I - Waltz 2 / II - Lyric Waltz /III - Dance 1 /IV - Finale / V - March / VI - Little Polka / VII - Dance 2 / VIII - Waltz 1
II - VIII - Conductor - Dmitry Yablonsky /Russian State Symphony Orchestra
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Suite for Variety Orchestra (Shostakovich)
The Suite for Variety Orchestra (post-1956) is a suite in eight movements by Dmitri Shostakovich. The work consists of a collection of movements which derive from other works by the composer.
For many years the Suite for Variety Orchestra was misidentified as the "lost" Suite for Jazz Orchestra No. 2 (1938), a different work in three movements that was lost during World War II, the piano score of which was rediscovered in 1999 by Manashir Yakubov, and orchestrated the following year by Gerard McBurney.
Shostakovich actually labelled the work as "no.1", but no "no.2" is known to exist. (However, Shostakovich biographer Derek Hulme announced in 2000 the discovery of a Suite for Variety Orchestra no.2 in four movements.)
Movements
According to a note by the composer, any number of the pieces may be played in any order. The order of movements given in the New Collected Works of Dmitri Shostakovich series is as follows:
1. March / 2. Dance 1 / 3. Dance 2 / 4. Little Polka / 5. Lyric Waltz (in C minor and E-flat major) 6. Waltz 1 (in B-flat major and A major) / 7. Waltz 2 (in C minor and E-flat major) / 8. Finale
Background
The Suite was first performed in a Western country on 1 December 1988 in Barbican Hall, London, conducted by Mstislav Rostropovich, under the title Suite for Jazz Orchestra no.2.
The work was recorded by Riccardo Chailly conducting the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in 1991, (also erroneously identified as the Jazz Suite No. 2) and released on a disc entitled Shostakovich: The Jazz Album (Decca 33702). The movements on that recording were ordered 1, 5, 2, 6, 4, 7, 3, 8. Chailly's recording of the Waltz 2 movement was used on the soundtrack to the 1999 Stanley Kubrick film Eyes Wide Shut, as the opening title and closing credit theme, as well as in the A&E Network series A Nero Wolfe Mystery (the episode "Champagne for One"). The Waltz 2 has also been used in advertisements for Sprint Nextel and Heineken.
It is thought that the Suite for Variety Orchestra must have been assembled by Shostakovich at least post-1956, because of the use of material from that year's music to the film The First Echelon. In fact, the greater part of the Suite for Variety Orchestra is recycled material:
The opening and closing movements (March and Finale) are based on the "March" from Korzinkina’s Adventures, Op. 59 (1940).
The second movement (Dance 1) was adapted from "The Market Place" (No.16) from the film score for The Gadfly, Op. 97 (1955).
The third movement (Dance 2) goes back to "Invitation to a Rendezvous" (No.20), from The Limpid Stream, Op. 39 (1934-35) [which itself was taken from "Mime and Dance of the Pope" (No.19) from The Bolt, Op.27 (1930-31)].
The seventh movement (Waltz 2) was adapted from the "Waltz" from the Suite from The First Echelon, Op. 99a (1956).
This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Suite for Variety Orchestra (Shostakovich).