Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Review: 'Dmitry Shostakovich' by Pauline Fairclough [Updated]


I love this photo. You'll likely recognize Shostakovich, and Sergei Prokofiev on the left, and the guy on the right is Aram Khachaturian! (Public domain photo). 

Dimitry Shostakovich, Pauline Fairclough, 191 pages, Reaktion Books, part of the Critical Lives series, published in 2019.

Pauline Fairclough's biography of Shostakovich is less than 200 pages long, much shorter for example than the Laurel Fay biography, yet it pretty much covers everything the nosy Shostakovich fan would want: A look at his major compositions, his personal relationships and his interactions with the Soviet government.

I suspect that Fairclough, professor of music at the University of Bristol and a Russian music specialist, had to work with space limitations. I looked up two other books in the Critical Lives series published by Reaktion Books Ltd., and they also run to about 200 pages.

So Fairclough had to make choices, and fortunately she makes good ones, resulting in a lively book. There's no long, boring chronicle of his childhood, for example. But she covers the beginnings of his composing career and has interesting discussions of all of his major works, descriptions which fortunately are not terribly technical and seem written for the general reader.

Fairclough also is the author of A Soviet Credo: Shostakovich's Fourth Symphony, about my favorite Shostakovich symphony, which has enjoyed a revival of many recordings in recent years. But to my surprise, her favorite is the Tenth: "The Tenth Symphony was, and is, his greatest symphonic work." There is an interesting analysis and even some nice gossip about how one movement records his crush on a young woman. 

In discussing Shostakovich's relations with Soviet officials, Fairclough steers a middle ground, dismissing the idea that he was a dissident and also arguing that depicting him as a Soviet stooge is unfair, although there were quite a few moments he said things he didn't really mean and took shady actions to please the authorities. 

And importantly, Fairclough takes her position because it fits the evidence. She convincingly shows that while Shostakovich was not perfect, he often took courageous actions to aid other Soviet composers who were in trouble, such as Mieczysław Weinberg. Many examples of such aid are given, and Fairclough argues that many others likely will never become known. "It is sheer good luck, for example, that the composer Isaak Schwarz discovered that Shostakovich had been secretly paying for his Conservatoire education."

(If you are as ignorant as I apparently am, follow the link to the Wikipedia bio of Schwarz, which has nuggets such as this: "Schwartz's father was professor of archeology at the Leningrad State University: he was arrested in 1936 and executed two years later as part of the Great Purge." Of course, as we are dealing with the Cyrillic alphabet, Fairclough and Wikipedia use different spellings.  Remember Woody Allen's old joke that the Russian Revolution picked up steam when the peasants suddenly realized the Tsar and the Czar were the same person?)

Fairclough's attention to information that would keep the reader interested extends to chronicling Shostakovich's love life. She has carefully tracked down photos of nearly all of his wives and girlfriends, (revealing that without exception they were rather good looking) and includes delicious details of Shostakovich's romantic triumphs and mistakes, including this memorable account of his ill-fated courtship of his second wife, Margarita Kainova, a Komsomol official:

" ... called to Shostakovich's apartment to meet Margarita, [Shostakovich pal Lev] Lebedinsky reported that, on her departure, Shostakovich confessed he had just proposed to her. 'Why on earth did you do that?' he enquired. 'Well, that's what has happened and I can't get out of it now' was Shostakovich's reply. Pressed on whether he was in love with her, Shostakovich mumbled 'No'." 

The marriage lasted five years; his first and third marriages worked out much better. 

Nina Varzar, the composer's first wife

I would like to have read something about Shostakovich's relationship with Sergei Prokofiev, but Fairclough apparently could not cover everything. 

It seems to me that Fairclough's pithy account would please many readers who know Shostakovich's music pretty well. And it will also serve as a good account for people who are beginning an interest in the composer. 

Update: Professor Fairclough clarifies her opinions on the fourth versus the tenth symphonies: "Incidentally, my favourite Shostakovich symphony is indeed No. 4. It's just that the Tenth is something special in the skill of its construction and I think it is his 'best' but that definitely doesn't make it my own favourite."

 

Tuesday, April 12, 2022

Two reasons to like Simone Lamsma


 I'm here to plug Simone Lamsma's recording, above, of Shostakovich's Violin Concerto No. 1 in A minor, Opus 772, and Sofia Gubaidulina’s In tempus praesens. It's a good recording. But first, let me mention something else I enjoy about her. 

If you check out the official website, you'll see that the biography page has this statement, which apparently is so important it is actually posted twice:

This biography is not to be edited without approval. If you wish to amend or shorten this biography, please do so and send it to Sylvia Ferreira for approval prior to publication at sylvia@solea-management.com

We update our biographies regularly. Please destroy all previous biographical material.

Isn't that amusingly arrogant? Not, "please use the current biography," but "Please destroy all previous biographical material." Thank goodness, I don't have any printouts of old biographies of Simone Lamsma laying around the house. What if the wrong person got his hands on it!? Imagine the horror!

In any case, I got interested in Simone Lamsma listening to a live recording of her performing the Shostakovich, and I'm happy to recommend this recording. Starting with this blog post, I want to mention if any album I am discussing is on one of the streaming music services offered free by public libraries in the U.S.; this particular album is on Freegal. 

Here is a video of Lamsma and conductor James Gaffigan talking about the Shostakovich piece:

 

Addendum:  Lamsma also has a brand new recording out, of works for violin and orchestra by Finnish composer Einojuhani Rautavaara. I couldn't find any early reviews, but it looks promising. 

Thursday, April 7, 2022

Norman Lebrecht speaks up for Russian pianists


When I think about the way Russians dominated classical music in the 20th century, I focus on the many great composers, not just Prokofiev and Shostakovich and Stravinsky, but all of the lesser-known figures who also were good, such as the folks I wrote about this blog. In a recent book review for the Wall Street Journal, Norman Lebrecht notes another argument: 

This may not be the timeliest moment to proclaim Russia’s creative superiority, but the musical facts are incontrovertible. Over the past century, Russia has produced most of the world’s outstanding pianists, from Rachmaninov and Horowitz at the dawn of recording to Daniil Trifonov and Igor Levit right now.

I guess it's not the timeliest moment, either, to revive a blog dedicated to Russian classical music ....

I have a soft spot for Lebrecht because he loves my favorite piano player, Sviatoslav Richter, but the review in question, of the book Playing with Fire: The Story of Maria Yudina, Pianist in Stalin's Russia by Elizabeth Wilson, covers a pianist I was unfamiliar with, Maria Yudina. Look like I have some more reading to do. 

Saturday, April 2, 2022

An interesting Riccardo Chailly album

 

Riccardo Chailly is a big name Italian conductor, and he's done the sort of projects you'd expect from an important conductor: A Brahms symphony cycle, the Mahler symphonies, etc.

But he's also demonstrated an ability for interesting programming on his recordings, and I wanted to call attention to his Prokofiev/Mosolov/Varèse album, pictured above, which puts mid-1920s compositions in dialogue, and which also counts as a (mostly) Russian Futurist album.

The album features a good performance of Prokofiev's Third Symphony and also includes Alexander Mosolov's Iron Foundry and Edgard Varèse's Arcana. 

Prokofiev composed his Symphony No. 3 in 1928, Iron Foundry was written in 1926 or 1927 and Arcana was written 1925-1927, so all of the music dates to about the same period. And it's good that Chailly took the occasion to introduce Mosolov to listeners who might only have known about Prokofiev and  Varèse.

Other good Chailly albums include two Shostakovich recordings: The Jazz Album and The Film Album




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