Programme
- Adagio for strings
- Kindertotenlieder
- Symphony No. 5 in D minor
Performers
- Claudia Hucklecontralto
- Michael Sanderlingconductor
Concert Information
Sold Out - 'Returns' Only
Art and politics have always co-existed 鈥 but it鈥檚 not as if Art has always been given much of a choice in the matter. Threatened in a terrifyingly public way by Stalin鈥檚 authorities, Shostakovich responded with a work that he called 鈥渁 Soviet artist鈥檚 response to justified criticism鈥 and his Fifth Symphony has divided critics ever since. But not audiences: the crowd at the first performance, in Leningrad in 1937, responded first with tears, and then with cheers. Michael Sanderling has a personal connection to this music: his father was one of Shostakovich鈥檚 greatest friends, so he鈥檚 ideally placed to peel back the layers of irony, drama and pitch-black humour that conceal the passionately human heart of this great 20th century symphony. First, though, the 鈥渟addest music in the world鈥: Barber鈥檚 鈥楢dagio鈥 and Mahler鈥檚 鈥楰indertotenlieder鈥. The music of Gustav Mahler fascinated Shostakovich, and music doesn鈥檛 come any more sincere than this heart-rending cycle. Award-winning contralto Claudia Huckle performs it here: songs of anguish, it鈥檚 true, but also songs of a profound and undying love.
Prelude: 6.45pm in the Recital Room (free to ticket-holders, subject to seating availability): Professor Marina Frolova-Walker of Clare College, Cambridge, introduces Shostakovich鈥檚 Fifth Symphony.
The concert will be recorded for future broadcast on 麻豆社 Radio 3.