15 Imslp | Shostakovich Symphony

The trombone solo is marked quasi voce (like a voice). Look at the string accompaniment: divided violas and cellos playing sul ponticello (on the bridge) for a glassy, harsh sound. The score reveals that the solo is not just sad—it’s harmonically static, almost paralyzed.

For many classical music lovers, the name Dmitri Shostakovich conjures a unique duality: the public Soviet figurehead and the private musical dissident. His fifteen symphonies form a diary of survival under tyranny, ranging from the brash optimism of the First to the suffocating terror of the Fourth , the bitter triumph of the Leningrad (Seventh) , and the stark introspection of the Fourteenth . shostakovich symphony 15 imslp

With the score from IMSLP on your tablet or screen, you become a detective. You notice the xylophone’s brittle laugh, the Wagnerian shadow, the empty measures where time itself seems to stop. You begin to understand why Shostakovich, the master of irony, wrote a symphony that begins in a toy shop and ends in a void. The trombone solo is marked quasi voce (like a voice)

The movement famously quotes the by Rossini. Why? Theories abound: a nod to his love of Rossini? A sarcastic comment on Soviet critics? Or perhaps a childhood memory of listening to his mother play the piano? The composer’s son, Maxim Shostakovich, suggested it was pure, joyful nostalgia. For many classical music lovers, the name Dmitri