Shostakovich: Symphonies Nos 12 & 15

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DMITRI SHOSTAKOVICH
Shostakovich: Symphonies Nos 12 & 15
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, John Storgårds

[ Chandos SACD / Hybrid SACD ]

Release Date: Friday 24 March 2023

The BBC Philharmonic and its new Chief Conductor, John Storgårds, follow their previous release of Shostakovich's Eleventh Symphony with this album of Symphonies Nos 12 and 15. Subtitled 'The Year 1917', the Twelfth Symphony was a project which Shostakovich had been planning and discussing for two decades - a symphony about Lenin. The first movement, 'Revolutionary Petrograd', depicts the arrival of Lenin in Petrograd in April 1917 and his meetings with the working people of the city. The second, 'Razliv', commemorates the site of Lenin's retreat to the north of the city. 'Aurora', the third movement, refers to the Russian battleship the revolutionary mutinous crew of which fired the first shot of the attack on the Winter Palace. Finally, 'The Dawn of Humanity' celebrates the ultimate victory of the Great October Socialist Revolution. Musically, the Twelfth seems to regress to a more simplistic musical language than that of the immediately preceding Symphony - which some commentators ascribe to Shostakovich's joining the Communist Party and perhaps trying harder to meet its expectations.

The Fifteenth (and last) Symphony was written entirely in July 1971, at a composer's rest home in Repino, north-west of Leningrad. It was his first non-programmatic symphony since the Tenth, and Shostakovich was wary of discussing the meaning of it, but eventually commented that it might be understood as representing the journey from life to death.

"Another terrific release from this source." Gramophone

"John Storgårds gets a clear sense of direction and some wonderful playing from the BBC Philharmonic, finding a dignity in both main themes [Symphony No 12], encouraging maximum character from bassoon as the first-movement action kicks off, and a handsomeness in the brass ensembles of the Adagio …" BBC Music

"… John Storgårds and the BBC Philharmonic do Shostakovich's enigmatic, macabre, and profoundly deep, final … with shattering/exorcising climaxes in the second and final movements, and a nightmarish-fantastical world created in the first … gripping and intense here, and then the slow second that might be heard as a funeral oration, featuring baleful (wide interval) cello solos …" CollinsCollumn.com

Tracks:

Symphony No.12, Op.112 ''The Year 1917''
Symphony No.15, Op.141

Symphony No.12 in D Minor, Op. 112 "The Year 1917": III. Aurora