Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

Radio 3,22 Mar 2013,20 mins

Shostakovich: Symphony No. 8

Discovering Music

Available for over a year

In the wake of the huge success of the Leningrad Symphony, in 1943 Shostakovich returned to the subject of war in his Eighth Symphony. This time he wanted to reflect on the tragedy of a war in which he said, "twenty-seven million Soviet lives were lost." At the time though, its popularity with audiences wasn't matched by the Soviet authorities, who denounced it as counter-revolutionary. The Minister of Culture went so far as to declare it "repulsive and ultra individualist" and by 1948 it had almost disappeared from the repertory. Stephen Johnson examines the forces at play in the Eighth Symphony, a work seen by the composer as a "poem of suffering".

Programme Website
More episodes

Tracklist

  1. Track
    Artist
  2. 1.
    Symphony no. 8 in C minor Op.65
    Symphony no. 8 in C minor Op.65
    Dmitry Shostakovich
  3. 2.
    Manfred symphony Op.58
    Manfred symphony Op.58
    Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky