How Shostakovich Wrote His String Quartet No. 8, Part 2: Movement 2 (Composition Analysis)

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июл 2024
  • The second part of my analysis of Shostakovich's String Quartet No. 8!
    Overview: 00:00
    Rehearsal 11 - 14: 06:30
    Rehearsal 14 - 18: 19:06
    Rehearsal 18 - 21: 30:40
    Rehearsal 21 - 22: 35:46
    Rehearsal 22 - 27: 43:55
    Rehearsal 27 - 29: 49:02
    Rehearsal 29 - 33: 51:00
    Rehearsal 33 - 35: 55:03
    Outro: 56:57
    Playlist for How Shostakovich Wrote His String Quartet No. 8: • How Shostakovich Wrote...
    Piano Trio No. 2 Article (CW: genocide, WWII, the Holocaust): www.classical-music.com/featu...
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Комментарии • 23

  • @im2801ok
    @im2801ok 9 месяцев назад +10

    I think it would be helpful to indicate that the melody played at the start of rehearsal # 21 is of overtly Jewish character (actually, when my mother heard it when I played a recording of this quartet back home many years ago, she immediately identified it as a disfigured version of a traditional Jewish song - "Am Yisroel Khay" (which is Hebrew for: "The People of Israel liveth"). As is widely accepted, the 4th movement of Shostakovich's piano trio op. 67, from which this melody is quoted, is a direct response to the liberation of the Majdanek concentration & extermination camp just outside Lublin in eastern Poland by the Red Army in 1944. It seems to depict the Jewish victims in that camp dancing beside their massed graves just before being shot into them. In that context, the juxtaposition of the message of the song with the actual fate of its subject is particularly horrendous. I understand it as an extreme expression of ire, pain, and ultimately - outraging protest against the atrocities that one man is able to commit against his fellow man, showing to what extent our civilization is capable of de-humanizing itself. Shostakovich was an un-flinching Judeophile, and the historical predicament of the Jewish People was central to his musical creation, so it is no wonder that he incorporated that melody into a work which was conceived by him, for a short while, as his musical letter of suicide.

    • @TachyBunker
      @TachyBunker Месяц назад +1

      Agree. Beyond, he did a super good and somewhat haunting collection based on Jewish poems.

    • @JordanMHollowayComposer
      @JordanMHollowayComposer  Месяц назад

      Thank you for sharing this! I will check out the song and the piano trio, I didn’t know of the connection.

  • @nigelhaywood9753
    @nigelhaywood9753 2 года назад +5

    You’d probably say ‘sforzando moltissimo’ but I think by now it’s just become a musical indication that goes beyond it’s linguistic origins.

  • @ArletteTownsend
    @ArletteTownsend 10 дней назад

    Super helpful videos! Thanks for making these. It's greatly assisted in the process of learning to play this epic work. I now understand the piece on a far deeper level and it will give my quartet guidance on how to approach rehearsals!

  • @enriquesanchez2001
    @enriquesanchez2001 2 года назад +5

    FASCINATING stuff - THANK you, Jordan ♥♥♥♥

  • @WillzUQ
    @WillzUQ 2 года назад +4

    I'm glad to see how your channel is growing

  • @Dre-eq4bv
    @Dre-eq4bv 2 года назад

    Great lecture, Jordan!!

  • @lindichen50
    @lindichen50 2 года назад

    Very appreciate for your work!

  • @belmarconductor
    @belmarconductor Год назад +2

    Absolutely incredible video, please keep doing more 🙏🏻❤️

  • @andreidogaru4296
    @andreidogaru4296 Год назад

    Great stuff, much appreciated!

  • @josephinedavies7141
    @josephinedavies7141 2 года назад +1

    Brilliant. Thank you. What a piece!

  • @michaelturley3909
    @michaelturley3909 2 года назад +1

    The detail you put in this is incredible! It really enhances listening to the quartet. Thank you for doing these.

    • @JordanMHollowayComposer
      @JordanMHollowayComposer  2 года назад

      Thank you so much for watching, Michael!! I’m really glad you’ve been enjoying them!

  • @KDG702
    @KDG702 9 месяцев назад

    Fantastic analysis thank you so much for this great video!

  • @juankliss
    @juankliss Год назад

    Greaat job thank youu

  • @chrisoconnor9521
    @chrisoconnor9521 8 месяцев назад

    The viola and cello are arpeggiating C minor chords, not rolling...

    • @JordanMHollowayComposer
      @JordanMHollowayComposer  8 месяцев назад +1

      E flat to C is absolutely a major 6th. And they are both arpeggiating and rolling, the bow is literally rolling across the four strings.

  • @Harry-xz1uv
    @Harry-xz1uv 2 месяца назад +1

    as a cellist who is currently playing this quartet, I want to confirm that 23 is by far the worst part of the movement, and in my opinion, the hardest bit to play of the entire quartet as it is long, and requires shifting no matter how you do it. You can't even really string cross on the cello as that still includes this long held extension which within about 6 bars becomes unbelievably painful to play! Combined with the speed, it is just awful hah! (but it sounds so good so I can't even be mad at him)

  • @mysticmouse7261
    @mysticmouse7261 Месяц назад +1

    What a genius raising ugliness to an art form.