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Published: Wednesday, 25 September 2024 at 10:10 AM


A towering figure in the story of 20th-century classical music, Dmitri Shostakovich was, along with his near-contemporary Sergei Prokofiev, one of the most significant Russian composers of the Soviet era. Shostakovich’s musical legacy is huge and endlessly varied – however, it’s possible to spot some key threads running through his work. There is often, for example, a subtle mix of sardonic wit and sincere emotion, along with a particular blend of traditional and modern musical techniques and schools of thought.

Who was Shostakovich?

Dmitri Shostakovich was a Soviet-era Russian composer and pianist. He was one of the most important musical figures of the 20th century. His 15 symphonies and, even more so, his 15 string quartets cross a vast emotional terrain and harness a fascinating variety of musical styles.

Like Mahler, whom Shostakovich much admired, Shostakovich used different musical techniques. He often displayed sharp contrasts and mixed disparate moods such as bleakness and grotesquerie.

Famously, and somewhat awe-insiringly, Shostakovich managed to produce an outstanding body of work while being closely and often suspiciously monitored by the Soviet authorities. However, life as a composer in 20th-century Russia was never likely to be easy, and Shostakovich endured a tense, often dangerous relationship with the Soviet regime. One example is his charming, Haydn-esque Ninth Symphony, which the authorities found to be a wholly frivolous, underwhelming reaction the the end of the Second World War and Russia’s part in defeating Nazism.