× About Us Support Thank you to our donors Musicians & Conductors Past Events
Dmitri Shostakovich (1906 – 1975)
Violin Concerto No. 1 in A Minor, Op. 77

Approximately 39 minutes

Composer: born September 25, 1906, St, Petersburg, Russia; died August 9, 1975, Moscow, U.S.S.R.

Work composed: Shostakovich began working on the violin concerto in July 1947 and finished it on March 24, 1948.
The concerto was written for and dedicated to violinist David Oistrakh.

World premiere: Evgeny Mravinsky led the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra with soloist David Oistrakh on October 29, 1955, in Leningrad.

Instrumentation: solo violin, 3 flutes (1 doubling piccolo), 3 oboes (1 doubling English horn), 3 clarinets (1 doubling bass clarinet), 3 bassoons (1 doubling contrabassoon), four horns, tuba, timpani, tam tam, tambourine, xylophone, celeste, 2 harps, and strings.


On February 10, 1948, the Soviet Union’s director of cultural policy, Andrei Zhdanov, issued a denouncement of Dmitri Shostakovich and several other prominent Soviet composers, charging them with “formalist perversions and antidemocratic tendencies in music, alien to the Soviet people and its artistic tastes.” As a result of what became known as the Zhdanov Doctrine, Shostakovich was fired from the Leningrad Conservatory, and most of his music was banned from publication and public performance. In order to support his family, Shostakovich abandoned “abstract” music (symphonies, concertos) in favor of film scores and nationalistic works that celebrated the Soviet state. Shostakovich’s grim artistic limbo continued until the death of Joseph Stalin on March 5, 1953.

In the autumn of 1947, Shostakovich began working on a violin concerto for David Oistrakh. Shostakovich’s own violin skills were rudimentary, and he was concerned that some of the passages in his concerto might not be technically feasible. Days after finishing the concerto, Shostakovich brought it to the last class he taught before his dismissal from the Conservatory, and asked student violinist Venyamin Basner to read through it. Basner recalled, “Dmitri Dmitriyevich asked if I wouldn’t mind trying something out on the violin. Shaking like a leaf, I got my violin out. The very idea, that I should be the first violinist to attempt to play this difficult music, and, what’s more, to sight-read it in the presence of the composer! ... The Concerto is a relentlessly hard, intense piece for the soloist. The difficult Scherzo is followed by the Passacaglia, then comes immediately the enormous cadenza, which leads without a break into the finale. The violinist is not given the chance to pause and take breath. I remember that even Oistrakh, a god for all violinists, asked Shostakovich to show mercy. ‘Dmitri Dmitriyevich, please consider letting the orchestra take over the first eight bars in the finale so as to give me a break, then at least I can wipe the sweat off my brow.’ Immediately Dmitri Dmitriyevich said, ‘Of course, of course, why didn’t I think of it?’ By the next day he had made the necessary correction by giving the first statement of the theme in the finale to the orchestra.”

Architecturally, this concerto is a bit of a hybrid. Shostakovich wrote four movements rather than the usual three, suggesting a symphonic structure. The individual movements themselves do not conform to expected concerto format (fast outer movements bracketing a slow central section), and even their titles are somewhat eccentric – Nocturne, Scherzo, Passacaglia, Burlesca. In the most obvious departure from traditional form, Shostakovich links the Passacaglia and Burlesca by a massive, technically demanding solo cadenza. Within these movements Shostakovich’s signature characteristics unfold, particularly in the tightly focused, ironically raucous Scherzo and the powerful, stern Passacaglia, through which the solo violin weaves a poignant melody.

A note about the dual opus numbers: When Shostakovich began writing the A minor Violin Concerto, he gave it the opus number 77. After Zhdanov’s denunciation, Shostakovich decided to postpone releasing the concerto. When Oistrakh finally premiered it, in the autumn of 1955, Shostakovich chose to publish it with the opus number 99, reflecting the fact that he felt it necessary to keep the concerto under wraps for eight years. At the end of his life, Shostakovich decided to reinstate the original opus number 77, to indicate the concerto’s true chronology in his compositional output.


© Elizabeth Schwartz