
Some time ago composer and music teacher Benjamin P. Jackson ranked the symphonies of Dmitri Shostakovich on his website. You can see this here, complete with explanations for every work's placement. Although I disagree a lot with Mr. Jackson's order and rationales, the exercise was very well done. So much so, in fact, that I've decided to follow suit with my own pecking order.
I consider Shostakovich to be one of the very greatest symphonists of the 20th century, but by no means are his 15 symphonies even in terms of what I would consider to be quality. His cycle is an object lesson in the truth that consistency isn't a pre-requisite for genius. (And yes, I do believe there is such a thing as genius, regardless of what the obnoxious deconstructionists say.) But the highs are very high, even if we all can't agree precisely about what those are and why. There are still many conversations about Shostakovich's music to be had, especially ones in which Soviet political intrigue doesn't dominate our focus. In that spirit, here is my ranking:
15. Symphony No. 3 in E-Flat, Op. 20 ("The First of May")
For me this one edges out the Second Symphony as the dud of the cycle. Now, I am not one of those stubborn listeners who simply needs every symphony to have adhered to the "proper" (i.e. German) classical manner. I despise this ahistorical attitude (which thinks it's so historical), and combatting it is one of my raisons d'être as a musicologist. (See my published work.) So no, it's not the "banalities," nor any so-called "genre incongruities," nor even the obsequious Soviet patriotism that bother me about Shostakovich's Third. It's quite simply that I don't find its materials at all special or memorable. No. 3 presents half an hour or more of boring noodling, followed by equally boring choral-orchestral declamation. Not Shosty's best effort, to say the least.
14. Symphony No. 2 in B Major, Op. 14 ("To October")
The Second Symphony has a couple of things going for it that the Third does not: it's a good deal shorter, and its materials are (or become) slightly more interesting after an almost atonal opening. (At that, the initial material is fairly quiet. If you're going to have noise, it's best to have quiet noise!) As in the Third, a chorus enters well into the piece. In this instance we get a puke-worthy poem by Alexander Bezymensky extolling Lenin and the October 1917 Revolution. So this text definitely sucks more than that used in No. 3. If I could understand sung Russian without a written translation, the lyrics might bother me enough to place No. 2 at the bottom. But, I'm throwing in with marginally more musical interest: No. 2 goes in the fourteenth slot.
13. Symphony No. 13 in B-Flat Minor, Op. 113 ("Babi Yar")
No. 13 comes in at No. 13. Is that unlucky? You might well think so, given the esteem in which this symphony is commonly held. But I merely feel unlucky every time I listen to it. Okay, that's being a bit dramatic. For real, though, I have never been very fond of Babi Yar. I admit that it has all kinds of fascination. I think the poems and what Shostakovich is commemorating here are extremely touching. Most of all I LOVE reading about this symphony's background, not least the cowardice and censorship he endured to get it heard. But all of that stuff captivates me more than the music itself, which I mostly find to be tedious. And it just goes on and on. My personal verdict is this: while the intentions are noble and the music is in many ways impressive, I'd almost always rather listen to other stuff by Shostakovich.
12. Symphony No. 14 in G Minor, Op. 135
Part of me wants to place this higher, because certain portions are very compelling. But mostly it's unremittingly dreary: a symphony about the finality of death by a Soviet atheist. Bleak stuff. Still, I have to give Shostakovich points for calling something a symphony that is essentially a cycle of eleven songs for soprano, bass, and string/percussion orchestra. It shows that the Mahlerian view of the genre (one of several which could be called "anti-classical") was no fluke in the early 20th century. This greatly compromises the symphonic purist position, which prizes classicism (especially of the German, sonata-form variety) to the exclusion of all else. And that's a GOOD thing. Consequently, if the Fourteenth is Grim with a capital G, and only sporadically memorable (for example, the hair-raising second movement!), so be it.
11. Symphony No. 4 in C Minor, Op. 43
I hear the groans, hisses, and gnashing of teeth. "DUDE, why is No. 4 ranked so low??! It's like his best one! GAHHH!!" Okay, let me explain something to you. I don't care about brilliance if I find it to be aloof. Yes, this is a brilliant symphony, demonstrating first-rate facility and imagination. But do you know what it almost entirely misses? Plain-spoken, emotional directness. Whereas Shostakovich's Fifth is teeming with that (and comes in at just the right length), his Fourth is an interminable parade of pyrotechnics that leaves me cold. It's made for Geeks by a Geek. The composer himself basically admitted this when he said that here he was writing for himself. Again, I don't object to the Fourth's episodic structure; I'm concerned with the draw of its materials. Even now, after all of my musical study, I want what I hear to move me most of all...regardless of it fitting whichever theory or structural model. But I'm afraid that while No. 4 excites my nerdiness, much less does it win my love.
10. Symphony No. 12 in D Minor, Op. 112 ("The Year 1917")
Here's another Shostakovich symphony that conventional wisdom loves to hate. From what I gather, many would rate No. 12 only slightly above Nos. 2 and 3 at the bottom of the heap. But I have always harbored more affection for it than to do likewise. This is principally due to the first movement, titled "Revolutionary Petrograd," which is thoroughly tuneful and exciting! If the symphony had stopped there, I might place it a notch or two higher on this list. But invention definitely flags with the remaining movements, and one is forced to think more about the work's fetid Lenin inspiration while listening to much less engaging material. Truthfully, this isn't the only instance when Shostakovich opens a symphony with a belter (as the British say) while the rest fails to keep up. Great as he was, his inconsistency emerges on more local levels than merely from composition to composition.
9. Symphony No. 11 in G Minor, Op. 103 ("The Year 1905")
Speaking of inconsistency, we come to the Eleventh. The premise here is quite good; the setting and terrible events of Russia's 1905 Revolution receive some fantastic treatment. Appreciably harrowing is the depicted episode of the Winter Palace troops shooting angry protesters on Bloody Sunday (January 9th). The corresponding second-movement buildup and aftermath present one of the most devastatingly effective junctures in any Shostakovich symphony. Most of the remaining music follows the composer's programmatic indications quite compellingly. But the thing just goes on for too long. And without the program, it is diffuse and much less absorbing. One wonders whether a short series of focused symphonic poems under the general title The Year 1905 would have worked better...kind of like what you see with Smetana's Má vlast or Sibelius's Four Lemminkäinen Legends. But I suppose by 1957 the symphonic poem genre was getting to be pretty long in the tooth. Despite its imperfections (real or perceived), the Eleventh Symphony remains a work of great power. If the listener engages with it on its own terms, the whole can make a tremendous impression.
8. Symphony No. 15 in A, Op. 141
In what is otherwise a caricaturist, over-the-top film, Tony Palmer's Testimony (which concerns the life and music of Shostakovich) contains an interesting line. If memory serves, it's spoken by a disembodied Stalin to the composer, and goes something like this: "When I died, a certain something left your music." That's not the exact quote, but it's close. There is a lot of truth to the sentiment. You still get masterpieces in Shostakovich's late music, as well as occasional glimpses of his youthful spirit. But there's a lot of unrelenting darkness, too. His last symphony seems to embody this pattern pretty aptly. As with No. 12, but even more acutely, he opens with an absolute gem of a movement. In fact, this may be my personal favorite among all the movements of the 15 symphonies. The William Tell Overture quotations, not to mention the humorous references to 12-tone music, are parts of a kooky and absolutely magical mixture. (He is supposed to have said that this music has something to do with a toy shop coming alive at night. Just brilliant.) But the rest of the symphony is...fine. Not bad, but comparatively uneventful. When I listen to these remaining movements, I'm always still on a high from the opener and disappointed that nothing so riveting ever follows.
7. Symphony No. 1 in F Minor, Op. 10
As far as First Symphonies go, this one is extremely impressive. The graduation project of a 19-year-old, it is in every way an assured first step in one of the century's major cycles. Given his later penchant for sprawling symphonic landscapes, it is ironic that Shostakovich's First is also one of his most concise. Youthful energy blends with humor and irony, the latter things persisting to the end of his career throughout widely divergent settings. I know plenty of people would rate No. 1 higher. I wouldn't necessarily disagree except that it doesn't quite have the emotional punch of some later symphonies, which come from deeper places of experience. So, I peg it as the lowest-ranked masterpiece on my list. What a way for a still-adolescent to prove to the world that he was the real deal!
6. Symphony No. 9 in E-Flat, Op. 70
I find Lighter-Vein Shostakovich to be hopelessly likable. I wish we had more of him. Was DS really thumbing his nose at Stalin and Company by writing an "anti-Ninth" to mark the end of the war? I don't know. But I know that the whole thing is gobs of fun to listen to. Every single time. I mean, who besides Zhdanov and Friends wouldn't want this delightful little romp instead of the bloated 'Hymn to Stalin and the Motherland' that was supposedly planned initially? Even in the slow movements (second and fourth), there's an easier feeling despite occasional eeriness. (After all, you can't take the menace ENTIRELY out of Shostakovich.) Also, the Ninth probably carries the distinction of being his most forthright nod to classicism. The sonata-form opening is sharply conceived and HILARIOUS. The scherzando-like third movement is always a blast, and the finale closes everything out with a rousing rondo. Performances usually last well under half an hour. Brevity might not always be the soul of wit, but the saying seems to apply here.
5. Symphony No. 7 in C, Op. 60 ("Leningrad")
The Leningrad embodies something that English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams famously wrote: "The composer must not shut himself up and think about art, he must live with his fellows and make his art an expression of the whole life of the community." In the 1940s, Shostakovich lived with his fellow Russians in Leningrad, faced fear and death with them when the Nazi army besieged their city, and there churned out a symphony conveying the somber heroism of those days. No wonder so many of his compatriots wept when they heard it performed. No wonder it came to stand as a symbol of Allied resistance to Axis aggression. To quibble over the "bombast" or loose form of the work, as some do, misses the point. Rhetorically this music hits all of the sensitive spots; if you're at all invested in its background/premise, the sheer emotional impact properly disarms such criticism. Yes, it sprawls a bit, but the payoffs are seemingly too flipping GOOD for that to matter. (Maybe the sprawling helps these payoffs to be so great, in a way.) One of my favorite parts is when the main theme returns to softly break the frightful tension in the aftermath of the first movement's 'Invasion Theme' stretch. That's as if to say: "It's not over yet. Keep fighting." This resonates on so many levels, even for those of us who weren't there.
4. Symphony No. 6 in B Minor, Op. 54
This might be another head-scratcher for some readers. But I feel that, if not for a so-so middle movement, No. 6 should be in the conversation for one of the top slots. It begins with phenomenal Largo that usually runs over 20 minutes. Jim Svejda calls this "music to shoot yourself by." I'm not certain I'd go that far, but it is definitely gloomy. Sure, this is an emotionally draining way to start a symphony. However, the music is so well conceived, and so deftly argued, that one can't help but admire the formidable craft. Perhaps the fluffy, rather inconsequential second movement is needed as a palette cleanser, then. Okay, fair enough. If this properly prepares the listener for my personal favorite among Shostakovich's finales, it's worth it. Gosh do I love the jaunty third movement! Here's Lighter-Vein Shostakovich again, and this time in the same work as such a serious opening. Some critics have not liked this at all. But Hugh Ottaway had it right when he suggested that "to marry such incongruous worlds as those of the first and third movements" was a "bold stroke of daring." (See Robert Simpson, ed., The Symphony, Volume 2: Elgar to the Present Day, Penguin Books, 1967, page 207.) I'm don't always agree with Mr. Ottaway...not even in the writing I just cited. But the point is well taken. Then again, I often listen to the finale by itself. So tuneful, and so much fun!
3. Symphony No. 8 in C Minor, Op. 65
I actually don't listen to No. 8 very often. I find it unnerving stuff that's best partaken of occasionally. The patriotism/heroism-hating critics sometimes express how much better they like this war-symphony than the Leningrad. You see, it 'more realistically expresses the hell of war.' Notwithstanding the fact that patriotism and heroism are as legitimate as war's horrors, the Eighth does look at things from a slightly different angle. If you're in a calm frame of mind, it can be an extremely powerful experience. In terms of craft, I'd say this 65-minute behemoth is very nearly a masterpiece, or maybe a "minor" masterpiece. The first four movements are absolutely convincing in terms of narrative experience. My main trouble is with a slightly meandering finale where the inspiration lapses just a bit. With the Eighth Shostakovich came very close to a complete vindication of his post-Mahlerian symphonic ideal. But a full realization would have to wait another couple of symphonies.
2. Symphony No. 5 in D Minor, Op. 47
There's a reason why the Fifth is probably Shostakovich's most-performed symphony. Quite simply, it speaks equally to popular and intellectual sensibilities. It balances the composer's essentially dramatic symphonic idiom with a tight form that even classicists can appreciate. It revels in memorable melody, yet also offers plenty in terms of harmony, sonority, and orchestral timbre. In short, it's the place in the whole cycle where everyone can most "meet in the middle." Rather than dilute the work, this elevates it. If that weren't enough, the background story is juicy: "A Soviet Artist's Creative Reply to Just and Deserved Criticism." Wow! What's really going on there? We've been debating this for many decades and still haven't come to a satisfying conclusion. That's part of the symphony's magic: was Shostakovich sincerely trying to make amends with his government, or was he pretending to do so while surreptitiously thumbing his nose? The truth is probably complicated. But the music of the Fifth often seems mysterious, even equivocal. As such it continues to tantalize expert and layman alike. Long may it do so.
1. Symphony No. 10 in E Minor, Op. 93
This is it: the summit of Shostakovich's symphonic cycle. The Tenth is the resounding fulfillment of everything that worked only so well in most of its brethren. Each movement operates soundly according to its own terms, and the whole is gripping from start to finish. When you compose symphonies with a song or opera orientation, as Shostakovich did, you can easily slip into certain kinds of detracting pitfalls: recitative-like noodling, trouble knitting themes together, or not quite knowing how or when to draw things to a close. So many symphonies by Shostakovich are powerful DESPITE all of the stuff dangling from them. Well, there is no dangling here. For once every note of an extensive span is needed, even during a big opening movement. This time the latter is a Moderato instead of something slower. Builds toward climaxes are impeccably shaped; nothing feels tacked on. Every bar rewards emotional investment. The conclusion of this movement leaves you breathless, but not exhausted. The Allegro that follows is absolutely terrifying. I have no idea if it is a musical depiction of Stalin or not, nor if the whole symphony is a celebration of the despot's death, as has been claimed. But it doesn't matter. Halfway through, listener attention is given no reason to wander. (You can't say that for very many other Shostakovich symphonies.) Then comes the bewitching Allegretto with its DSCH motive and freaky Mahlerian horn call. This music haunted my thoughts for long after I first heard it. Last but not least we have a winner of a finale that absolutely maintains the heretofore high inspiration – right down to those closing DSCH statements in the timpani. In sum, the Tenth represents the best of everything Shostakovich attempted, and most cogently speaks of the world in which he and his cohorts lived, suffered, and persevered.
Conclusion
As I finish this ranking, I realize that Shostakovich really only "rang the bell" symphonically perhaps a handful of times. Few to none of the fifteen are what I would call "bad," but he was like most symphonists (even many "great" ones): greatness by no means saturates every corner of his cycle. On the other hand, perfection shouldn't be the standard, as even Beethoven's 9 symphonies are not consistently "great." The question should be whether or not this music can speak earnestly to us in the world we live today. For Shostakovich I believe that the answer is a full-throated "yes," and I would it apply to nearly every individual work across the 15 regardless of imperfections. I firmly believe that the test of a symphony should not be its adherence to arbitrary rules of form, but rather its ability to move us on a direct level, and testify engrossingly to what was in the composer's heart, mind, and surroundings. If this is the measure, Shostakovich's cycle is one of the best, and the entirety is definitely more than the sum of its parts.