Suite on Verses of Michelangelo Buonarroti

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Dmitri Shostakovich in 1974, around the period he composed the Suite on Verses by Michelangelo Buonarotti (photograph by Yuri Shcherbinin)

The Suite on Verses of Michelangelo Buonarroti (Сюита на слова Микеланджело Буонарроти, Op.145, 1974) is a cycle of song settings by

bass voice and piano; the composer also produced an orchestrated version
(145a).

Shostakovich started work on the songs after coming across Efros' recently published volume of the poems.[2] Shostakovich was dissatisfied with Efros' translations and privately asked the poet Andrei Voznesensky to see about making some new translations. Nevertheless it was premiered, using Efros' texts, on 23 December 1974 in Leningrad by the bass Yevgeny Nesterenko and pianist Yevgeny Shenderovich.[3]

During rehearsals for the orchestral version, Opus 145a, in October 1975, Maxim Shostakovich disclosed to Yevgeni Nesterenko that his father considered this composition took the place of the Sixteenth Symphony in his oeuvre.[4]

Selected recordings

The piano version is less recorded. The original performers Yevgeny Nesterenko and Yevgeny Shenderovich made the first recording for Melodiya. Later recordings include Fyodor Kuznetsov, Yuri Serov (Delos), and John Shirley-Quirk.

The orchestral version, Op. 145a, has been recorded several times, including the first by Yevgeny Nesterenko, with the

Berlin Classics), Ildar Abdrazakov, with the BBC Philharmonic, under Gianandrea Noseda
(Chandos).

See also

References

  1. ^ Dmitri Shostakovich Catalogue: The First Hundred Years and Beyond - Page 552 Derek C. Hulme - 2010 Settings of 11 poems by Michelangelo Buonarroti, the original Italian translated into the Russian language by Abram Efros (see Note).
  2. ^ Pages from the life of Dmitri Shostakovich - Page 224 Dmitriĭ Ivanovich Sollertinskii, Ludmilla Sollertinsky, Liudmila Vikentʹevna Mikheeva - 1980 "Returning from Repino to his dacha near Moscow, Shostakovich embarked on his next opus. He had come across a recently published volume of the poems of Michelangelo Buonarroti in translations by Efros, the noted Soviet literary scholar."
  3. ^ Laurel E. Fay Shostakovich: A Life Page 282- 2005 "On 8 January 1975, Nesterenko and Shenderovich gave a repeat performance at the composer's Moscow apartment for a gathering of colleagues. Later in the evening, Voznesensky arrived with his translations, which he read to the approval of the assembly. Shostakovich found himself confronted with an embarrassing predicament; he had written the music to Efros's translation and, ..."
  4. ^ Derek C. Hulme, Dmitry Shostakovich Catalogue: The First Hundred Years and Beyond, Page 555