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Jurowski in conversation: Shostakovichs
Symphony 7 >
Jurowski
in conversation: England and London >
Vladimir
Jurowski - biography >
The Seventh Symphony is an explicit
reaction to a specific event, the siege of Leningrad. How
does it stand up when programmed, maybe years in advance,
as part of an orchestral season? Do you feel at all uneasy
about the fact that we can't know what the contemporary political
situation will be at the time of performance?
Not at all, rather the opposite. The strength of the symphony
means that it's not exclusively related to the suffering of
the people of Leningrad. It's a symphony, not a daily paper.
It hasn't lost any of the strength of its political and humanist
message. In a time when there is a lot of suffering surrounding
us, this is music which can give people spiritual and emotional
strength to overcome suffering, to retain the pride and the
dignity of humans. The third and fourth movements have such
absolute values: faith, belief, and the strength of the human
spirit which can overcome anything. It's a remarkable thing
that Shostakovich wrote this finale when the Soviet Union
was far from even a hypothetical victory. So what he created
was an idea of a victory, a huge utopia, which helped people
in their suffering.
It can seem quite a strange idea
to British audiences, this concept of turning to art, to symphonic
music, as a means of realizing a utopia in the face of adversity.
Is it exclusively a Russian concept?
I think, first of all, it's to do with the unique ability
Shostakovich had to globalise human suffering and give it
a voice. On the other hand it has to do with the unique historical
situation in Russia at the time of the Seventh Symphony. But
I think that having said that, it still can be seen as a piece
of art which is global, not strictly national, and definitely
not local. I have experienced performances of this piece in
the West at which people were literally torn out of their
seats by the end. It's something to do with Shostakovich's
incredible capability to develop one idea, and lead it to
an absolute climax, which is what he does in the finale of
the symphony.
Vladimir Jurowski was talking
to Andrew Mellor
Shostakovich's Symphony 7 is performed
on Wednesday 5 March 2008
An
audio sample of Shostakovich's Symphony 7 can be accessed
from the performance calendar page >
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