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
Hi Kubla - try the Borodin Quartet/ S Richter (on EMI) for the Shostakovich Quartets. It's still the best ref, IMO.
I'd second the Borodin Quartet. I have a recording on BBC Music (one of the BBC Legends series) that includes two other great string quartet's, one by Borodin (String quartet No. 2) and the other by Ravel (String Quartet in F). They are from live performances at the Leigh Town Hall for the Edinburgh Festival in 1962. The recording was remastered in 20-bit and is an original (analog) mono recording. The recording is OK, the performances are GREAT. The other two on this disc are much lighter in comparison to the Shostakovich, but then again, I'd say most are!

Marco
Get the Barshai set. It is well known to be one of the best values in classical music. The price here is absolutely no indication of quality. It was recorded on a bargain label, but this conductor can be far more interesting than many of the major label conductors. Plus, he is known to be a bona-fide expert on Shostakovich.

As for Shostakovich, I figure him to be an absolute genius but is among the most elusive composers in classical music. Where did he get this stuff, and what does it all mean? It boggles the mind.
For a cheap thrill ($7.98 at most), pick up Naxos 8.550953 which includes both the chamber symhony version of Shosakovich's 8th Quartet and another chamber symphony by Myaskovsky (their spelling).
Congratulations, Kubla. You've stumbled onto some of the greatest music ever composed (in my opinion).

The 8th string quartet is actually a musical autobiography of Shostakovich's life. The four opening notes of the quartet (d, e-flat, c, b) comprise Shostakovitch's "musical signature," and is a dominant theme throughout the piece. The first time he heard the quartet played for him, Shostakovich wrote in his journal that the tears streamed down his face "like piss from a man from having drunk too much beer."

The second movement of the quartet was intended to represent the schizophrenic and tumultuous nature of Shostakovich's world under Stalin and the socialist regime in power at the time. As mentioned above, counter-revolutionary music was a big no-no at the time, and Shostakovich and Prokofiev were (at various times) on the hit list. So, Shostakovich had two catalogues of music going. One which went to Stalin and his censorship boys, and the other which stayed in his desk drawer. Another thing to listen for in the third movement... the two sets of three very abrupt chords are meant to represent the KGB knocking on the door.

I would also recommend that you try listening to the cello concerto. You will immediately recognize the theme of the first movement (it's identical to a passage in the third movement of the quartet, i believe). Anyway, it's a fantastic piece. The second movement is spine-tingling and erie! Rostropovich has recorded it several times (it was composed for him), but my favorite is his recording with Seiji Ozawa and the London Phil. Also on that disk is the Prokofiev Symphonie Concertant (also a phenomenal piece of music!). As a Yo-Yo fan, I would also recommend trying out his recording. It's coupled with an interesting recording of the 5th Symphony. It may just turn you back on to Yo-Yo!

The symphonies are also terrific. Heck, everything is terrific. I once played in an orchestra conducted by Shostakovich's son, Maxim. We played the 5th and 9th symphonies, and to hear Maxim talk about his father, his father's life, and his father's music is something I will always treasure.

Happy listening, Kubla. There's a lot of great music out there!

-Eric