Dmitri Shostakovich – Symphony no. 2 in B major, opus 14 – “to October”
by richibi
“Carpenter“ (1929) – note the industrialization
of the subject, however
Cubist, for better or for
worse
_________
Shostakovich’s Symphony no. 2 doesn’t
sound like a symphony – one movement
only, a chorus – but was never meant to,
it had been conceived as a piece in
commemoration of the October
Revolution, a significant event in the
Communist cosmology, and
commissioned by that very polity,
hence the name, “to October“
but later, the symphonic poem was
included chronologically, thus no 2,
in the Shostakovichian oeuvre – if
you’ll excuse that pedantry, “oeuvre”
being too sweet a word for me not to
resist its austere territoriality – the
Symphony no 2 in B major being
first performed in 1927
it starts a shade above inaudibly, which
I often find irritating – unless, of course,
it’s Wagner, or Richard Strauss, who
knew what they were doing – suggesting
something significant is rumbling,
brewing on the musical horizon, after
which we enter in a lively fashion upon
a dance, full of folkloric flavour
but the harmonies are atonal, discordant,
a society, however traditional, is in disorder,
tonality, one of the stalwarts of Classicism,
along with tempo and repetition, has been
upended, distorted, the commune, the
community, can, no longer unburdened,
with only discordant harmonies, dance,
though you can feel them trying
Ravel does something similar in his
“La valse“, where, with a distortion
of tempo, the world is spinning
with only a change in volume, intensity,
in Shostakovich, the music becomes
martial, autocratic, peremptory, nearly
even frightening
I found at this point that the subtlety of
the move from the conviviality of dance
to the aggression delivered by a more
forceful music, marches and so forth,
lay in a mere alteration of the musical
pulse, from seduction to, indeed, rape,
in a simple change of rhythm – thus is it
written in our very sensibilities
a violin obbligato then intervenes,
strangely, but welcome, in a piece of
brash, by this point, agitprop, but
soon becomes as vociferous as
earlier the crowd who wanted to,
however awkwardly, dance
the obbligato, incidentally, instead of
an out and out solo part, as also with
the piano in Shostakovich’s First
Symphony, suggests the work of a
a community, a Soviet ideal, rather
than that of an individual asserting
hir particular predominance, if you
listen between the lines
a particularly impressive chorus
eventually delivers a tribute, a
hagiographic poem, to Lenin, which
Shostakovich abjured, but delivered
nevertheless for the money, and for
the influence, reportedly, however
ignominiously, for he was young,
not fully formed, innocent yet
it resembles, of course, a cantata, a
religious chant – see Bach, one of the
evident muses of Shostakovich – but
which addresses here a political
system, a cute trick of contemporary
secular regimes, the several –isms
within our post-religious ideological
societies
watch for it
note the spoken, or rather, prosaically
proclaimed last verses of the oration,
hortatory, don’t you think, or what
R ! chard
psst: incidentally, few composers are as
political, though few have been
under such ideological pressure,
as Shostakovich
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