Symphony no 11 in G minor, opus 103 (The Year 1905) – Dmitri Shostakovich
by richibi
“Bloody Sunday. Shooting workers near the Winter Palace January 9, 1905”
________
if you don’t find a lot to hang on to in
Shostakovich’s 11th Symphony, as I
didn’t, apart from his everywhere
ravishing instrumentation, it’s that
the piece is a commemoration of a
particular event in Russian history,
Bloody Sunday, when the Tsar’s
Imperial Guard opened fire on a
crowd of unarmed protestors who
had come to petition Nicolas ll for
better work conditions, akin, indeed,
to slavery then, there, January 22,
1905, the first stirrings, thus, of the
1917 Russian Revolution, which
installed the Bolsheviks, Leninism,
then Stalinism, and so forth
Bloody Sunday can be compared to
China’s Tiananmen Square, June 4,
1989, it seems totalitarian states will
blithely resort to such dire measures
Shostakovich had been commissioned
to write a symphony for the 50th
anniversary of the event, January 22,
1955
he’d been reinstated by Khrushchev
after the death of Stalin, who’d
excused the tyrant’s condemnation
of Shostakovich by saying the despot
had been too subjective, and rescinded
the law which that earlier ruler had
imposed requiring all artists to
conform to party ideology, see Hitler
again on that one, his proscribed
entartete Kunst, his interdicted
degenerate art
but for personal reasons, Shostakovich
was unable to compose this new work
until 1957, the year after the Soviets had
quashed the Hungarian uprising of 1956
with tanks and ammunition, an event
too reminiscent of, to the composer, the
earlier tsarist massacre, and horrifying
furthermore, his father had been there,
and spoke of children having been shot
out of the trees as they merely watched
the proceedings, felled too suddenly,
apparently, to wipe the smiles off their
innocent still faces
the Symphony is called “The Year 1905“,
it is mighty, but is too local to effect any
universal understanding, I think, the
program is too specifically Russian to
evoke more than historical attention to
an unacquainted observer, listener
I’d visited a church in Rome, Sant’Agnese
fuori le mura, St Agnes Outside the Walls,
once, a place I would not miss were I ever
to return to that illustrious city, before even
the Vatican, the Coliseum, et cetera, the
church was built in the 4th Century and
has weathered the ages, the vicissitudes
of time, with all their impositions
the mass was in Italian, however, not the
Latin that had once united all Catholics
in a common set of sounds that had been
internalized to represent the message of
the service
but now I could only recognize the form,
no longer the content, something like the
response a person without the history
of Russia would have here, I would
contend
this is the dilemma of this, however
significant, composition, I find
you might also imagine that a tribute to
Canadian soldiers who’d died at, say,
Vimy Ridge, or Passchendaele, might
not be as moving to someone who
wasn’t Canadian
Shostakovich received the Lenin Prize
for his achievement, one of the Soviet
Union’s most prestigious accolades
R ! chard