In 1936, Josef Stalin, the dictator of the 
                  Soviet Union, went to see a performance of Lady Macbeth of 
                  Mtsensk, an opera by the golden boy of Soviet Music, Dmitri
                  Shostakovich. The young composer rushed to the theatre, hoping
                  to bask in the glory of Stalin’s approval, only to discover
                  to his horror that the communist leader had left in disgust
                  after
                  the first act. The next day, the now infamous Pravda editorial 
                  entitled Muddle instead of Music, which denounced Shostakovich 
                  as a composer of confusing, jarring noise appeared. The composer 
                  went immediately from socialist darling to a man in danger of 
                  his very life. Some believe that the only reason he was spared 
                  the gulags was because Stalin was in love with a patriotic song 
                  that Shostakovich had composed for a propaganda film some years 
                  earlier. 
 
                  
                  In a captivating hour of discussion, Michael Tilson Thomas
                  plays heir to the legendary Leonard Bernstein as he teaches
                  a fascinating lesson in musical analysis, political intrigue
                  and biography. He dissects Shostakovich’s complicated score, exposing the composer’s
                  protest, cleverly disguised as an apology. Did he compose a
                  great patriotic score, or did he use every ounce of his genius
                  to speak for a people oppressed and living in constant terror? 
 
                  
                  Tilson Thomas makes a strong case for the latter by pointing
                  out the many subtle twists and turns of motif and harmony,
                  revealing places where had Shostakovich chosen something as
                  minute as a single different note, the outcome would have been
                  completely different. In a well paced hour of discussion and
                  musical examples, Thomas not only presents an intelligent analysis
                  of the score, but gives us a good look into the complex and
                  tragic life of one of the twentieth century’s most significant
                  musical figures. 
 
                  
                  Following the documentary, MTT leads the San Franciscans in
                  a taut, well-paced reading of the symphony from a 2007 appearance
                  at the BBC Proms Concerts. There is no shortage of drama in
                  the boldly dissonant opening movement, yet Thomas never resorts
                  to the sort of extroverted emotionalism that was characteristic
                  of Bernstein’s later readings. The brief scherzo is delivered
                  with appropriate sarcasm, and then Thomas lowers the boom in
                  this exquisite reading of the hauntingly personal third movement.
                  He places just enough hurt into the music to make the bitterly
                  ironic final movement come across as the nose-thumbing that
                  it really is. 
 
                  
                  Production values are outstanding throughout, but I was disappointed that there was no documentation whatever in the booklet. Granted, Thomas tells you everything you need to know in the hour long documentary, but it would have been nice to have had some sort of outline to follow. This series would be a great aid to teachers teaching entry-level music appreciation classes. 
                  
 
                  
                  Kevin Sutton