wilhelm Kuchelbecker, and two by Maria Rainer Rilke. That’s a
total of precisely none written in Shostakovich’s mother-tongue,
so all of them were originally set in translation. Doughty points out
that Shostakovich later sanctioned performances using the original languages,
as well as a version in German translation - though surprisingly not
one in English, the language of the symphony’s dedicatee, Britten! Clearly,
the inflections and speech rhythms of the texts, the music inherent
in the sounds of the poetry, were not very high on Shostakovich’s list
of priorities, and we the listeners must seek the correspondence between
text and music from the "flow of meaning", assuming of course
that any particular translation from the Russian translations with which
Shostakovich worked has been done so as to preserve the order as set.
Ye gods, that’s convoluted! Thankfully, this recording sticks to the
"original" Russian, which is probably the form in which the
composer himself first apprehended the poems!
A symphony this may be by name, but a song cycle it
most definitely is by nature: each of the songs is sharply characterised
and distinguished from its neighbours, even where Shostakovich engineers
a seamless link from one to the next. The poems are frequently like
"playlets" so, compared with the relatively detached,
discursive approach of the Thirteenth, here the singers have
to act their socks off! It follows, as day does night, that suitable
singers are going to make a performance, whilst duffers will destroy
it. With Alla Simoni and Vladimir Vaneev, Barshai seems to have come
up trumps.
Like Aleksashkin, Vaneev is a real Russian bass, another
of those voices that’s ample, black as a coal cellar at midnight, and
ideally suited to the sort of grave (!) recitative that Shostakovich
requires in the first song (appositely entitled De Profundis),
or the venomous expressions of disgust in the eighth (The Zaporozhian
Cossack’s Answer to the Sultan of Constantinople), where he revels
in the colouful language. This is definitely one to keep away from the
kiddies, unless you want to explain the meaning of sentences like "You
were born while your mother was writhing in faecal spasms"! Even
when he’s singing high up, the shadow of those deep undertones still
resonates within the sound, as in the third song (Lorelei) where
he also demonstrates articulative agility comparable to the soprano’s,
or in the ninth (O Delvig!) where he veers from tenderness to
tentative optimism to heartrending effect.
I generally quake with apprehension when sopranos,
whose voices seem to be trained to crack glasses at twenty paces, point
their lethal vocal chords in my direction. With blessed relief I can
tell you that Simoni is a god-send. She has a strong voice, but (to
my ears) a delivery that is firm and relatively uniform across her entire
range: there is little if anything of the dreaded wobble or yowling
"up top", and (best of all) she wilfully ignores the "Soprano
Axiom" ("Output level shall be proportional to frequency squared,
or cubed if you can manage it"). But there’s more than mere firmness
and strength of tone - for example in the fourth movement (The Suicide),
there’s touching delicacy as well. To cap it all she is an incredible
vocal actress - particularly evident in the sixth song (Madam, look!)
where her hysterical hacking of the word "laughing" becomes
a comical cross between stammering and gipping! - if anything more than
a match for even the impressive Vaneev.
So, the voices are terrific, but what of their "backing
group"? I have memories (however distant and vague!) of playing
cleaner than this. I equally have memories (equally distant, but rather
more distinct!) of it utterly boring the pants off me. I’d like to think
that it’s because I’m older, wiser, and more perceptive. I’d like
to, but with a sigh I must set vanity aside and instead admit that it’s
because the WDRSO strings play with a fire and pungency that simply
pins me to the wall, and with such sweetness that I melt and dribble
down onto the floor. I could rabbit on for ages (come to think of it,
I have anyway!) about all the zillions of felicities that litter
the course of this symphony, but I’ll have to limit myself to an exemplificatory
"Oh, god! You should hear those double-basses!" Shostakovich,
in coincidental observation of UK trades descriptions legislation, says
"strings and percussion", making sparing but correspondingly
effective use of the can-banging boys. If the most significant contribution
comes in the form of the temporal ticking of clacking castanets, they
do get one "big scene", when they’re let off the leash in
the militaristic fifth song (On Watch). By gum, do they enjoy
the outing!
Standing at the centre of it all is Rudolf Barshai,
guiding the threads of the music with effortless-sounding fluidity -
nothing fast seems reckless or rushed, yet even the snailest of snail’s
paces is palpably mobile. The voices are placed well to the fore, but
Barshai makes pretty sure that not a single note of the instrumental
contribution is lost. The many facets of Death drawn together by the
composer’s collection of texts are characteristically by no means all
unremitting gloom; we get doses of rage and outrage, stoic acceptance
and aching nostalgia, even comic turns and a ray or two of hope. That’s
a lot of ground, and Barshai covers it all. The recording, both immediate
and ambient, is absolutely superb.
I don’t want to end this on a negative note, so I’ll
say this first: why on earth are there no texts and translations? Shostakovich
was responding in a profound manner to the poetry - to hear the "flow
of music" without knowing the corresponding "flow of meaning"
is like going to the cinema and sitting with your eyes shut, i.e. utterly
ridiculous. Anyway, quite honestly, I don’t care if this music
can be played - or sung, for that matter - better than it is here. These
musicians have inflamed my mind and touched my heart, and believe me
that’s not as easy to do now as it once was!
Symphony No. 15 op. 141 (1971)
Having got the subject of death off his chest, Shostakovich
moved on. Or did he? Our impressions of the Fifteenth Symphony
are inevitably coloured by its opening "toyshop" movement.
In music as in anything else first impressions are sticky little blighters,
so much so that we as often as not end up wasting half our lives trying
to make everything that follows fit in. Hence the commonly-expressed
feeling that the work is enigmatic, mysterious, puzzling. I remember
one chap who beat his brains against the brick bastions of the Fifteenth
for ages, then concluded (not unreasonably, if a little harshly, given
his frustration) that the whole shebang was the rag-bag product of a
composer on the threshold of senile dementia. Me? I don’t believe that
for one second.
So what is going on? That first movement looms
less large when viewed through the wrong end of a telescope, as I found
when I tried taking a step back and looking at the piece as a whole.
I got the distinct impression that, whereas the Fourteenth’s
statement about death was coloured by a degree of political motivation,
the Fifteenth is instead about death, "plain and simple".
Let’s face it: if at any age you’re racked by increasing ill-health,
intrusive thoughts of kicking the bucket are hard to put down. Up to
around twenty years previously, Shostakovich had been fearful that the
nocturnal "knock at the door" would be that of Uncle Joe’s
bully-boys coming to take him away. In his mid-sixties and racked by
increasing ill-health, the knock was more likely to be that of the "real-life"
Grim Reaper.
In this light, the Fifteenth Symphony sounds
to be a not unreasonable combination of reminiscence and valediction,
starting in the frolicsome foibles of carefree youth and ending up shrouded
in the mists of the Ultimate Question. This would explain the flurry
of self-quotations, but not the two "sore thumbs" - Wagner
and Rossini. Many diverse composers have been influenced by Wagner,
but I’d wager that there’re precious few of us who’d bet so much as
a ha’penny on Shostakovich being one of them. Maybe he’s leg-pulling:
"Here it is, folks, my Grand Wagnerian Influence!" On the
other hand, in quoting the Fate motive, that dread harbinger and herald
of the fall of Siegfried, the irrepressible and fearless hero, he is
(as ever) neatly pinning a dark relevance onto his gag. Of course, he
also quotes that well-known motive from Tristan und Isolde, the
infamous rising dissonance which resolves only onto further dissonance,
yearning after an unattainable ideal - and neatly turns it into an inconsequential
ditty. This could so easily be a veiled comment on the triviality of
Man’s most solemn aspirations when faced with the unknowable mysteries.
But what should we make of the quotation of Rossini’s
famous William Tell galop? Suspecting, as per the Fate motive,
some devious connection with the music’s operatic context, I asked someone
who knows about these things. I was told that, after the sizzling conclusion
of the overture, that particular tune does not feature in the drama
at all: it occurs, with considerably less vehemence, only in the bucolic
burblings of the ballet music! Momentarily dismayed, I retreated and
regrouped "with the speed of light, and a cloud of dust, and a
hearty ‘Hi-yo, Silver!’" I wondered (somewhat feverishly), did
Shostakovich watch TV on those visits to the West that started in the
late Fifties? If so, did he (like so many of my generation) become a
fan of the Lone Ranger? Did he see in Tonto’s Kemo Sabay a reflection
of himself, galloping on his white stallion, protecting the innocent,
and waging a one-man war against the nasty baddies? Ridiculous thought,
isn’t it? Well, the opera buff remarked, and as far as I can tell in
all innocence, "Maybe he was a fan of the Lone Ranger". That
makes two of us being ridiculous, so perhaps we should all listen
to the music in that context, and then see how ridiculous it really
is?
Barshai and his faithful Indian companions set off
at a thoroughly jolly trot, opposing a sunny flute to the icy pricklings
of glockenspiel, and setting a thoroughly amiable tone for the entire
first movement. The tune is remarkably reminiscent of the DSCH-based
main subject of the first movement of the First Cello Concerto,
a theme which had already resurfaced in the Eighth Quartet. Here
it is utterly, uncomplicatedly merry: freed of its former political
undertones, it expands under Barshai’s fatherly guidance into Shostakovich’s
putative "toyshop". The whole movement is delightfully done,
every corner of the WDRSO, including the considerable "kitchen",
enjoying the youthful romp - I warmed especially to the trumpet, whose
poco inebrioso quasi Prokofiev sounds like little Johnny has
sampled something from the sideboard that Daddy should have kept in
a safer hidey-hole! There’s also some gorgeously rumbustious playing,
notably from those lower strings, but nothing is allowed to threaten
the childlike mood: even the main climax, in its outline, weight and
tone harks back not to anger or anguish past, but to the youthful impetuosity
of the Second Piano Concerto. Tellingly, just before this jubilation
comes another significant reminiscence of Shostakovich’s own youth,
as he reproduces in the strings the effect of that extraordinary, layered
"miasma" of the experimental Second Symphony. Then,
almost at the end, hot on the heels of a circus band march-past he does
it again, only this time chattering on the lighter woodwind and percussion,
for all the world like kids playing with grown-up toys.
Whereas the first movement looked back at the Good
Old Days (the accent being firmly on the "Good"), the second
looks forward less than optimistically to what the future holds. The
WDRSO’s brass lean wearily on the straining dissonances of their chorale,
the solo cello struggles up from the depths of its rocking-chair only
to lament, the solo trombone is all but drained of energy and expression.
The solo violin aspires momentarily, but is cut off by toneless (or
intoneless!) dead-sounding woodwind chords, reminiscent of the
chords in the coda of Strauss’ Also Sprach Zarathustra or (and
here’s a thought!) those famous "self-cancelling" chords of
Stravinsky’s. When I say it sounds dreadful, that’s not a complaint
but a compliment! Curiously, when the trombone does stir itself into
something approaching a tune, to the accompaniment of a suitably leaden
tuba, it emerges as something of a dirge-variant of Waltzin’ Matilda
(this surely is accidental?!). The violin again sings with affecting
sweetness, but is again confounded by those negating woodwind (one of
the curiosities about growing older is that our minds, remaining forever
"sweet sixteen", can’t understand why the body creaks and
groans at even the most trivial demands). It’s too much; warping the
once proud and defiant DSCH into an agonised, plunging SDCH, the dirge
spills over into massive mortification that is hammered home to horribly
enervating effect. Only exhaustion can follow: strangulated muted trumpets,
halting string phrases like glimmering red embers, lifeless plunkings
of celeste, a dull and broken tattoo of tympani. Sure, I’ve heard this
movement played with more outright intensity than this, but for me Barshai
scores in avoiding that extreme. He seems to be very much aware
that this is "terminal" music, even in the embittered climax
which in his hands becomes like the abortive flare of a dying sun, shedding
the remnants of its light into an uncaring universe.
The ensuing short allegretto sounds a bit brighter,
with its almost pointillist chamber-music scoring delectably
dotted by the players. The tune skips upwards, then turns on its head
and skips downwards, getting nowhere fast. In keeping the pace leisurely,
the tempo metronomic, and the dynamics subdued, Barshai finds an eerie,
haunted quality, carrying something of the feeling of "Death takes
the Fiddle", helped out more than a little by some splendidly scrawny
playing (quite deliberate, I’m sure!). My gut feelings are that this
symphony is stuffed to the gunnels with self-quotations, and my intestines
are just as sure that as yet I haven’t spotted 99% of them. Nevertheless
I’d lay odds that the grotesque downward trombone slides, leerily relished
by the WDRSO first trombone, are a reference to the comical detumescence
of the sated Sergei in Scene 3 of Lady MacBeth. If so, then here
they ram home the prevailing impression of failing potency, as do the
dislocated clatterings of the percussion - the WDRSO can-bangers, captured
in great detail by the recording, create a convincing "clock with
a dicky ticker".
The opening of the finale confirms the progression.
Shostakovich, in co-opting the gloomy brass Fate motive and attendant
halting drum rhythm from Siegrfried’s Tod, foretells the fall
of another hero - the composer himself. It also forms a wonderful complement
and opposition to the Rossini quote from the first movement, or it does
if you subscribe to the "Lone Ranger Theory", because then
that quotation also relates to a "hero", only one who is full
of vim, vigour, and fighting spirit, and for whom death was merely something
he himself visited on the enemies of justice. But then Shostakovich,
teasingly tweaking the Tristan quote, immediately goes on to
demonstrate that his own sense of humour, like the Humour of
the Thirteenth Symphony, is unquenchable. Barshai here coaxes,
with faultless timing, a prettily poised tenuto from the violins.
At a measured, dead-even tempo, Barshai makes the ensuing ghostly dance
feel like the comical passage of the Fourth’s finale with all
its get-up-and-go got up and gone: all is understated and wan, what
little colour it has in its cheeks draining away in the twilight. The
music subsides, via what must surely be a glance back to the nocturnal
pacings of the Tenth, to the gloomy stasis of Siegfried’s
Tod, into which the WDRSO’s wonderful first clarinet meanders listlessly.
Gradually, the music stirs and grows, in a long, curiously crawling
crescendo. The climax that erupts, triggered with telling rubato,
mirrors the outburst in the second movement, and is likewise burdened.
The tune of the plodding dirge this time sounds like a variant of the
first few bars of the Seventh’s "Nazi" march, as if
the strutting jackboot had become a lead-lined size 15 welly. This climax
ends in real disaster: a cinematographic "shock, horror!"
discord like the Last Gasp of the Damned. The Wagner quotes and the
ghostly dancing, already more remote, are gradually stifled by the "self-negating"
chords of the second movement: is this Shostakovich’s impression of
Asrael tapping Dmitri Dmitrevich on the shoulder? The coda drifts into
delirium. Over a numb hum of strings, the wraiths of themes half-remembered
jostle with the percussion "dicky-ticker", and then - nothing.
Again, I am led to wonder whether, in such music, those
who bring more overtly expressive playing aren’t in some way missing
the point. I must confess that, had I come to this performance of this
symphony "cold", then in respect of all save the first movement
I would in all likelihood have carped about listless phrasing and dull,
ponderous climaxes (and so forth). But I haven’t come to it "cold",
I’ve come to it via the other fourteen performances in the cycle, and
along the way I’ve picked up a great deal of respect and admiration
for Barshai’s thoughtful interpretations. Consequently, I do not believe
(as some do) that he has "blobbed out" at the finishing post.
What we hear is exactly what he intended us to hear. My feelings
about the nature of the music, as expressed here, do not originate from
any perceptive acuity on my part (though it would be a nice ego-boost
if they did!), but from what Barshai is telling me. It doesn’t really
matter whether you think his performance good or bad, because above
all it is an informed one.
Round-Up and Conclusions
The recording schedule of this cycle, a dozen "sittings"
over a period of eight years, is astonishingly convoluted - just bend
your brains around this little lot! Ten of the symphonies were set down
in one "sitting" (series of sessions during a given month)
each, but in the order 7, 1, 3, 2, 12, 6, 10, 15, 11, 13. The
rest were done in pairs of sittings anything up to nineteen months apart,
except for number 9 which surprisingly took three sittings over a nine-month
period. On top of that, at least five of the sittings involved two or
more different symphonies - during September 1995 they worked on numbers
5, 9, and 12, and April 1996 saw effort devoted to numbers 4, 5, 9 (the
CD cases give days as well as months, but even my pernickety mind baulks
at descending to that level of detail!). The logistics must have
been a nightmare, but this must also mean that both players and conductor
must have been thoroughly immersed, if not in the cycle as a whole,
then at least in considerable breadths of it at a time. How else can
we explain such noteworthy consistency over such a long period?
Regarding the recorded sound, although three producers
were variously involved, all the recordings were made by the same engineer,
Siegfried Spittler, who on the whole has captured the sounds fabulously,
in terms of both quality and consistency. My only real reservations
concerned the balance and dynamics of the Eleventh, but even
this is by no means a dead loss. Moreover, all the recordings were made
in the same location, Cologne’s warm-hearted Philharmonie,
which makes the relatively "sore thumb" of this symphony,
to say the least, a mite puzzling. Spittler has, with commendable good
sense, tempered the warm acoustic by pushing his microphones forward
just enough to "prick" the ambience with detail, but not so
far as to detach a wholly "foreground" orchestra from a wholly
"background" ambience. I have noted a couple of places where
the microphones seemed to overload. These were always where Shostakovich
had scored for particularly high intensity high frequencies. It’s a
minus point which could have been corrected easily enough, but at least
the instances are rare and short-lived, and on some equipment
(I would venture) may pass entirely unnoticed.
Spittler has also given us a just balance between the
sections of the WDRSO. In particular (and wonder of wonders!) the percussion,
who have such an unusually important role, are given their proper due.
During the writing of this "review", I have heard comments
about the percussion at the start of the Fourth, on the one hand
complaining of over-dominance and on the other lamenting its lack of
prominence! I guess that proves it’s about right? Equally, there have
been suggestions that there’s not enough depth in the bass, to which
I can only respond, "Well, adjust your tone controls then!"
because I was frequently impressed at what was going on down in the
basement (the bass drum sound in the fourth movement of the Thirteenth
was one awe-inspiring shock to my system - alimentary that is, not audio).
Overall, the sound is rich and firm, warm and detailed, and your equipment
will simply love you for ever for being given the privilege of reproducing
it!
The vocal contributions in Symphonies 2, 3,
13, and 14 are balanced against the orchestra with consummate
care. Soloists are where they should be, "up front" but not
sitting on your knee, whilst choirs are definitely where they belong,
behind the orchestra but not banished to the stair-wells, and sound
decently large (the ruination of more than one Berlioz Grande Messe
or Te Deum has been the use of what sound like chamber choirs!).
The minor choral contributions to the Second and Third
are nice and vigorous, but the singing of the men of the Choral Academy
Moscow in the Thirteenth is truly phenomenal, an awesome wall
of sound threatening to engulf your senses! Soloists, Aleksashkin in
the Thirteenth, Simoni and Vaneev in the Fourteenth, sing
with immense character and scarcely a trace of the wibbly-wobblies that
seem to be de rigeur these days. Also, it’s not just that they
sing well, but that they "play their parts" in the acting
sense with such dramatic conviction.
The WDRSO approaches what is for me the ideal band
to play these symphonies. Shostakovich demands a certain quality of
sound, or rather spectrum of sound qualities. In one corner is
the "Russians on the razzle" quality: garish, aggressive,
coarse. Somehow, the Stiff Collars and Posh Frocks of the top orchestras
seem reluctant to loosen their collars (the possible disposition of
the frocks I leave to your imaginations!), and instead impose something
of their civilised refinement on the music. The WDRSO players on the
other hand can sound as if they’re playing in grubby jeans and tatty
T-shirts, and that belting out a Russian rugby song is to them the most
natural thing in the world. In the opposite corner is the "dreaming
in the Dacha" quality: remote, ethereal, musing. Safer ground for
the SCs and PFs, but they often forget that the ground beneath their
feet is still as common as muck. Enter the WDRSO to play like angels
with dirty feet: they can sing as sweetly as anyone, but you won’t catch
them trying to hide any of Shostakovich’s gritty accompaniments behind
their velour upholstery for fear it might spoil the pristine perfection
of their drawing-rooms. In spirit, the WDRSO stand shoulder to shoulder
with the Leningrad Phil. of old.
It all starts in the basement: their double-basses
sound truly awesome, as if their bows were primed not with horse but
with mastodon hair. I lost count of the times I smiled at robust
resonances, or at gruff grunts and growlings, or at rosiny runs. This
extends, though less obviously, right the way up to the top of the section.
They may not be the most refined string band in the world, but they
are one of the most colourful and committed, capable of (and demonstrating)
sweet song through to bitter acridity, shag-pile Axminster warmth through
to liquid nitrogen chill, perky playfulness through to rapid-fire machine-gunning,
and corpulence through to scrawniness - and all in the service of the
composer.
The brass are a magnificent bunch of roughnecks, though
they not once, even though they’re given ample opportunity, drowned
out the rest of the orchestra. These discs contain some of the finest
orchestral tuba-playing that it has been my pleasure to experience.
The trombonists sound as if they were born with slides in their hands,
and some of the "up top" sounds of the trumpets really do
earn the epithet "golden". Likewise the horns, who can rattle
and roll it with the best of them, and still turn on a noble weight
to rival the VPO. They also make up an ensemble of satisfying solemnity
and tonal breadth.
Shostakovich makes rather special demands of woodwind:
he expects them to be able to scream and shrill. The WDRSO
woodwind are a wonderful bunch. Individually, they still possess an
individuality that is increasingly rare in these days of anodyne
international uniformity. Before you’ve got very far, you’ll find yourself
greeting a soloist like an old pal. I became particularly chummy with
the bassoon and the clarinet. But put them together, and turn up the
wick, and their screaming and shrilling are electrifying, thanks not
least to piccolos that could slice through thick leather like it was
tissue paper.
Then there’re those important people in the kitchen.
Sometimes they get a mite tangled up, and I wished, just fleetingly,
that they’d done a re-take. The rest of the time (that is, most
of the time), I simply luxuriated in the terrific array of sound they
produced. The WDRSO tamtam has to be singled out (especially as I am
a real sucker for the sound), not just for some superb, towering "swishes"
but also for having such an incredibly extensive palette of sonorities.
In comparison other tamtams, especially (I seem to remember) the wooly
muffler wearer at the Concertgebouw, pale into "Poor Johnny One-Notes",
but this one has to be heard to be believed!
Lots of clues start to club together, leading me to
suspect that these recordings were cobbled together from takes that
were in fact complete live performances. It would explain much, though
it would leave us with the probably unanswerable question of "how
did they keep the audience so bloody quiet"? At rock bottom, it
doesn’t matter, except that (again) it highlights the consistency of
performance, which is worth infinitely more than the asking price of
a few fluffs.
Of course, in all this I’m not forgetting Barshai,
who is ultimately responsible for everything. For every single symphony
there will be someone who will point to another recording which is "better".
It’s arguable that some of the performances yield nothing to the competition.
Numbers 1, 6, 9 and 13 went straight to the top of my list, and it’ll
take a real blinder to topple Barshai’s number 14 (I haven’t heard his
earlier one - yet!). Yet, the rest of them are at least contenders,
barring only number 11, not on account of its performance but of its
comparatively sub-standard recording balance. Even taken individually
that’s impressive. But there is more, much more.
Looking at this set as a whole, there is something
very special indeed, as you can gather from the way I got just a bit
carried away in the above. That’s not a facetious remark (not entirely,
anyway). If you have read my dissertation on even one symphony, you
may have noticed that while I was talking about the performance, I tended
to drift back to discussion of the music. I had based my opinions and
impressions on not one but several auditions of each work. The upshot
was that I became so immersed in the experience that the distinction
between the music that Shostakovich wrote and the music that
Barshai made became blurred. Work and interpretation melded in
my mind. But this clarified my judgement, rather than clouded it. The
latter wasn’t likely because I was aware of what was happening. Consequently,
much of what I said about the music was in fact equally a comment on
Barshai’s performance.
It need hardly be said, but I’ll say it anyway, particularly
as after this somebody, somewhere is sure to brand me as a fawning and
undiscerning "Barshai groupie". There are two broad approaches
to these works, either to go completely OTT, or to play them with some
degree of circumspection. There are risks either way. In maximising
physical excitement, a conductor at best runs the risk of drowning the
real import of the music under a flood of virtuosic brownie-points,
and at worst erects a spectacular arboreal facade to cover the fact
that his forest is devoid of wood. On the other hand, a performance
that on initial exposure seems relatively dull will be reported as such
by critics, who usually have deadlines that preclude the luxury of extended
(and intensive!) exposure. The danger is that babies may be evicted
along with the bathwater. Having enjoyed the aforementioned luxury in
abundance, my feeling is that Barshai, whose performances are firmly
in the latter camp, is much more a "baby" than he is "bathwater".
He has so thoroughly understood these symphonies that if I were told
that on a hot day he sweated Shostakovich through his very pores, I’d
very likely believe it. His understanding encompasses each symphony
both as a whole and as an integral part of the entire cycle, and within
his sure grasp of the architecture he more or less unerringly gives
each moment its contextual due. However great the temptation, no one
climax is ever allowed to exceed its proper place in the larger picture.
For me, that creates a far greater impact overall than any consistently
high-octane performance.
This set is such a towering achievement that I’m sorely
tempted to suggest it rivals the Decca Ring Cycle as some sort
of "gramophone classic". It’s one of those few, I might say
definitive, complete sets that everyone should have on the shelf.
This is high praise indeed, and you would be right to wonder whether
I am myself going OTT! Well, I can only affirm that I wouldn’t say it
if I didn’t sincerely believe that Barshai thoroughly deserves it. However,
after all the brain-bruising listening, I find that I have to end a
mite incongruously on a couple of mundane economic notes. Firstly, if
you must pick and choose, these recordings are being issued as individual
discs by Regis. Secondly, dare I complain about the lack of texts and
translations, or a couple of barely half-full discs, when we’re being
asked to stump up the best part of twenty five pounds sterling
to own a copy? I ask this because, if you don’t believe what I’ve said
about it, that’s what it’s going to cost you to prove me wrong.
Paul Serotsky
See also reviews by
Dave Billing
Christopher Howell
Part
1 Part 2