II
Pictures of Shostakovich
The relationship of Dmitri Shostakovich with the Soviet
State has been a controversial topic ever since the publication
in 1979 of Testimony - The Memoirs of Dmitri Shostakovich.
This book, compiled by Solomon Volkov from interviews
and articles, challenged the myths that had surrounded the
composer since he had first achieved international fame in
the nineteen-thirties. Western academics, with the willing
help of Soviet propagandists, had built a largely fictitious
personality assessment of the composer which purported to
explain the apparently varying quality of his musical output.
He was portrayed as a 'Hamlet' figure, plagued by self doubt,
and not fully in control of his faculties. He was also believed,
by many, to be a committed communist - the greatest musical
exponent of socialist realism. For those who adhered to these
beliefs, and had a vested interest in perpetuating them, the
publication of Testimony was a thorny issue. At first
it was dismissed as a forgery, and its accuracy was denied
by most of those who knew him. The composer's own family were
forced to make public statements denouncing the book as a
fraudulent. However, as the communist regime began to relax
its grip on the minds of its people, the truth and validity
of the memoirs were confirmed by everyone who was in a position
to do so. Most telling of all was the revelation by the composer's
son, Maxim, in a B.B.C. television interview in 1986.
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It's true. It's accurate. Sometimes,
for me, there is too much rumour in it, but nothing
major. The basis of the book is correct. (1)
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The composer's daughter, Galina, was even more certain of
the authenticity of the work.
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I am an admirer of Solomon Volkov.
There is nothing false there [in Testimony
]. Definitely the style of speech is Shostakovich's
- not only the choice of words, but the way they are
put together. (2)
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The revelations of Testimony brought about a new
interpretation of the composer, set out most clearly in Ian
MacDonald's The New Shostakovich . While maintaining
some doubt as to the truthfulness of Shostakovich himself
in the memoirs, MacDonald accepts that the composer was at
heart a dissident, contrary to the conformity that he generally
projected in public. While in spoken and written words, he
had never before publicly condemned the political system under
which he lived, his music was full of references to Stalin,
totalitarianism, and the sufferings of the Russian people.
According to MacDonald and others, much Shostakovich's musical
output, and in particular the symphonies, consists of a social
and political commentary on his society, and his own place
within that society.
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The majority of my symphonies are
tombstones. Too many of our people died and were buried
in places unknown to anyone, not even their relatives.
It happened to many of my friends. Where do you put
the tombstones for Meyerhold or Tukhachevsky? (3)
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The view of Shostakovich as a committed socialist, and the
belief that his musical output reflected this commitment was
completely undermined once the authenticity of Testimony
was established. The realities of his life and personal
thought are still emerging, most recently with the publication
of Shostakovich - A Life by Laurel Fay. This book concentrates
on a factual rather than interpretive approach to the composer's
life and works, and even though its revelations go no further
in portraying the dissident composer than previous publications,
it has still become a source of controversy. It confirms with
documentary and anecdotal evidence much of what was contained
in Testimony , and the points of view expressed by
those who accepted it in the first instance.
With regard to The New Shostakovich - although it is
one of my main sources, I have some reservations as to the
accuracy of the interpretation of the 'extra-musical' content
of Shostakovich's music - simply because the nature of the
musical references to external referents is of necessity vague.
However, I am convinced that the basic idea expressed by MacDonald
- that much of the music of Shostakovich contains external
referents in the manner of a spoken or written language -
is completely correct.
A knowledge of the relationship between Shostakovich and the
State is important in establishing the representational nature
of his symphonic output. His portrayal as a committed socialist
was originally based on several factors, many of which have
now been shown to be untrue. Of particular note are the events
surrounding the Fourth and Fifth symphonies, Lady Macbeth,
and the Leningrad symphony. It was in 1936 that
Shostakovich first experienced the disfavour of the Party,
as part of a general offensive against artists of all kinds.
In January of that year the opera Lady Macbeth of Mtensk
District , a work which had received great success and
critical acclaim, came under attack in the official Party
newspaper - Pravda . Entitled Chaos Instead of Music
, the article was a general attack on formalism, a tirade
against the opera, and a personal attack on the composer.
Perhaps the most telling part of the article was the line,
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The power of good music to infect
the masses has been sacrificed to a petty bourgeois,
"formalist" attempt to create originality through
cheap clowning. It is a game of clever ingenuity that
may end very badly. (4)
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In the language of the Soviet press, this amounted to no
less than a condemnation to death. Most of the composer's
friends and associates immediately began to avoid him, for
fear that his misfortune would become theirs. His rivals publicly
denounced him and sought retribution. The composer took to
sitting outside his apartment at night with a packed travel
bag, so that the secret police would not disturb his family
when they came to take him away. Luckily, perhaps, for the
composer, Stalin seemed to have taken a personal interest
in keeping him alive. Throughout a period when his works practically
disappeared from the concert repertoire, he was supplied with
enough contracts for the production of film music to keep
himself and his family alive. It is likely that this resulted
from a direct decision of Stalin, as the dictator personally
controlled every aspect of cinematic production during his
reign.
Shostakovich's next ' composition, the Fourth Symphony
, was in rehearsal when its production was abandoned. The
original version of events stated that the composer felt that
the work was not ready for performance, and possibly completely
unsalvageable. This was, it seems, untrue. The real reason
for the abandonment of the performance is more likely to have
been the interference of the Party, and the Party's order
that the production should not go ahead. Eyewitness accounts
tell of Shostakovich being called to a meeting with the director
and a local Party leader. He emerged from the meeting tense
and pale, stating that the production would not go ahead.
The next symphony, No.5, received a place in Shostakovich
mythology as 'a Soviet artist's reply to just criticism'.
This phrase was not his own, but that of a critic. Laurel
Fay comments specifically on this 'quote' in Shostakovich
- A life .
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This passive appreciation of an unidentified
critic's remark is the source of one of the most enduring
myths about Shostakovich, that the composer used the
phrase as a subtitle for his Fifth Symphony. Shostakovich
never accepted the criticism levelled at him and his
opera in 1936. [ ... ] He neither affixed nor endorsed
any subtitle on the Fifth Symphony, nor does any appear
on the published score. (5)
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Fay goes on to state that this myth was propagated not so
much in the Soviet Union as it was in the West. It was used
by many Western critics as the proof that Shostakovich was
a Socialist striving to achieve the goal of a truly socialist
art form. His later comments in Testimony contradict
this interpretation. He specifically comments on the supposedly
triumphant endings of the Fifth and Seventh Symphonies.
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I discovered that the man who considers
himself its greatest interpreter does not understand
my music. He says that I wanted to write exultant
finales for
my Fifth and Seventh Symphonies but I couldn't manage
it. [...] I think its clear what happens in the Fifth.
The rejoicing is forced, created under threat [...]
Its as if someone is beating you with a stick and
saying, "your business is rejoicing, your business
is rejoicing". (6)
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Many of the other symphonies stand to confirm or contradict
the opposing views of Shostakovich's relationship with the
ideological and cultural maelstrom in which he lived. The
Second and Third Symphonies are both dedicated to the Revolution
and do not appear to contain the guile of later works. They
are possibly genuine contributions to the celebration of the
universal freedom that communism was supposed to bring. The
fact that the composer makes no mention of these symphonies
in his memoirs is possibly because he wished to dissociate
himself from a flirtation with a regime which he later grew
to hate. Conversely, it is possible that these symphonies
were completely insincere, and a way of pleasing the political
masters who might otherwise choose to destroy his life. He
returned again to celebrations of the Revolution in Symphonies
Eleven and Twelve, although some more recent interpretations
have cast these as works which dealt with the betrayal of
the ideals of the Revolution rather than their fulfilment.
The Ninth was expected by all to be a celebration of the glorious
victory over Germany, and a musical portrait of Stalin. Many
were incensed by its return to simpler classic forms and its
apparent ignorance of the significance of a 'Ninth Symphony'.
The Tenth has been described by the composer as this portrait
in music of Stalin - one the composer could only write safely
in the knowledge that the 'Great Leader' was no longer around
to seek vengeance (7).
From examination of the available evidence, it seems possible
that the entire symphonic output of Shostakovich, excepting
the First, forms a commentary, and possibly satire, on the
regime under which he lived. He has certainly, to some extent,
incorporated representational aspects into his music and commentary
on the events through which he lived. He did this in a manner
which excluded the possibility of the authorities understanding
the specifics of what was being said. While he is known to
have regularly signed press releases and made public statements
with which he did not agree, the question of the truth that
is contained in his music is still an open one. Many sources
and commentators have described Shostakovich as yurodivy
- a particularly Russian sort of dissident who's origins date
back to the fifteenth century.
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The yurodivy has the gift to
see and hear what others know nothing about. But he
tells it in a paradoxical way, in code. He plays the
fool, while actually being a persistent exposer of
evil and injustice. The yurodivy is an anarchist
and individualist, who in his public role breaks the
commonly held "moral" laws of behaviour and flouts
conventions. But he sets strict limitations, rules,
and taboos for himself.
(8)
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It is certain that the entire truth of the matter will never
be known, but the journey of trying to discover the meaning
contained in the works of this composer reveals an aspect
of his music that has not been documented in any other composer.
Shostakovich may have been the first political diarist to
write exclusively in the medium of music.
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