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The Soviet Experience - Volume 1
String Quartets by Dmitri Shostakovich and his Contemporaries
Dmitri SHOSTAKOVICH (1906-1975)
String Quartet No. 5 in B flat major, Op. 92 (1952) [31:45]
String Quartet No. 6 in G major, Op. 101 (1956) [25:38]
String Quartet No. 7 in F sharp minor, Op. 108 (1960) [12:13]
String Quartet No. 8 in C minor, Op. 110 (1960) [21:56]
Nikolai MYASKOVSKY (1881-1950)
String Quartet No.13 in A minor, Op.86 (1949) [25:36]
Pacifica Quartet (Simin Ganatra (violin); Sibbi Bernhardsson (violin);
Masumi Per Rostad (viola); Brandon Vamos (cello))
rec. 24-25 July, 3-5 September 2010, 1 February and 14-15 May 2011,
Foellinger Great Hall, Krannert Center, University of Illinois,
Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, USA
CEDILLE RECORDS CDR 90000 127 [60:05]
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The Pacifica’s plan to give the Chicago première of all Shostakovich’s
Fifteen String Quartets over 10 concerts during the
2010/11 concert season was the inspiration behind the Soviet
Arts Experience festival in Chicago. Lead by the University
of Chicago in 2010-12 the Soviet Arts Experience is
an extensive collaborative project uniting a number of the city’s
arts institutions. It serves as a showcase for works created
by artists under (and in response to) the Politburo of the Soviet
Union. In the spirit of the ‘Soviet Arts Experience’ the Pacifica
and Cedille intend to release a cycle of music from Shostakovich
and his contemporaries. This first volume comprises four String
Quartets from Shostakovich and a single Quartet
by Nikolai Miaskovsky (Myaskovsky).
The Pacifica first came to my attention in 2005 with their beautifully
played set of the complete Mendelssohn String Quartets.
Their playing exuded style and sophistication, an abundance
of character and warm expression. Especially remarkable is the
sweetness of tone and the silvery timbre of Simin Ganatra, the
first violin. That set was recorded in 2002/04 in the Pick-Staiger
Concert Hall at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois
(Cedille CDR 90000 082). They are quartet in residence at the
University of Illinois and is also resident performing artists
at the University of Chicago. On the evidence of a number of
critically acclaimed recordings and splendid recital performances
they can be ranked alongside the finest chamber music performers
on the international stage.
Shostakovich lived all of his adult life under a Soviet-controlled
State. Commencing in 1938 he wrote his fifteen String Quartets
over a 36 year period. This is the same number of quartets as
he wrote symphonies. All were premièred soon after their composition
with the exception of the Quartet No.4 of 1949 that
had to wait four years before it was introduced. It is often
said that the cycle reflects the principal events in Shostakovich’s
life. The best known and most frequently played is the Eight
from 1960. The quartets contain both numerical and musical references
with the Eighth in particular containing numerous musical
citations and repeated use of the composer’s personal motif
making up the initials D-S-C-H.
The String Quartet No. 5 in B flat major, Op. 92 comes
from one of the most extreme periods of Stalinist terror in
Russia. It was premièred just after Stalin’s death in late 1953
but had been written a year earlier, in 1952. At the start of
the first movement the viola’s first four notes are a combination
of the composer’s personal D-S-C-H motif. A complex and challenging
work, the three movement quartet is performed without a break.
In the central movement Andante/Andantino,
attacca - the emotional core - the Pacifica convey
a sense of total desolation like a bleak landscape, ghostly
and unforgiving.
When the String Quartet No. 6 in G major, Op. 101 was
written in 1956 Stalin had been dead for three years. Composers
experienced a thawing of the cultural restrictions. At this
time Shostakovich was emotionally distraught due to the sudden
death of his wife Nina in the winter of 1954 with the additional
grief of his mother dying the next year. However, in 1956 shortly
before completing the score Shostakovich had quickly married
Margarita Kainova. Cast in four movements the generally melodious
score is lighter, certainly far less complex than its predecessor
and it conveys a restrained beauty. In the third movement -
Lento, attacca, the soul of the quartet, a
Passacaglia - the playing has a deep concentration
and intensity ensuring an uncomfortable journey and an aching
fatigue.
The marriage to Margarita was unsuccessful and they were soon
divorced in 1959. Composed in 1960 he dedicated his String
Quartet No. 7 in F sharp minor, Op. 108 to his first wife
Nina who been dead for five years. Significant is his choice
of F sharp minor - a key which is conventionally related
with pain and suffering. It seems appropriate in reflecting
the composer’s grief. The score is the shortest of all Shostakovich’s
quartets and lasts here for just over12 minutes. This concise
three movement structure with its conflicting moods has been
said to mirror the ups and downs of his marriage to Nina. There’s
remarkably expressive playing from the Pacifica in the Finale
marked Allegro - Allegretto (Adagio) commencing
with a Fugue - wild, angry and briskly energetic. It
represents what could be described as the barking of an aggressive
dog. From 2:40 the music calms and regains composure yet a sense
of unease is never far away.
Extremely popular in recital and on record is the String
Quartet No. 8 in C minor, Op. 110 from 1960. It bears a
dedication to ‘The Victims of Fascism and War’. It was written,
it seems, in a just a few days whilst on a working trip outside
Soviet Russia in the Communist State of East Germany near Dresden.
Shostakovich had seen at first hand the destruction that Allied
bombing had inflicted on Dresden. Set with numerous self-quotations
including the near incessant use of the D-S-C-H motif the score
could be described as a musical autobiography of Shostakovich.
The ferocious short second movement Allegro molto,
attacca is strikingly played: just bursting with aggressive
and dynamic energy. After the flurry of the D-S-C-H motif I
was stuck by the abrupt appearance at 0:55 of the Jewish theme
from the composer’s Second Piano Trio. Of significant
impact are disconcerting fortissimo chords that open
the fourth movement Largo, attacca. This is
followed by music of a deep and uncomfortable quality that seems
to reflect weariness and disillusion. In the Finale
marked Largo the Pacifica create a heart-wrenching
feeling of intense desolation and wretchedness. This is perhaps
a representation of the composer’s world-weariness. Conspicuously
the D-S-C-H motif is heard repeatedly throughout with the movement
virtually built around it.
The first set of the complete Shostakovich quartets that I regularly
played was from the Fitzwilliam String Quartet. Their performances
recorded at the All Saints Church Church, Petersham, Surrey
in 1975/77 are energetic and enthusiastic and still are worthy
of acclaim today on Decca 455 776-2. Muscular playing of greater
dynamic extremes is a feature of the complete set from the Emerson
Quartet on Deutsche Grammophon 475 7407. Recorded in 1994/98
at the Harris Concert Hall, in Aspen, Colorado I believe the
Emerson set to be the finest available at present.
Actually Polish-born near Warsaw, Nikolai Miaskovsky, an older
contemporary of Shostakovich had experience of living for several
decades in Russia before it became the Soviet Union. Consequently
he was part of the generation of the pre-Revolution composers
of Tchaikovsky, Glière, Lyadov and Rimsky-Korsakov. Actually
Miaskovsky had studied with the last three. The composer of
twenty-seven Symphonies Miaskovsky wrote thirteen String
Quartets which is two less than Shostakovich. The last
in Miaskovsky’s cycle and his final work altogether is the highly
rated String Quartet No.13 in A minor, Op.86 from 1949.
At the time of writing the A minor Quartet Miaskovsky
knew he was dying and many consider the score as his musical
testament. Although Miaskovsky’s A minor Quartet and
Shostakovich’s String Quartet No. 8 were composed just
over a decade apart the listener could be inhabiting a completely
different sound-world. Miaskovsky’s score is far more conservative
than that of Shostakovich, being mellow and generally optimistic
in mood rather than anxiety-laden and tormented. To my ears
Miaskovsky’s A minor Quartet has similarities to the
quartets of say Borodin and Glazunov. Highly lyrical, the opening
movement Moderato of the String Quartet No.13
is passionate and contains a lovely if rather forlorn recurring
theme. Briskly rhythmic and upbeat with a poignant central section
the Presto fantastico could serve as a Scherzo.
Beautifully performed by the Pacifica the slow movement Andante
con moto - a romance – is possessed by a heartbreaking
mood that could easily depict the pain of lovers parting. Bristling
with melody in the Finale, Molto vivo, energico
the Pacifica drive the music forward vigorously and with evident
determination.
On Cedille in this music from the ‘Soviet Experience’ the Pacifica
Quartet provide performances of great merit. Throughout, their
playing is splendidly consistent, always intelligent and generates
a real intensity that suits Shostakovich’s music perfectly.
The performances feel spontaneous and fresh. I was comfortable
with the choice of tempi and was delighted by the first
class unity and intonation of these performances. The sound
quality is most impressive in both clarity and balance. At only
sixty minutes playing time another work could certainly have
been accommodated.
The essay in the booklet is the finest I have read for some
time. The Soviet Experience series has got off to an
impressive start with these excellent performances.
Michael Cookson
Review index: Myaskovsky
chamber music
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