In September 1938, Shostakovich announced that he was sketching out his Sixth Symphony, which would be a large-scale "
Lenin Symphony" for soloists, chorus, and orchestra that would utilize the poem
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin by
Vladimir Mayakovsky. Shostakovich reported that the declamatory quality of the poem was challenging to set and that he was unsatisfied with the work he had done so far on the symphony. He later tried to incorporate other literature about Lenin in his new symphony, but without success. Speaking in a later radio address in January 1939, he announced that he was "getting ready to write" the Sixth Symphony, but made no mention of Lenin or Mayakovsky’s poem. The purely instrumental Symphony No. 6 was completed in September 1939. Shostakovich commented on it in the press: The musical character of the Sixth Symphony will differ from the mood and emotional tone of the
Fifth Symphony, in which moments of tragedy and tension were characteristic. In my latest symphony, music of a contemplative and lyrical order predominates. I wanted to convey in it the moods of spring, joy, youth. On 5 November 1939, the premiere of the Symphony No. 6 took place in the Large Hall of the Leningrad Philharmonic in Leningrad by the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra under
Yevgeny Mravinsky. The concert was part of a 10-day festival of Soviet music that included performances of
Sergei Prokofiev’s
Alexander Nevsky,
Yuri Shaporin’s
On the Field of Kulikovo, and Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony. On the same programme was the
Romantic Poem for violin and orchestra by
Valery Zhelobinsky. According to
Isaak Glikman, the symphony had a successful premiere and the finale was encored. lauded the symphony in his review, predicting a bright future for it, and praising Shostakovich for his continued progress away from
formalistic tendencies. Other critics remarked negatively upon what they considered was the symphony’s lopsided structure and its juxtaposition of moods. The first recording was made by
Leopold Stokowski with the
Philadelphia Orchestra for
RCA Victor in December 1940. ==References==