Shostakovich...WHOA



An old g/f made a copy of a Shostakovich recording and until this week I’d never gotten around to it. MAN, is this guy giving me nightmares. I don’t know a damn thing about classical music but HOLY CHRISTMAS!

I can’t call up the old g/f to ask (I want to live, I want to live!) so I’m hoping someone can ID this recording and then offer suggestions to similar Shostakovich. I’m looking for brooding, scary, intense, hair-raising chaos…just like what’s-her-name.

The recording I was given has the following handwritten on it: “Kammersinfornie (after) string Quartet #8 & #10.” “1960” is also written on the recording with an arrow from it pointing to “Quartet #8.” The track most indicative of what I like is #2 whatever that is.

What’s this guy’s rep in the classical world, anyway? Maybe the style of this recording isn’t representative of his work.

As an interesting side note…this girl was always giving me really twisted material as witnessed by the title of the last book she gave me: “The Insanity of Normality – Realism as Sickness: Toward Understanding Human Destructiveness.” An army of red flags popped up with that one but I valiantly forged ahead with my little pea shooter anyway (please excuse the disgusting and humiliating metaphor.) I got clobbered.
kublakhan

Showing 2 responses by gregm

Hi Kubla - try the Borodin Quartet/ S Richter (on EMI) for the Shostakovich Quartets. It's still the best ref, IMO.
Iasi's recs are definitive IMO. So I MUST waste server space in seconding the Mitropoulos/Oistrakh - /Rostro for the violin & cello. How rare to discover s/one familiar with these versions!

The Mravinski/Lenigrad 10 is also undisputable.
Another version for violin is L Kogan/Svetlanov/USSR S.O. Different and beautiful view (nostalgic at times) -- but, IMO, it doesn't surpass Mitropoulos.

For 7 I'll have to check Gergiev (St Petersburg, I suppose?). I've been running on K Ancerl/Czech S O until now.