What are the best recordings of Shostakovich’s mighty Fifth?

By Michael Beek

Published: Wednesday, 24 May 2023 at 12:00 am


Whether written as propaganda or with bitter irony, Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony reflects the terror of Stalin’s rule like no other work.

Probably the most-performed modern symphony of the past 75 years, Shostakovich’s Fifth was a crucial work in his development and an act of historic resonance. Written at the height of Russia’s Stalinist terror by a composer at risk of his life, it seeks to reaffirm the grand Beethovenian tradition of constructive symphonic power and has gripped audiences since its 1937 premiere.

In the wake of the notorious Pravda newspaper attack on his opera Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk, Shostakovich produced a newly disciplined structure that unfolds with classically remorseless inevitability. On one level the Fifth imitates the favoured Soviet symphonic pattern of progress through struggle to victory.

But the pattern is subtly skewed. The finale is partly adapted from one of his Pushkin songs, ‘Rebirth’, about a ‘barbarian artist’ defiling the work of genius with scribbles that only time will wear away.

Here are a selection of the very best interpretation of this great and multifaceted symphony.

We chose Shostakovich as one of the 50 greatest composers, and named his Symphony No. 5 as one of the 20 greatest symphonies of all time

Shostakovich Symphony No.5: best recordings

The best recording… Yevgeny Mravinsky

Since he conducted the premiere in Leningrad, Shostakovich’s Fifth has been indelibly associated with the name of Yevgeny Mravinsky. He recorded it several times, mainly in mono versions available from companies such as Russian Disc. But it’s only his late 1983 live performance with the Leningrad Philharmonic that is in good stereo.