
Great Masters: Shostakovich - His Life and Music
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Narrado por:
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Robert Greenberg
Dmitri Shostakovich is without a doubt one of the central composers of the 20th century. His symphonies and string quartets are mainstays of the repertoire. But Shostakovich is also a figure whose story raises challenging and exciting issues that go far beyond music: they touch on questions of conscience, the moral role of the artist, the plight of humanity in the face of total war and mass oppression, and the inner life of history's bloodiest century. And though he was not without flaws, he was a faithful witness to the survival of the human spirit under totalitarianism.
And now you can discover the extraordinary life, times, and music of Shostakovich in a probing series of eight lectures from an acclaimed conductor, teacher, and music historian. Drawing on both the flood of declassified documents from the Soviet Union that began in 1991 and Shostakovich's own extraordinarily frank posthumous reminiscences, Professor Greenberg shows how Shostakovich, who, in the words of a friend, "did not want to rot in a prison or a graveyard" was still unwilling to become a docile instrument of the Soviet regime.
You'll learn how what he would not say publicly in words, he instead said through his music - messages from a buried life of his experiences during the terror of Stalin, the Nazi destruction of his country, postwar reconstruction, and the arms race.
In work after work, often composed under crushing difficulty and anxiety, you'll hear how he used a brilliant arsenal of ironic conceits, musical quotes from un-Soviet sources such as American jazz or Jewish klezmer tunes, and other techniques to assert the integrity of his art in the face of totalitarian oppression, and to pay, as he said, "homage to the dead."
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.
©2002 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2002 The Great CoursesListeners also enjoyed...




















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What made the experience of listening to Great Masters: Shostakovich - His Life and Music the most enjoyable?
The history that is learned along side of Shostakovich's music.What was one of the most memorable moments of Great Masters: Shostakovich - His Life and Music?
His survival in the Soviet Union.Any additional comments?
This is about the 12th Greenberg lecture I've listened to, and I have enjoyed them all. He is an excellent educator. Starting another today, Bach and the High Baroque.awesome!
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Greenberg knows his stuff
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Prof Greenberg gets a 40 out of 10
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Learning is Cool!
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I believe his best
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Shostakovich’s Ringside Seat to History
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Testament of our Times
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I don't mean to sound negative. I usually rate Greenberg's courses 5 stars, but the difference in his treatment of Shostakovich compared to other artists in the Soviet Union is noticeable. Still, this is a very good and enjoyable course.
Good biography, but too much a rationalizer of Shostakovich's failings.
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Also, I’m a huge fan of Robert Greenberg and am just moving through everything he’s done. Off topic for this review but his series on Wagner is fantastic.
Fantastic lecturer
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What made the experience of listening to Great Masters: Shostakovich - His Life and Music the most enjoyable?
Shostakovich was a musical genius working during very difficult times. Because his life was always at risk during the Stalin and post-Stalin eras, he had to walk a very fine line to survive. What makes his music particularly fascinating is the way he wove irony and dissonance into the melodic lines. Stalin and his henchmen perceived the music as heroic, a tribute to the triumph of their reign, but anyone with ears and a clear head would perceive in the same sounds a scathing indictment of the Soviet leaders' crimes against humanity. Robert Greenberg is as entertaining as he is brilliant. I particularly enjoyed his send-up of the American academic elite, who discounted Shostakovich's condemnation of the Soviet Union because it didn't conform to their preferred narrative about the virtues of Communism.Greenberg points out that in the years from the revolution to the dissolution of the Soviet Union, 61 million civilians were slaughtered--nearly three times Hitler's bodycount--a number that is recently being discredited for being too low (!) Shostakovich would be the first to say he wasn't a hero--but he was a survivor and a witness. His music is the ultimate refutation of totalitarianism and testament to the importance of artistic and personal freedom. Don't miss it!What other book might you compare Great Masters: Shostakovich - His Life and Music to and why?
Greenberg's course on Beethoven is completely amazing. I'll be listening to more of his courses soon.What does Professor Robert Greenberg bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
Insight, expertise, personality, and a wonderfully entertaining delivery. Greenberg doesn't read: he performs!Utterly fascinating!
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