If one puts together all the operas, film scores, ballets and 
                sets of incidental music that Shostakovich wrote, one would find 
                that his “dramatic” music comprises more than a third of his entire 
                output. Given the conditions under which he worked, such pieces 
                would show a greater variety in quality than in the output of 
                someone living in a non-totalitarian state. This is exactly what 
                we find on this record: music written to serve political purposes 
                that sometimes can’t help being good.  
              
On 
                    this disk we have two sets of incidental music and one film 
                    score, as well as a historical curiosity. Around 1931 the 
                    composer was working for a theatrical group known as TRAM 
                    which was engaged in a production called Rule, Britannia! 
                    The plot is very similar to that of the ballet The Age 
                    of Gold. Here, a Western engineer - engineers were big 
                    in Russia at that time - joins the Communist cause against a background of the 
                    struggle between communism and fascism. The score to the original 
                    production is lost and we only have the music for four numbers, 
                    with the “Protest” movement reconstructed by Mark Fitz-Gerald. 
                    While I would not insult the music by calling it “agitprop” 
                    one definitely gets the idea that the composer was not enjoying 
                    himself while writing it. Only the aforementioned “Protest” 
                    movement, which reminds one of some of Shostakovich’s earlier 
                    film music, evinces genuine feeling. 
                  
In 
                    spite of a title that sounds like a 1930s Hollywood musical, Salute to Spain is altogether more substantial than 
                    Rule, Britannia! It was one of his first efforts to 
                    reingratiate himself with the Party after the Lady Macbeth 
                    of Mtsensk debacle of 1936. It incorporates genuine historical 
                    characters of the Spanish Civil War and follows the adventures 
                    of three Spanish sisters who perish fighting the Fascists 
                    - see the end-result of The Girlfriends. While much 
                    of the material consists of fanfares, marches and revolutionary 
                    songs (well-set), the music for the Song of Rosita 
                    is genuinely moving as is its reminiscence just before the 
                    final music, which is an equally affecting Funeral March for 
                    her sister Lucia. These sections are music of genuine quality. 
                  
The 
                    Girlfriends is an epic tale about 
                    three friends, Asya, Zoya and Natasha, who grow up under Tsarism 
                    and their later adventures as nurses in the Russian Civil 
                    War. In the first part they really are girls and Shostakovich 
                    has some effective music as familial situations yield to a 
                    great strike at the rubber plant at which the girls’ parents 
                    are employed. After the near death of Asya’s mother the girls 
                    try to earn money by singing at an inn. This produces the 
                    most interesting section, musically, of Part 1 - the character 
                    Sylich’s description of the death of his son aboard the battleship 
                    Potemkin. After this affecting tale, a riot breaks out and 
                    the girls just escape the arrival of the militia. Part 2 takes 
                    place in 1919 and is heralded by an amazing fanfare for brass 
                    and organ. The girls have become nurses for the Red Army and 
                    are almost captured when the town of Pushkin falls to the Whites. They are rescued by Sylich on a train and during 
                    their flight we have the most surprising musical episode of 
                    the film: a series of bizarre variants of the Internationale 
                    played on the theremin. There are further escapes for the 
                    three, but at the end Asya is killed and the film ends with 
                    a very moving elegy. Of the twenty-three tracks almost every 
                    one is scored for a different small group of instruments from 
                    the one preceding it, although several incorporate string 
                    quartet and piano - a reminder that the composer was working 
                    on his first piano concerto at this time. But the score is 
                    not at all fragmentary and the drama is maintained. 
                  
When 
                    I received this disc the item that most interested me was 
                    the unfinished Symphonic Movement. As is well-known the authorities 
                    in Russia expected that Shostakovich would complete his war-time trilogy, started 
                    with the Seventh and Eighth symphonies, with a work that would 
                    both be a fit paean to the end of WWII and a worthy Symphony 
                    No. 9 in itself.  Several of his students had indicated that 
                    the composer started such a piece, but Shostakovich instead 
                    produced the Symphony No. 9 that we know, which while estimable, 
                    is neither a patriotic epic nor a companion to the Beethoven 
                    9th. The Shostakovich scholar Olga Digonskaya, 
                    after years of searching, was able to locate the opening of 
                    the original Symphony No. 9. This work has some of the same 
                    dissonance found in Symphony No. 8. There is an unrelenting 
                    main theme and an interesting second subject. However, I found 
                    that the work proceeded on motor energy more than actual conviction. 
                    Perhaps the composer felt something similar: no matter how 
                    happy he might feel at the end of the conflict, it was not 
                    really his style to say so musically. Or perhaps he just wished 
                    to avoid “presumptuous”, as he put it, comparisons with the 
                    great Ninth of Beethoven. In any event, something of a disappointment. 
                  
The 
                    somewhat cavernous sound of the Grzegorz Fitelberg hall actually 
                    adds to the overall feel of the film score, lending a certain 
                    authenticity. Celia Sheen is good as always in her strange 
                    variation on the Internationale - a far cry from Midsomer 
                    Murders. Equally good is Kamil Baczewski in his excerpts 
                    from Salute to Spain - he sings this music very movingly. 
                    The orchestra does well in following their conductor through 
                    a wide variety of emotional territory, both as a complete 
                    entity and in the various subgroups used in The Girlfriends. 
                    I felt that after putting together this large score, Fitz-Gerald 
                    could have put more energy into conducting it. His reading 
                    is good, but could reveal more of the excitement that is in 
                    the music. His conducting of the other works is exceptional. 
                    In producing this disk, Fitz-gerald has shown us new sides 
                    of Shostakovich’s endeavor in three fields: symphonic, cinematic 
                    and theatrical and for this and his disc of the score to Odna, 
                    we owe him a debt of thanks.
                  
William 
                    Kreindler