Dmitri Shostakovich: Symphony No. 13 "Babi Yar" Kurt Masur

BUY THIS ITEM

  • $16.99 List price
    $13.49 Online price
    (Save 20%)
    $12.14 Member price
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=745099084820&productCode=MU&maxCount=100&threshold=3

GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

Usually ships within 24 hours

Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

Enter a zip code

CD

  • Release Date: 05/03/1994
  • Sales Rank: 35,123
  • Label: TELDEC
  • UPC: 745099084820

Customers who bought this also bought

 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
To listen to samples you'll need a Windows Media Player

Dmitri Shostakovich: Symphony No. 13 "Babi Yar"

1LISTENBabi Yar (Recitation)
2LISTENSymphony No. 13 in B flat
3LISTENSymphony No. 13 in B flat
4LISTENSymphony No. 13 in B flat
5LISTENSymphony No. 13 in B flat
6LISTENSymphony No. 13 in B flat
7LISTENThe Loss

About this Artist

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

Shostakovich: Symphony No13, Op113; Yevtushenko: Babi Yar [Recitation]by Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

February 09, 2007: The least of Shostakovich's moods is the satirical, but it serves as effective contrast to his nobler heroic-tragic and elegiac moods. In his Symphony No. 13 on the World War II massacre at Babi Yar, he gives vent to his satirical muse in the isolated second movement. He calls the movement "Humor" but there is nothing funny about it. Serious iconoclasts of the type bred in Soviet Russia regard "humor" as a means of expressing protests against bad leadership. In the words of the concluding poem by the work's unaccompanied reader, "Everyone is a leader but no one leads." Despite Shostakovich's frequent displays of musical wit, the great feature of his music is its dead earnestness. It reminds me of Robert Frost's complaint that New York critics were judging him by the false standard of Russian fiction without regard for how "unterribly" life goes in America compared to Russia. What could be more perfectly terrible than the lugubrious movement "Fears" based on life spent under tyranny? The symphony's last movement "Careers" draws out the standard liberals' stale plum Galileo-- a discoverer of truth employed since his time to discredit greater truth. In 1962 when the symphony premiered, Russians needed heroes to hang their idealism on. Galileo served as well as any. Oops, the Galileo movement returns to the satirical vein and I was listening for a heroic finale. The symphony's program dictates a persistent theme of knuckle-wrapping chastisement. There is something "terrible" even in that.