Dmitri Shostakovich - String Quartet No. 10, Op. 118 (1964)

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  • čas přidán 15. 06. 2024
  • Dmitri Dmitriyevich Shostakovich (Дми́трий Дми́триевич Шостако́вич, tr. Dmitriy Dmitrievich Shostakovich 25 September 1906 - 9 August 1975) was a Soviet composer and pianist, and a prominent figure of 20th-century music.
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    String Quartet No. 10 in A flat, Op. 118 (1964)
    Dedicated to Moisey Vainberg (1919-1996)
    1. Andante (0:00)
    2. Allegretto furioso (4:11)
    3. Adagio (8:16)
    4. Allegretto (13:32)
    Fitzwilliam Quartet
    Details by Thomas May:
    Shostakovich's Tenth Quartet was given its premiere in Moscow on November 20, 1964. Shostakovich dedicated it to one of his closest musical friends, the composer Moisey Vainberg, who had also incurred the perilous wrath of Stalin. (Vainberg had been imprisoned in 1953, the year of Stalin's death.) At first glance, the familiar four-movement outline of the quartet follows a long-accustomed pattern. Yet much of the impact of this music comes from the larger tensions Shostakovich manages to generate across the work.
    The quartet begins almost surreptitiously, with a violin solo that seems detached, caught in a game of casual questioning. When the ensemble enters in response, it does so with a rhythm that often occurs as an obsessive idée fixe for Shostakovich: short-short-long (known in poetic meter as an "anapest"). Eventually a more soulful melody occurs in the cello, followed by another flight of the solo violin, angular and upping the ante on that initial impression of detachment. From this abundance of material, we seem to be set up for a large-scale event, rich in the conflict and synthesis of development. But Shostakovich simply recapitulates what's happened (spicing it up with some eerie sul ponticello harmonizing), while the anapestic trance carries through to a deceptive resolution.
    Deceptive, that is, since the whole opening movement turns out to be a curtain-raiser for the ferocity of the second. Its aggressive rhythmic accents, attacks, and muscle-flexing ensemble take us by surprise: Now we encounter a conflict between the relaxed atmosphere of the beginning and its antithesis. Shostakovich's furious, motoric ostinatos convey a sense of chase that becomes ever rougher and more distorted, until nothing but the collective of the ensemble is left.
    The Adagio follows with a set of variations on a threnody-like, full-throated A-minor melody in the cello, which functions as a passacaglia. An astonishing final set of harmonic transformations segues (again catching us by surprise) directly into the lengthy final movement. A new attitude of jauntiness - heard as a viola solo - ensues, with a rondo-like rhythm that seems to promise a light-hearted cap to the quartet. But systematically Shostakovich retraces the journey already taken through the entire work, bringing back the thematic material of each of the preceding movements in succession, against powerful counterpoint from the "rondo" theme. Finally, the themes from the first movement seem to duel with the latter until the music fades into the same quizzical atmosphere with which the quartet began.
    This furnishes a good example of the temptation to reduce this music to hidden "programmatic" meanings: an allegory of the individual beaten down by the inhumane forces of the State, a pattern that is repeated endlessly in a "cycle." Such reductions tend to obscure the musical and artistic experience that a performance entails, as if they could explain away the profound sense of ambivalence the composer paradoxically generates from a marvelous internal coherence. (The same goes for trying to read the later quartets as a kind of medical diary, mirroring his increasing experience of physical frailty.)
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Komentáře • 11

  • @ninjaassassin27
    @ninjaassassin27 Před 10 měsíci +37

    There is far too much beautiful music, and far too little music which looks at the ugly and serious parts of life. Thank god for Dmitri Shostakovich. And for this channel.

    • @erika6651
      @erika6651 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Word, and despite all the harsh reality found in Dmitri's music, he still finds moments to give us some beauty. Specifically in this piece, 0:20 - 0:28

  • @southfloridaarcheryguy114
    @southfloridaarcheryguy114 Před 10 měsíci +13

    Love this quartet. I’ve heard it arranged for string orchestra. Works well both ways.

  • @notaire2
    @notaire2 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Wunderschöne und spannende Interpretation dieses modernen und perfekt komponierten Streichquartetts im veränderlichen Tempo mit ein bisschen neuesachlichen doch wesentlich seidigen Tönen vierer technisch perfekt Instrumente. Der dritte Satz klingt besonders schön und echt melodisch. Im Kontrast klingt der letzte Satz echt lebhaft und auch inspirierend. Wunderbar und atemberaubend zugleich!

  • @mattimaranda9638
    @mattimaranda9638 Před 9 měsíci +12

    I've said it before and I'll say it again... there's some serious heavy metal going on in here.

    • @Ella-hg4cq
      @Ella-hg4cq Před 8 měsíci

      I would love to hear someone play this on an electric guitar

    • @mattimaranda9638
      @mattimaranda9638 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@Ella-hg4cq electric guitar, baritone, bass guitar and drums. That would be pretty awesome.

    • @Ella-hg4cq
      @Ella-hg4cq Před 8 měsíci

      @@mattimaranda9638 megadeth level solos

    • @arnekorpen3143
      @arnekorpen3143 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@Ella-hg4cq Would sound terrible, obviously. Electric guitar was designed for quite limited goals.

  • @jocelynjosssheehy2970
    @jocelynjosssheehy2970 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Wow!

  • @arnekorpen3143
    @arnekorpen3143 Před 4 měsíci +1

    13:34 Tchaikovsky violin concerto finale?