Origins In the late 1960s,
Dmitri Shostakovich developed an interest in setting
Anna Akhmatova's
Requiem to music. However, when his student
Boris Tishchenko made his own setting of those verses, Shostakovich declined to further pursue his as he believed that doing so would be seen as an encroachment into his student's work. A few years later, the interests of Shostakovich and Tishchenko crossed again. In 1970, Shostakovich became acquainted with the poetry of
Marina Tsvetayeva through Tishchenko's
Three Songs to Verses by Marina Tsvetaeva, which the latter had composed earlier that year. Both music and poetry elicited Shostakovich's approval. He wrote to Tishchenko that he had become very fond of the work and requested a copy of the score. After receiving it, he wrote to the younger composer that he was playing and singing the work every day. Shostakovich soon acquired a collection of Tsvetayeva's poetry, which became part of his daily reading. Sofia Khentova, Shostakovich's official biographer, speculated that Tsvetayeva's character and outlook may have attracted the composer's attention. The next year, while working on the
Fifteenth Symphony and notated among its sketches, Shostakovich composed "
Yelabuga Nail", an incomplete and unpublished setting for bass and piano of a poem by
Yevgeny Yevtushenko about Tsvetayeva's suicide. Shostakovich was sufficiently pleased with the song that he offered to play it for his friend, the arts critic
Isaak Glikman.
Composition On July 27, 1973—after travels to Denmark and the United States, where doctors had diagnosed his health problems as terminal—Shostakovich and his wife arrived in
Pärnu,
Estonian SSR, where they stayed until August 30. There, between July 31 and August 7, he composed his
Six Poems by Marina Tsvetayeva. At some point before its composition, Shostakovich heard a television broadcast of a performance by the mezzo-soprano
Irina Bogacheva. He felt that her voice approximated best how he envisioned the sound of Tsvetayeva's own: "husky, hefty, occluded in the smoke of homegrown tobacco". The poems he chose to set represented an intersection of themes that had interested his entire life—
William Shakespeare,
Alexander Pushkin, the dynamics between artist and ruler—and allowed him a vehicle to express his veneration for Akhmatova.
Preparations for the premiere (pictured here in 2018) Despite having been inspired by Bogacheva, Shostakovich initially had trouble informing her about the
Six Poems by Marina Tsvetayeva. He called her a number of times from Pärnu, but without answer. On September 11, 1973, he sent her a letter stating that he was eager to acquaint her with his song cycle. "Of course, I dream that you would indulge this suite with your attention", he wrote, "and ask you to sing it". Unbeknownst to him, she was touring around the Soviet Union during this time. Glikman believed that Shostakovich was concerned that she was deliberately avoiding him similarly to how
Boris Gmyrya had dodged his request to sing the premiere of the
Thirteenth Symphony. Shostakovich contemplated engaging either
Elena Obraztsova or
Tamara Sinyavskaya to sing the cycle's premiere. The composer went to the extent of sending the latter a copy of the score for study. Nevertheless, he was dissatisfied with both singers, and continued to press for Bogacheva. Shostakovich also sent a letter to
Sofiya Vakman, Bogacheva's longtime accompanist, who replied on September 20 that she and Bogacheva were delighted and honored that he chose them to perform the premiere of the
Six Poems by Marina Tsvetayeva. She also said that they were looking forward to preparing it under his supervision when the singer returned from touring. Bogacheva and Vakman arrived at Shostakovich's home on October 22 to begin rehearsals for the premiere of the
Six Poems by Marina Tsvetayeva. The latter recalled being surprised that the composer preferred to sit as far from her and Bogacheva during their performance. Following their initial playthrough, Shostakovich requested to hear it again. Vakman said that while they performed, Shostakovich sat listening and weeping silently. Once they finished, his mood turned cheerful and they began to discuss interpretive points. Bogacheva was concerned that the
tessitura of the cycle was too low for her. "I am not a contralto", she told Shostakovich. She requested that he
transpose it a
half-step up, an idea he considered momentarily before rejecting it by saying that he enjoyed the lower register of her voice, which he believed sounded good. Her suggestion that the cycle would be more structurally effective if the order of the first and last songs were reversed was also rebuffed by the composer. His approach to tempi was more flexible. "Take no notice of [my tempo markings]—I never know if I mark the metronome correctly", he said.
Orchestration Shostakovich completed his orchestration of the
Six Poems by Marina Tsvetayeva while vacationing in
Repino on January 9, 1974. He modified the tempo in the first song, "My Poetry". ==Music==