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Home / World

Music tells Leningrad's awful story

By Sarah Shannon
6 May, 2005 07:38 AM4 mins to read

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Maxim Shostakovich

Maxim Shostakovich

In the late summer of 1942, a group of starving Leningrad musicians gave a performance that became a legend.

Nazi forces encircled the city, slowly starving its citizens to death in a siege that would cost almost a million Soviet lives. Some musicians were so weakened by hunger that they could barely lift their instruments. But they roused themselves to perform a new symphony by their compatriot Dmitri Shostakovich.

The score for Shostakovich's Seventh Symphony, Leningrad, had been smuggled into the city past the Nazis. It was a rallying cry to Shostakovich's countrymen, telling the story of the siege and dwelling on patriotic themes before vividly imagining the German Army being routed from Russia.

The Leningrad orchestra performed it on August 9, the day Hitler had predicted their city would fall to his troops. Loudspeakers outside the hall relayed the music to those without tickets, and it blared from more speakers at the edge of the city - a musical two fingers to the Nazis entrenched there.

On Monday the symphony will be performed to mark the VE Day anniversary at the Royal Albert Hall. It will be performed by the St Petersburg Academic Symphonic Orchestra. The conductor will be Shostakovich's son Maxim. The event will also be the international premiere of the symphony's new incarnation, Cinemaphonia.

Using rare and sometimes shocking newsreel from German and Soviet archives, the director Georgy Paradzhanov has created a powerful film that will be shown on a giant screen behind the orchestra. Its narrative of the siege, of bloodshed and starvation in a frozen city, and the eventual triumph of the Soviet forces, is intended to help the audience to understand the horrors that drove Shostakovich's composition.

It doesn't shy from Stalinism's darker side, either, with stark images of the Ukrainian famine. There's footage of exquisite icons being taken down from church walls before men throw them on to fires and bomb the churches into oblivion.

Maxim Shostakovich gave the Russian premiere of Cinemaphonia earlier this year in St Petersburg (formerly Leningrad), where he now lives. At the end of a dramatic performance, watched by veterans of the siege, Maxim lifted the score and kissed it before holding it out to the audience.

He expects to feel similar emotions at its London performance. "For me, this music is something in my blood," he says. "This comes directly from my father, so I feel it very close to my soul. Through his music I can recognise all his anger and all his tenderness. It's like hearing his different phrases as he spoke; through his music I can hear his voice."

Maxim was a boy when war broke out. His father tried to enlist in the Army but, as an already revered composer, he was evacuated from the threatened city, eventually settling in Kuibyshev (now Samara), on the Volga. He wrote his Seventh Symphony remarkably quickly. "I have never composed as fast before," he said.

Maxim, 66, can just recall the symphony's premiere in Kuibyshev. "I remember the standing ovation, my father and mother and sister being there. And this theme in the symphony with a small drum that gave me a feeling, even as a small boy, that something evil was approaching."

A handful of the musicians who played in Leningrad during the siege took part in the first Cinemaphonia.

"The original performance was a great event," says Maxim. "People were living under constant bombardment, but they still came to hear the music."

He believes the symphony has stood the test of time. "It's not just about World War II but about the endless battle between good and evil. It is certainly one of the greatest symphonies."

- INDEPENDENT

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