1st Edition

Composing the Modern Subject: Four String Quartets by Dmitri Shostakovich

By Sarah Reichardt Copyright 2008
    144 Pages
    by Routledge

    144 Pages
    by Routledge

    Since the publication of Solomon Volkov's disputed memoirs of Dmitri Shostakovich, the composer and his music has been subject to heated debate concerning how the musical meaning of his works can be understood in relationship to the composer's life within the Soviet State. While much ink has been spilled, very little work has attempted to define how Shostakovich's music has remained so arresting not only to those within the Soviet culture, but also to Western audiences - even though such audiences are often largely ignorant of the compositional context or even the biography of the composer. This book offers a useful corrective: setting aside biographically grounded and traditional analytical modes of explication, Reichardt uncovers and explores the musical ambiguities of four of the composer’s middle string quartets, especially those ambiguities located in moments of rupture within the musical structure. The music is constantly collapsing, reversing, inverting and denying its own structural imperatives. Reichardt argues that such confrontation of the musical language with itself, though perhaps interpretable as Shostakovich's own unique version of double-speak, also poignantly articulates the fractured state of a more general form of modern subjectivity. Reichardt employs the framework of Lacanian psychoanalysis to offer a cogent explanation of this connection between disruptive musical process and modern subjectivity. The ruptures of Shostakovich's music become symptoms of the pathologies at the core of modern subjectivity. These symptoms, in turn, relate to the Lacanian concept of the real, which is the empty kernel around which the modern subject constructs reality. This framework proves invaluable in developing a powerful, original hermeneutic understanding of the music. Read through the lens of the real, the riddles written into the quartets reveal the arbitrary and contingent state of the musical subject's constructed reality, reflecting pathologies ende

    Contents: Introduction: musical meaning and analytical tools; Shostakovich and the modern subject; The end that is no end: cadences and closure in the 6th string quartet, Op.101 (1956); The space between: codas, death and the 7th string quartet, Op108 (1960); Musical hauntings: the ritual of conjuration in Shostakovich's 8th string quartet, Op.110 (1960); The indivisible remainder: novelization in the 9th string quartet, Op.117 (1964); Epilogue: music and the real; Bibliography; Index.

    Biography

    Sarah Reichardt is an Assistant Professor of Music at the University of Oklahoma.

    ’...[this review can] give no idea of the subtlety and fluidity with which Reichardt moves between musical surfaces, deep-lying structures, musicological and cultural theory, or the fine balance she maintains between deep probing of the moment and broad consideration of large-scale experiential drama. Her writing is persuasive without being coercive.’ Music and Letters ’...the attempt made in Composing the Modern Subject to examine the ways in which Shostakovich's music continues to resonate with modern audiences bears careful reading....the seriousness with which it takes the quartets is testimony to their enduring expressive power.’ Tempo 'Reichardt writes lucidly, intelligently and confidently, and guides us deftly through the complexities of psychoanalytical terminology and musical analysis.' Slavonic and East European Review