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Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast

Shostakovich Symphony No. 10 LIVE w/ The Aalborg Symphony

Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast

Joshua Weilerstein

Arts, Performing Arts, Music

4.92.5K Ratings

🗓️ 27 October 2025

⏱️ 60 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Longtime listeners of Sticky Notes know that Shostakovich's 10 symphony was the inaugural piece covered on the show. It's been 8 years(!) since that show, so I've totally re-written the episode and had the privilege of presenting this new version live with the Aalborg Symphony Orchestra last week in Aalborg.

Shostakovich, like so many composers before him, was obsessed with musical codes and messages, with songs that expressed two or more meanings, with ideas that were at once black and white and profoundly complex. This also describes Shostakovich himself, a man who was incredibly guarded with his public persona, and even his private persona as well. It is impossible to know anything for sure with Shostakovich, and to me therein lies the greatest strength of his music. The 10th symphony has been described as a portrayal of the Stalin years, as a portrayal of obsessive love, as a requiem, as sarcastic, as humorous, as agonizing, as triumphant, as, as, as….and the truth is that like all of the greatest works of Western Classical music, it is all of those things and so much more. It is a work of profound intensity, grabbing you from the start and not letting go for nearly 50 minutes, which makes sense considering that the piece was written in the shadow of another momentous event, the death of Joseph Stalin. There are very few experiences like hearing Shostakovich's 10th symphony live, and it is the kind of piece that, by the end of it, leaves you a slightly different person than you were when it started. Today on the show, we're going to be talking about a wide range of topics, from orchestral color to Joseph Stalin, from symphonic form to obsessive love, and much more. Join us!

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Thank you.

0:02.0

Thank you.

0:03.0

Thank you. What is there in my name for you?

0:21.6

What is there in my name for you?

0:38.3

It will die like the sad sound of waves, splashing on a distant shore, like a sound at night in the deep forest.

0:48.3

On the leaf of memory, it will leave a dead trace, like the outline of an inscription on a grave,

0:58.0

in an incomprehensible language.

1:02.0

What is there in it? Forgotten long ago, in new and restless disturbances.

1:10.0

It will not bring pure and tender memories to your soul.

1:15.6

But in the day of sorrow, in silence, pronounce it longingly.

1:21.6

Say there is a memory of me.

1:25.6

In the world there is a heart where I live.

1:30.3

In 1952, nine months before Dmitri Shostakovich wrote his 10th Symphony,

1:37.3

he set the words I just read to you, a poem by Alexander Pushkin, to music.

1:43.3

The music is a sad waltz, full of melancholy and longing,

1:49.0

just as in the text. Some of the music in the song is echoed in the third movement of

1:53.9

Shostakovich's 10th Symphony, an autobiographical movement that features not only a musical

1:59.8

depiction of Shostakovich's name, but also the name of a woman who Shostakovich was madly in love with.

2:06.6

At the end of the symphony, Shostakovich's name reappears in a kind of deranged moment of triumph,

2:13.6

directly pushing aside music that Shostakovich supposedly claimed was a savage depiction

2:20.3

of Joseph Stalin himself. Shostakovich, like so many composers before him, like Bach or Schumann,

2:27.3

for example, was obsessed with musical codes and messages, with songs that expressed two or more meanings, with ideas that were at once black and white and profoundly complex.

...

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