
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On today’s date in 1930, “The Age of Gold,” a new ballet by the Soviet composer Dmitri Shostakovich opened in Leningrad. At that time, it was trendy for Soviet Art to extol sporting events, and contrast the wholesome values of the new Soviet society with those of the decadent, bourgeois West.
And so, the plot of this new Soviet ballet ran as follows: a Russian soccer team arrives in a Western city to play a match during an industrial exposition, only to find their heroic endeavors thwarted by a hostile hotel staff, a seductive Western opera diva, and, of course, corrupt police and city officials.
Dutifully following the Party line, Shostakovich wrote: “Throwing into contrast the two cultures was my main aim. The dances for the Europeans breathe the decadent spirit of … contemporary bourgeois culture, but I tried to imbue the Soviet dances with the wholesome elements of sport and physical culture.”
One of the lasting hits of his ballet score was a sardonic little Polka.
Despite all this political subtext, Shostakovich seemed to be having a whale of a time, as if he rather enjoyed spending a little time – if only musically – in the decadent West.”
Dmitri Shostakovich (1906 –1975) — Polka, from The Age of Gold (Moscow Chamber Orchestra; Constantine Orbelian, cond.) Delos 3257
By American Public Media4.7
1010 ratings
On today’s date in 1930, “The Age of Gold,” a new ballet by the Soviet composer Dmitri Shostakovich opened in Leningrad. At that time, it was trendy for Soviet Art to extol sporting events, and contrast the wholesome values of the new Soviet society with those of the decadent, bourgeois West.
And so, the plot of this new Soviet ballet ran as follows: a Russian soccer team arrives in a Western city to play a match during an industrial exposition, only to find their heroic endeavors thwarted by a hostile hotel staff, a seductive Western opera diva, and, of course, corrupt police and city officials.
Dutifully following the Party line, Shostakovich wrote: “Throwing into contrast the two cultures was my main aim. The dances for the Europeans breathe the decadent spirit of … contemporary bourgeois culture, but I tried to imbue the Soviet dances with the wholesome elements of sport and physical culture.”
One of the lasting hits of his ballet score was a sardonic little Polka.
Despite all this political subtext, Shostakovich seemed to be having a whale of a time, as if he rather enjoyed spending a little time – if only musically – in the decadent West.”
Dmitri Shostakovich (1906 –1975) — Polka, from The Age of Gold (Moscow Chamber Orchestra; Constantine Orbelian, cond.) Delos 3257

38,482 Listeners

43,548 Listeners

25,800 Listeners

7,594 Listeners

3,965 Listeners

1,358 Listeners

525 Listeners

181 Listeners

247 Listeners

73 Listeners

112,277 Listeners

2,172 Listeners

56,530 Listeners

4,117 Listeners

76 Listeners

36 Listeners

6,535 Listeners