Overture Magazine 2013-2014 May-June 2014 | Page 17

Program Notes } This is a symphony that is built from the transformations of one potent motto theme, which we hear immediately at the opening of the massive, sonataform first movement, “Revolutionary Petrograd.” Shostakovich reported that the mood of this music was inspired by his own memories of Lenin’s arrival and street fighting in Petrograd (the name of St. Petersburg during that period) in October 1917 when he was a boy of eleven. Cellos and basses sing in unison the motto theme: a solemn, very Russian theme based on the shape of Orthodox chant. The rest of the strings enter and flesh out its harmonies. This melody rises torturously upward until it is cut off by an explosion of drums and tam-tam announcing the start of the main Allegro section, led off by bassoons snarling a militant march theme. Shrill and savage, the music describes the people of Petrograd rising up against the weak government that had replaced the Czar. Then it subsides for the movement’s second major theme, which is derived from the motto melody; this more lyrical theme seems to express the people’s yearning for a new order. This appealing melody is developed and gradually builds to a triple-forte shout. A hushed bridge passage —each movement of this Symphony is connected without pause to the next— leads to the Adagio second movement, “Razliv.” The development section, again led off by bassoons, is a dramatic street battle, culminating in a gigantic blast of tam-tam. Then the second theme reprises gently in the strings. After a splendid brass chorale, the movement closes quietly to the strains of the solemn motto theme. A hushed bridge passage — each movement of this Symphony is connected without pause to the next — leads to the Adagio second movement, “Razliv.” Razliv was the name of Lenin’s country home where he retreated periodically to make his plans. Once again, unison cellos and basses introduce a troubled theme: a twisting version of the motto. Unison horns then present a baleful new theme, heavy with potential danger. In fact, the horns will be very prominent throughout this movement, periodically returning with a chorale-like refrain. Also prominent are woodwind soloists, particularly flute, clarinet, and bassoon; they dominate most of this melancholy music. A sense of expectation gradually builds over shuddering strings. After the solo trombone sings the baleful theme in its most sinister appearance, stealthy pizzicato low strings on the movement’s opening theme bridge to the next movement. Movement three is subtitled “Aurora.” The “Aurora” was the battleship on the Neva River that fired the signal shot for the storming of the Winter Palace on October 26, 1917; it has been preserved there as a memorial. In this scherzo-style movement, the energy builds slowly with pizzicato strings offering a new version of the Adagio’s first theme and drums menacing. Ultimately, the big second theme from movement one returns in trombones and tuba; it propels a huge crescendo leading to the explosive irruption of drums signaling the attack. This music merges directly into the finale, “The Dawn of Humanity.” Horns followed by violins proclaim a joyous new version of the once-solemn motto melody. When this opening section subsides, violins quietly introduce a dancing version of the Adagio’s twisting theme. Indeed, this finale is filled with reprises of the Symphony’s various themes now transformed into a song of celebration. Eventually, the lyrical theme of the people that dominated movement one also joins them in the brass. To pounding drums, the whole orchestra roars out a triumphant conclusion in D major. DHMH RSA # R24924 Instrumentation: Three flutes, piccolo, three oboes, three clarinets, three bassoons, contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion and strings. WWW.ELIZABETHCOONEYAGENCY.COM TRUST, INTEGRITY & EXCELLENCE SINCE 1957 Notes by Janet E. Bedell, Copyright ©2014 May– June 2014 | O v ertur e 15