
Dimitri Chostakovitch
Russian composer born 25 September 1906 in Saint Petersburg; died 9 August 1975 in Moscow.
Dmitri Shostakovich was born in Russia in 1906. He grew up in a musical family, and his own musical gifts manifested themselves in early childhood, nourished by piano lessons from his mother. He began composing in 1915, notably piano pieces, and in the autumn of 1919, entered the prestigious Petrograd Conservatory, where the influence of Rimsky-Korsakov was still strong in the person of the Conservatory’s director, Alexander Glazunov. There, Shostakovich studied piano, harmony, fugue, counterpoint, music history, orchestration, and composition with professors such as Maximilian Steinberg, Alexandra Rozanova, Nikolay Sokolov, and Leonid Nikolayev.
In 1923, Shostakovich became a piano accompanist for silent films, a job that created ties with dance, theatre, and cinema in the feverish cultural scene that characterized Moscow and Leningrad in the late 1920s. In 1925, the year he completed his first symphony (which, embraced by many Western conductors in 1926, brought him international renown), he met Marshal Mikhail Tukhachevsky, who would become his patron and who would introduce him to many key people in his career as a composer. In 1927, he received an honorable mention at the first International Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw (this disappointment put a definitive end to his aspirations for a career as a pianist), and met Sergei Prokofiev, the director Vsevolod Meyerhold (who hired him in his Moscow theater in 1928), and Alban Berg at a performance of Wozzeck in Leningrad, which would have tremendous impact on him.
Shostakovich by this time had achieved a level of notoriety that drew the attention of the Soviet government, and in 1927, he received a number of commissions from the Communist Party to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the October Revolution. This forced Shostakovich into two seemingly opposing roles: first, that of official composer for the state, required to toe the Party line, and that of an avant-garde composer, which was what he aspired to be. The tension between these two roles caused him constant anguish and injected a kind of schizophrenia into his composing. By the 1930s, his position with regard to Stalin, who had held power with an iron fist since 1928, was faltering. He joined the Union of Soviet Composers in 1932, and in 1934 he was elected a deputy of the October District in Leningrad, but on 28 January 1936 Pravda published an article on his opera Lady Macbeth of the District of Mzensk with the headline “Muddle Instead of Music,” accusing the work of being “anti-realist,” against the people, vulgar, and atonal – despite the fact that it had had successful premieres in Leningrad and Moscow in January 1934 and then in 1935 in New York and Stockholm, notably. Shostakovich’s two children, Galina and Maxim, were born against this difficult backdrop of Stalinist terror, in 1935 and 1938, respectively. Shostakovich accepted a post teaching at the Leningrad Conservatory in 1937, and then, after moving to Moscow, began teaching at its conservatory in 1943.
In 1941, the German-Soviet pact of non-aggression came to an end when the German Army attacked the Soviet Union without warning and began advancing on Leningrad. Shostakovich attempted to join the army and ended up as a firefighter in the Home Guard, writing musical arrangements to be played on the front. On 1 October 1941, he and his family were evacuated from Leningrad (after he appeared on the cover of Time magazine wearing a firefighter’s helmet). Away from Leningrad, he completed his Seventh Symphony, which was performed in the besieged city on 9 August 1942 and was quickly adopted as a patriotic hymn to the resistance of the Soviet people and the USSR’s victory over the Nazi Army.
In February 1948, a violent anti-formalist campaign led by Tikhon Khrennikov, whom Andrei Zhdanov had appointed head of the Union of Soviet Composers, led to the blacklisting of several of Shostakovich’s pieces, forcing him to abandon his teaching positions in August 1948. In March 1949, he was appointed a member of the Soviet Delegation to the Cultural and Scientific Congress for World Peace in New York, where he returned in 1959 and 1973. In the 1950s and 1960s, Shostakovich held official posts and participated in electoral politics, but also traveled abroad extensively, once he had been rehabilitated by Nikita Khrushchev. His travel included a trip to Leipzig in 1950 for the 200th anniversary of Bach’s death, and to Paris in 1958, to preside over the first International Tchaikovsky Competition. While in Paris he recorded two piano concertos and other short works for piano, and he experienced the first symptoms of what would later be diagnosed as Motor Neurone Disease. In 1960, during a trip to London, he became friends with Benjamin Britten; in 1962, the city of Edinburgh dedicated a music festival to him.
By this time his health, which had always been frail, began declining rapidly. In 1966, he was named a Hero of Socialist Labor and suffered from a heart attack, after which he was hospitalized for two months. A second heart attack in September 1971 left him partially paralyzed. He was hospitalized again in December 1972 for lung cancer treatment, and died of the illness in August 1975.
© Ircam-Centre Pompidou, 2012
By Grégoire Tosser
Dmitri Shostakovich’s output (147 opus numbers), one of the most abundant, performed, and recorded of the twentieth century, is inseparable from the political and cultural context in which he lived. Much of it written in Stalin’s Russia, then that of Khrushchev and Brezhnev, Shostakovich’s music records the career of a composer living under a political system in which the arts held a key ideological function and were judged mainly on their cultural impact on the people.
Shostakovich’s precocity and exceptional gifts attracted notice early, but by the same token they also attracted constant surveillance of his work. Following the fluctuations of the party line, they might take the form of official compositions, often conventional and of limited musical interest, or more audacious, avant-garde, subversive creations, to cite the two extremes. The ambivalence of his language frustrates any musicological reading that tries to distinguish clearly between “free,” personal works and constrained ones that merely decorate an official façade. Fundamentally, this ambiguity appears as an essential characteristic of his work, in that it applies just as much to the composer’s personality (was he a communist? a resister? a dissident?) as to the music (alternately serious and grotesque, ironic and edifying, detached and charged with pathos) and to the musical language itself (encompassing tonality, modality, atonality, tonal dodecaphony, and neoclassicism). Indeed, critical musicology and historiography concerned with Shostakovich’s work and life have evolved to a remarkable degree since the 1970s, in tune with various controversies and with shifts in the political and ideological balance of power in our world.
A young composer at the heart of the communist utopia
Shostakovich was already composing in the 1910s, mainly for orchestra (notably in the Scherzi, op. 1 of 1919 and op. 7 of 1923-1924, in which the orchestration owes much to Tchaikovsky). He also wrote for piano, his own instrument, on which he accompanied silent films starting in 1923 — see the Eight Preludes, op. 2 (1918-1920), and Three Fantastic Dances, op. 5 (1920-1922, premiered in 1925), as well as the Sonata No. 1, op. 12 (1926), and Aphorisms, op. 13 (1927), which betray the influence of piano works by Prokofiev, Scriabin, and Glazunov (the last of whom, as director of the Petrograd Conservatoire, considerably aided the young composer in his studies after the loss of his father in 1922). It was in May 1926 that Shostakovich first made a name for himself, with the success of the work written as a capstone for his composition degree, the First Symphony, which communicates humor, dance, and the grotesque through an expanded tonality and an orchestration rooted in the great Russian tradition of Tchaikovsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Scriabin, early Stravinsky, and Prokofiev. This sensational rise to fame immediately garnered Shostakovich a commission for a work to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Russian Revolution, which he fulfilled with his Second Symphony, op. 14, dedicated “To October.” Despite audacious harmony and orchestration in the early movements, which reflect the Constructivism that was also of interest to Prokofiev and Alexander Mosolov at the time, the final movement, one of his first essays in vocal music, sets an insipid and predictably revolutionary text by the poet Alexandr Bezymensky — “horrid, abominable verses,” Shostakovich would later say. They are no doubt similar in that respect to those written by Semyon Kirsanov for the final chorus of Shostakovich’s Third Symphony, op. 20 (1929), subtitled “First of May,” which, despite exalting the proletarian revolution and portraying the uprising of the communist people against the Czarist old regime, is nevertheless considerably more elaborate. In these two symphonies, the motives are non-thematic, based entirely on relationships of contrast through juxtaposition (of dynamics, texture, tempo, etc.), and served by a language in which an overgrowth of polyphony often suspends tonality. In the orchestration, the towering figure of Rimsky-Korsakov remained a point of reference. Critics and an enthusiastic public praised the young Shostakovich for his precocity, and often compared him to Glazunov, who also used dense polyphony.
The Nose, op. 15, composed between 1927 and 1929, marks the start of a transition period in which Shostakovich embarked on a collaboration with the avant-garde man of the stage Vsevolod Meyerhold. This opera, which displays the variety and eclecticism of light music, owes something to Shostakovich’s work around the same time for the cinema, the stage, and dance (The New Babylon, op. 18, 1929-1930, would become his first of about forty film scores; in his music for the play The Bedbug, op. 19, 1929, by Vladimir Mayakovsky, a foxtrot recalls that Shostakovich playfully orchestrated the famous song Tea for Two by Vincent Youmans in 1927; and among his ballets are The Golden Age, op. 22, 1929, and The Bolt, op. 27, 1930). The Nose premiered in January 1930 but was quickly withdrawn (it would be revived only in 1974, one year before Shostakovich’s death, by the Moscow Chamber Orchestra under Gennady Rozhdestvensky). The opera shows an audacity and liberty of tone that, though tolerated during the cultural ebullience of the 1910s and 1920s, would be censured and banned in the 1930s. Stalin, having amassed total power, now controlled the whole artistic sphere, notably through the Union of Soviet Composers, created in 1932 to replace all other existing musical organizations. The Nose, written at the dawn of the Stalin era, presented a worrisome depiction of police repression under the rule of Czar Nicholas I. Shostakovich used unprecedented techniques to express the satire and grotesquery of Nikolai Gogol’s story: the voices are set in extremely wide ranges, going as far as screams. The influence of popular music (jazz, film music, folk dances) is unmistakable, alongside noises of farts, burps, and erotic moans. One scene in Act III, showing the simultaneous reading of two letters, has the stage split in two, like a split screen in film. Act I includes an interlude for solo percussion, as in Varèse’s Ionisation, to portray the implacable character of the police machinery and the fear incited by it.
Socialist Realism and the heroic myth
Though a success at its premiere in 1934, the opera Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk, op. 29 (1930-1932), based on a novella by Nikolai Leskov, was targeted by an article in Pravda on 28 January 1936, “Muddle Instead of Music.” The doctrine of Socialist Realism, used after 1935 to condemn composers such as Schoenberg, Milhaud, and Stravinsky, prohibited harsh dissonances, atonality, melodies “impossible to memorize,” and references to jazz. On these bases, it held Shostakovich’s opera to be cacophonic and pornographic (particularly the trombones’ evocation of the sexual act between Sergei and Katerina). Political tones are again extremely present (notably in the heroine’s poisoning of her tyrannical stepfather), which also provoked its condemnation. Only after Stalin’s death did Shostakovich dare to revise the work as Katerina Ismailova, op. 114 (1954-1963), attenuating the explicit character of the crudest scenes and touching up the melodic lines and brass orchestration.
Preferring to leave his Fourth Symphony, op. 43, in a drawer (dating from 1935-1936, it would only be premiered in December 1961), Shostakovich redeemed himself with another instrumental work, the Symphony No. 5, op. 47 of 1937, which he officially presented as “a Soviet artist’s creative response to just criticism.”1 Its imposing and highly transparent form in four movements presents a post-Romantic trajectory that seems to recall Sibelius and Mahler. Shostakovich stayed away from ballet and vocal music for a while, and never finished another large project for the theater (the opera The Gamblers, op. 63a, after Gogol, on which he worked in 1941-1942, would remain incomplete). This avoidance no doubt explains some of his interest in the string quartet, initiated in 1938 with the First Quartet, op. 49, a genre he later valued greatly, as well as in the re-orchestration of Mussorgsky’s Boris Godunov, op. 58 (1939-1940). These projects were a more neutral kind of work, less likely to bring down criticism from the regime.
Historical circumstances in the early 1940s, namely the siege of Leningrad, finally created the opportunity for Shostakovich to be proclaimed an official composer and celebrated as a hero. The case of the Seventh Symphony, op. 60 (1941), played in a besieged Leningrad on 9 August 1942, points to the ambiguity inherent in every creative act: presented as a program symphony about the resistance of the people of Leningrad to the siege by German troops, the symphony was in fact written before the beginning of the conflict. The famous “invasion” theme from the first movement, which gives rise to twelve variations over an ostinato in the snare drum, showcasing Shostakovich’s inexhaustible fund of counterpoint, would be raised to the status of an official hymn in the victorious USSR and broadcast around the world (allowing Bartók to parody it in his Concerto for Orchestra, written in the United States in 1943).

The Zhdanov Doctrine
In 1948, Stalin and his lieutenant Andrei Zhdanov, displeased with the opera The Great Friendship (1947) by Vano Muradeli, launched an “anti-formalist” campaign designed to expose the
tendency [that] expresses a formalism alien to Soviet art, a rejection of the classical heritage under the false pretext of the search for novelty, a rejection of the popular character of music, a refusal to serve the people, all that for the benefit of the narrowly individual emotions of a small group of chosen aesthetes.2
The presence of text and the primacy of melody were back in favor and outrageously valorized. Numerous works by Shostakovich were forbidden, and he, obliged to engage in self-criticism, conformed to the new rule of “songful” music and priority for vocal works based on folklore. His From Jewish Folk Poetry, op. 79 (1948), officially follows this line, though it fell afoul of the antisemitic campaign launched by Stalin in January 1949; this song cycle belongs to a series of works in an idiom close to klezmer, along with the First Violin Concerto, op. 77, and the String Quartet No. 4, op. 83 (1948-1949). In the oratorio The Song of the Forests, op. 81 (1949), on a text by Yevgeny Dolmatovsky that celebrates the reforestation decreed in 1946, the people are represented by voices: solo bass, solo tenor, mixed choir, and children’s choir (additionally, the orchestra includes a band of six trumpets and six trombones). Shostakovich’s first work for a cappella choir, the Ten Songs on Texts by Revolutionary Poets, op. 88 (1951), again takes up Mussorgsky’s idea of the choir as representation of the people. In a more sarcastic vein, Shostakovich composed a jeering score for Mikheil Chiaureli’s propaganda film The Fall of Berlin, op. 82, in which a parody of a German march is meant to show Hitler as a buffoon who lost the war through his own incompetence. The Anti-Formalist Rayok, left in a drawer and premiered in 1989 by Rostropovich, no doubt dates from the same period. In this cantata, Stalin, Zhdanov, and the apparatchik Dmitri Shepilov are roundly ridiculed; each sings various absurd official speeches to the accompaniment of sardonic music that includes a parody of “Souliko,” Stalin’s favorite tune.
Instrumental music, lacking a text to guide interpretation, was held suspect by the regime. Though Shostakovich’s maxim “Those who have ears will hear” hints at a will to hold onto hope, he remained vulnerable to accusations of formalism. A new task emerged for composers: to create a discourse around the work. By presenting an acceptable, particularized, official version of the intentions supposedly communicated in the work, this discourse became an indispensable way to orient interpretations, while still preserving the work’s ambiguity; in short, doublespeak became routine. Whatever the case, reference to the past came to seem necessary, whence the revival of classical forms and movements (waltzes, scherzos, passacaglias, fugues). A notable example is Shostakovich’s 24 Preludes and Fugues, op. 87 (1950-1951), written to commemorate the two-hundredth anniversary of the death of Bach and dedicated to Tatiana Nikolayeva, a laureate of the International Bach Competition, for which Shostakovich had served on the jury in Leipzig in 1950. The influence of Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier is also visible in the fifteen string quartets, each in a different key, on their way to sketching out an incomplete cycle of twenty-four.
In 1953, the year of Stalin’s death, Shostakovich composed his Tenth Symphony, op. 93, of which the second movement, an implacable scherzo, is said to be a musical portrait of the Little Father of the Peoples. Similarly, the second movement of the Eleventh Symphony, op. 103, subtitled “The Year 1905” (1956-1957), portrays the crowd massed in front of the Winter Palace on 9 January 1905, the day known as “Bloody Sunday,” which saw the repression of the Russians’ first attempt at a revolution. Shostakovich drew on revolutionary folklore for the main themes of this work. All the same, ambiguity persists: the musicologist Lev Lebedinsky — a friend of Shostakovich — heard in it not “the salvos of the police firing on the crowd before the Winter Palace in 1905, but the thunder of the Russian tanks in the streets of Budapest” in 1956.3
Shostakovich’s growing attention to the string quartet, especially after 1955, reveals the same orientation toward autonomous music. These often-introspective works sometimes harbor encrypted messages or autobiography. The Eighth String Quartet, op. 110 (1960), officially dedicated “To the victims of the war and of fascism,” features, in addition to a traditional Jewish theme also found in the last movement of the Second Piano Trio, op. 67 (1944), the DSCH motif (derived from the German spelling of his name, Dmitri Schostakowitsch, where S = E-flat and H = B) also found in the Tenth and Fifteenth Symphonies, the First Violin Concerto, the Second Piano Sonata, and the Fifth and Seventh String Quartets, where it appears as a recurring motif, an idée fixe.

A new stylistic freedom
Rehabilitated in 1953 and again in 1958 during the period of de-Stalinization, Shostakovich organized performances of older works that he had hidden. He also turned toward vocal music. Some of the texts, set in Russian translation, are openly subversive or have an autobiographical tenor, sketching out a musical aesthetic of death and mourning (his health was further weakened by a heart attack in 1966). For instance, Yevgeny Yevtushenko’s verses for the Symphony No. 15 “Babi Yar,” op. 113 (1962) for bass, men’s choir, and orchestra, refer to the mass grave of Jews discovered in the Ukraine; the premier of the work was turbulent and led to an open rift with the regime. Other examples include the sonnets in the Suite on Poems by Michelangelo, op. 145 (1974), for bass and piano (orchestrated as op. 145a); the poems by Lorca, Apollinaire, Küchelbecker, and Rilke in the Fourteenth Symphony, op. 135 (1969), for soprano, bass, and chamber orchestra, which concern the deprivation of artistic liberty; and poems by Alexander Blok (Seven Romances, op. 127, 1967), Marina Tsvetaeva (Six Poems for Contralto and Orchestra, op. 143, 1973), and Dostoyevsky (Four Verses of Captain Lebyadkin, op. 146, 1974). Even more than in the previous decade, Shostakovich’s style is characterized by clarity and sparsity in the lines and harmony, narrativity, orchestration favoring low timbres, and reminiscences of Mussorgsky, especially in the Second Cello Concerto, op. 126 (1966), and the Second Violin Concerto, op. 129 (1967).
Besides an ever-growing dominance of the intervals of fourths and fifths, one marker of the greater musical freedom in Shostakovich’s late work is what André Lischke calls “the presence and negation of dodecaphony.”4 The chromatic aggregate is objectively discernable, but serial combinatorics are absent, and the rows are deliberately arranged in a tonal perspective, as seen in the Violin Sonata, op. 134 (1968), the Fourteenth Symphony, the String Quartet No. 13, op. 138 (1970), the Suite on Poems by Michelangelo, and the String Quartet No. 12, op. 133 (1968), in which the theme is at once dodecaphonic and laden with tonal indicators:

Despite his failing health, and a musical style that had evolved little (perhaps because it was already fully in place by the 1930s), Shostakovich in his last decade reached a sort of tragic fulfilment. The theme of death is omnipresent in his music. Self-parody and the grotesque dominate the Five Romances on Texts from Krokodil Magazine, op. 121; the Preface to the Complete Edition of My Works and Brief Reflections on This Preface, op. 123 (1965-1966); the very official but somewhat offbeat and ironical symphonic poems October, op. 131 (1967); and March of the Soviet Militia, op. 139 (1970). A nostalgic, disillusioned outlook on artistic creation comes to the fore, as witness the proliferation of homages, allusions, quotations, and self-quotations (for example, in the Fifteenth Symphony, the Michelangelo Suite, and the Viola Sonata, op. 147). Chamber music, and especially the string quartet (his fifteenth and last is characterized as his requiem or musical testament), takes on the function of private journal in which a twilight language, quite distant from that of the official compositions, comes into its own.
Subject to the vicissitudes of Soviet artistic policy, Shostakovich’s output, at least in the interim between his blazing modernist debut in the 1920s and his return to a freer language after 1960, prolongs Romanticism or post-Romanticism. From those eras, he took his topics (funeral marches, waltzes, scherzos, program music, concertos, giant symphonies, etc.) and sometimes treated them in a grotesque or sarcastic mode tinged with Neoclassicism, while scheming to undermine the tonal system (through dominant substitution, total chromaticism, bi-modality). As the composer Claudy Malherbe observes,
His obstinate attachment to tonality was not mere blindness but strategic: the novelty that can no longer be given to him by construction will come from deconstruction. So his phrases blubber, or turn around on themselves in a loop. The directionality formerly ensured by the play of cadences and modulations becomes muddled, sometimes to the point of immobility. Hollow, uncertain sonorities are often preferred to clear, affirmative ones. Quotations and borrowings seem incongruous once placed in a context that challenges their original meanings.5
Malherbe points to the quotation from Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata in the third movement of the Viola Sonata, Shostakovich’s last work:

Like its creator’s own personality, the music of Shostakovich remains profoundly and indefectibly ambiguous: imprinted with multiple and often contradictory interpretations and official commentaries, prey to the ideological and political controversies played out between the USSR and the West, and revived in the hope that it might reveal the coded messages of a musical autobiography.
Translated from the French by Tadhg Sauvey
1. SHOSTAKOVICH, “My Creative Response,” in the newspaper Vechernyaya Moskva, 25 January 1938. ↩
2. Andrey ZHDANOV, Sur la littérature, la philosophie et la musique, Paris, Norman Béthune, 1972, p. 74. ↩
3. Unpublished article cited in Elizabeth WILSON, Shostakovich: A Life Remembered, London and Boston, Faber & Faber, 1994, p. 317-318. ↩
4. André LISCHKE, “Présence et négation du dodécaphonisme dans les dernières œuvres de Dimitri Chostakovitch,” Analyse musicale, Oct. 1989, p. 31-37. ↩
5. Claudy MALHERBE, “Le vierge, le vivace et le bel aujourd’hui. L’espace musical contemporain, une logique de la différence,” in Hugues Dufourt and Joël-Marie Fauquet (eds.), La musique depuis 1945. Matériau, esthétique et perception, Liège: Mardaga, 1997, p. 248-249. ↩
© Ircam-Centre Pompidou, 2012
- Solo (excluding voice)
- Marche funèbre for piano (1917), DSCH
- Dans la forêt piano trilogy (1919), DSCH
- Huit préludes for piano (1918-1920), DSCH
- Trois pièces for piano (1919-1920), 4 mn 20 s, Le Chant du Monde
- Trois danses fantastiques for piano (1920), 5 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Cinq préludes for piano (1919-1921), 6 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Sonate n° 1 for piano (1926), 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Aphorismes ten pieces for piano (1927), 15 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Passacaglia arrangement by the composer of the intermission between scenes 4 and 5 of Lady Macbeth of the Msensk district, for organ (1933), 6 mn
- Vingt-quatre préludes for piano (1932-1933), 31 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Trois pièces for solo violin (1940), partition perdue
- Sonate n° 2 in B minor, for piano (1943), 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Cahier d'enfant seven pieces for piano (1944-1945), 7 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Vingt-quatre préludes et fugues for piano (1950-1951), 2 h 32 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Danses des poupées for piano (1952), 10 mn, DSCH
- Onze variations sur un thème de Glinka for piano (1957)
- Chamber music
- Arthur Honegger : Symphonie n° 3 « Liturgique » transcription for piano four hands (), DSCH
- Suite en fa dièse mineur for two pianos (1922), 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Trio avec piano n° 1 in C minor (1923), 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Trois pièces for cello and piano (1923-1924), partition perdue
- Deux pièces (Prélude et Scherzo) for string octet (double string quartet) (1924-1925), 11 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Igor Stravinsky : Symphonie de psaumes transcription for piano four hands (1930), DSCH
- Deux pièces pour quatuor à cordes (1931), 8 mn, DSCH
- Moderato in A minor, for cello and piano (1934), 3 mn
- Sonate in D minor, for cello and piano (1934), 28 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 1 in C major (1938), 15 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quintette avec piano in G minor, for two violins, viola, cello and piano (1940), 29 mn about , Le Chant du Monde
- Mili Balakirev : Polka in F sharp minor, arrangement of a piano piece by Balakirev, for harp duet (or ensemble) (1941), 3 mn, DSCH
- Trio avec piano n° 2 in E minor (1944), 24 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 2 in A major (1944), 32 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 3 in F major (1946), 33 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Marche joyeuse in D major, for two pianos (1949), 3 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 4 in D major (1949), 22 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 5 in B flat major (1952), 30 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Concertino in A minor, for two pianos (1953), 8 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Tarentelle for two pianos (1954), 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 6 in G major (1956), 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 7 in F sharp minor (1960), 12 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 8 in C minor (1960), 19 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes unfinished (1961), 8 mn, DSCH
- Quatuor à cordes n° 9 in E flat major (1964), 26 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 10 in A flat major (1964), 22 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 11 in F minor (1966), 15 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 12 in D flat major (1968), 27 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Sonate in G major, for violin and concert piano (1968), 31 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 13 in B flat minor (1969-1970), 18 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 14 in F sharp major (1973), 27 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 15 in E flat minor (1974), 37 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Sonate pour alto et piano in C major (1975), 29 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Instrumental ensemble music
- Le Gourdin arrangements of traditional melodies, for bass voice and orchestra (), DSCH
- Suite de la musique de "Tué sous condition" excerpts selected by Gerard McBurney, for orchestra (), 39 mn, DSCH
- Suite pour orchestre de variété (), 20 mn, DSCH
- Scherzo in F sharp minor, for orchestra (1919), 5 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Thème et variations en si bémol majeur for orchestra (1921-1922), 15 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Scherzo in E flat major, for orchestra (1923-1924), 4 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 1 in F minor, for orchestra (1923-1925), 33 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Vincent Youmans : Tahiti Trot (Tea for two) arrangement for orchestra of the foxtrot from the musical No, no, Nanette (1927), 4 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Domenico Scarlatti : Deux pièces transcribed from the sonatas for harpsichord L. 413 (n° 1) and L. 375 (n° 2) for wind orchestra (1928), 7 mn, DSCH
- Seule music from the silent film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for choir and orchestra (1929), DSCH
- La Nouvelle Babylone music from the silent film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for orchestra (or theater orchestra) (1928-1929), 1 h 25 mn, DSCH
- stage L'Âge d'or ballet in three acts, six scenes (1929-1930), DSCH
- stage Le Boulon ballet in three acts, seven tableaux (1930-1931), DSCH
- Montagnes d'or music from the film directed by Sergueï Youtkévitch, for orchestra (1931, 1936), 1 h 32 mn, DSCH
- Suite de la musique du film "Montagnes d'or" excerpts selected by the composer, for orchestra (1931), 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite du ballet "Le Boulon" Ballet suite n°5, excerpts selected by Alexander Gaouk, for orchestra (1934, 1931), 27 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Tué sous condition music for a music hall revue by Vsevolod Vojévodina and Evguéni Ryss (1931), DSCH
- Suite de l'opéra "Lady Macbeth du district de Mzensk" excerpts selected by the composer, for orchestra (1932), 26 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique de scène de "Hamlet" suite from the stage music, for small orchestra (1932), 23 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Rencontre music from the film directed by Friedrich Ermler and Sergey Youtkevich (1932), Le Chant du Monde
- Suite pour orchestre de jazz n° 1 (1934), 7 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Mouvement symphonique for orchestra (1934), DSCH
- L'Histoire du Pope et de son serviteur Balda music for the cartoon directed by Mikhail Tsekhanovsky, for chamber orchestra (1933-1934), DSCH
- La Jeunesse de Maxime music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for orchestra (1934-1935), Le Chant du Monde
- Le Ruisseau limpide comedy ballet in three acts, four tableaux (1934-1935), DSCH
- Suite du ballet "L'Âge d'or" for orchestra (1929-1935), 16 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Cinq fragments for small orchestra (1935), 9 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 4 in C minor, for orchestra (1935-1936), 60 mn about , Le Chant du Monde
- stage Salut, Espagne stage music for a piece by Alexandre Afinoghenov, for orchestra (1936), Le Chant du Monde
- Le Retour de Maxime music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for orchestra (1936-1937), DSCH
- Pierre Degeyter : L'Internationale orchestration (1937), DSCH
- Symphonie n° 5 in D minor (1937), 45 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite n° 2 for jazz orchestra (1938), 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite pour orchestre de jazz n° 2 rebuilt and orchestrated by Gerard McBurney (1938), 7 mn, DSCH
- L'Homme au fusil music from the film directed by Sergei Yutkevich, for orchestra (1938), Le Chant du Monde
- Les Faubourgs de Viborg music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for orchestra (1938), Le Chant du Monde
- Un grand citoyen (partie II) music for the second part of the film directed by Friedrich Ermler (1938-1939), DSCH
- Symphonie n° 6 in B minor, for orchestra (1939), 30 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Johann Strauss II : Train de plaisir (polka) polka-gallop op. 281 orchestrated by Shostakovich for integration in a performance of The Gipsy Baron (1940), 2 mn, DSCH
- Vergnügungszug orchestration of Johann Strauss's Polka-Galop, opus 281 (1940), 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Marche solennelle in D flat major, for military orchestra (1941), 6 mn, DSCH
- Symphonie n° 7 in C major, "Leningrad", for orchestra (1941), 1 h 12 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 8 in C minor, for orchestra (1943), 1 h 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Des gens simples music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for orchestra (1945), 12 mn, DSCH
- Mouvement symphonique for orchestra (1945), 7 mn
- Suite du "Ruisseau limpide" for orchestra (1945), Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 9 in E flat major, for orchestra (1945), 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie pour cordes after String Quartet No.3, arrangement by Dimitri Sitkovetski (1946), 30 mn, Sikorski
- Ouverture de fête in A major, for orchestra (1947), 5 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Pirogov music from the film directed by Grigori Kozintsev, for orchestra (1947), DSCH
- Suite de la musique du film "La Jeune Garde" for orchestra (1947), 22 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Pirogov" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra (1947), 27 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- La Jeune Garde music from the film directed by Sergei Guerasimov (1947-1948), 27 mn, DSCH
- Suite de la musique du film "Rencontre sur l'Elbe" excerpts selected by the composer, for mixed choir and orchestra (1948), Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de ballet n° 1 excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra (1949), 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Marche allemande for woodwind and percussion (1950), DSCH
- Suite de ballet n° 2 excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra (1951), 18 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de ballet n° 3 excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra (1952), 16 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de ballet n° 4 excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra (1953), 16 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Valse extraite d' "Unité" for orchestra (1953), 3 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 10 in E minor, for orchestra (1953), 50 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "L'Inoubliable Année 1919" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra (1954), 24 mn
- Le Taon music from the film directed by Alexandre Feinzimmer (1955), Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Le Taon" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra (1955), 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 11 in G minor, "L'Année 1905", for orchestra (1956-1957), 60 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Cinq Jours, cinq nuits music from the film directed by Lev Arnstam, for orchestra (1960), DSCH
- Le Carillon de Novorossiïsk La Flamme de la gloire éternelle, for orchestra (1960), 3 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Cinq Jours, cinq nuits" selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra (1961), 32 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 12 in D minor, "L'Année 1917", for orchestra (1960-1961), 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la trilogie des films "Maxime" excerpts selected by Lévon Atovmian, for orchestra (1961), 20 mn
- Tcheriomouchki music from the film (based on the operetta Op. 105) directed by Gerbert Rappaport, for orchestra (1962), Le Chant du Monde
- Cinq entractes de l'opéra "Katerina Ismaïlova" for orchestra (1963), 24 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Ouverture sur des thèmes populaires russes et kirghizes in C major, for orchestra (1963), 8 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Hamlet (tragédie de Shakespeare dans la traduction de Boris Pasternak) music for the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev (1963-1964), Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique de film de "Hamlet" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra (1964), 42 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- L'Exécution de Stépane Razine symphonic and vocal poem for solo bass, mixed choir and orchestra (1964), 30 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Une année comme une vie music from the film directed by Grigori Rochal, for orchestra (1965)
- Prélude funèbre et triomphal for orchestra (1967), 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Octobre symphonic poem for orchestra (1967), 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Une année comme une vie" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra (1969), 22 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Marche de la milice soviétique for wind ensemble (1970), 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Intervision six-bar orchestral fragment for Soviet television (1971), DSCH
- Symphonie n° 15 in A major, for orchestra (1971), 45 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "La Nouvelle Babylone" excerpts selected by Guénadi Rojdestvensky, for orchestra (1975), 50 mn
- Suite de la musique du film "L'Histoire du Pope et de son serviteur Balda" excerpts selected by Guénadi Rojdestvensky, for orchestra (1979), 20 mn
- Suite de la musique du film "Seule" excerpts selected by Dimitri Smirnov, for wind, percussion and double bass (1929-2001), 26 mn
- Concertant music
- Concerto pour piano, orchestre à cordes et trompette n° 1 in C minor (1933), 21 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Concerto pour violon n° 1 in A minor, for violin and orchestra (1947-1948), 36 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Concerto pour piano n° 2 in F major, for piano and orchestra (1957), 18 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Concerto pour violoncelle n° 1 in E flat major, for cello and orchestra (1959), 29 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Robert Schumann : Concerto pour violoncelle in A minor, re-orchestration (1963), 21 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Concerto pour violoncelle n° 2 in G major (1966), 36 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Concerto pour violon n° 2 in C sharp minor (1967), 29 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Boris Tichtchenko : Concerto pour violoncelle n° 1 re-orchestration (1969), 26 mn, DSCH
- Vocal music and instrument(s)
- Rayok antiformaliste for four bass solo, mixed choir, piano and narrator (), 18 mn, DSCH
- L'Ane et le Rossignol for women's choir and orchestra (1921), Le Chant du Monde
- La Cigale et la Fourmi for mezzo-soprano and orchestra (1921), Le Chant du Monde
- Nikolaï Rimski-Korsakov : Attente dans la grotte arrangement for soprano and orchestra from Opus 40 no.4 by Rimsky-Korsakov (1921), 2 mn, DSCH
- Deux fables de Krylov for mezzo-soprano, women's choir and orchestra (1922), 8 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 2 in B major, dedicated to October, for orchestra and mixed choir (1927), 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de l'opéra "Le Nez" for tenor, baritone and orchestra (1928), 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Le Nez satirical opera in three acts and ten tableaux with epilogue (1927-1928), 1 h 50 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Le Coup de feu stage music for the comedy by Aleksandr Bezymensky, for choir and orchestra (1929), 8 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Christophe Colomb two orchestral pieces, for the opera Le Pauvre Christophe Colomb by Erwin Dressel (1929), 7 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- stage La Punaise stage music for the play by Vladimir Mayakovsky, for male choir and orchestra (1929), Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 3 in E flat major, Premier Mai, for orchestra and mixed choir (1929), 28 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Rule, Brittania ! stage music for the play by Adrian Piotrovsky, for choir and chamber orchestra (1931), Le Chant du Monde
- Chanson sur le contre-plan arrangement for two-part choir and piano (1932)
- stage Orango satirical opera in three acts and a prologue (1932), 45 mn about
- Six romances sur des textes de poètes japonais for tenor and orchestra (1928-1932), 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Six romances sur des textes de poètes japonais transcription of op. 21, for tenor and piano (1928-1932), 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Hamlet incidental music for Shakespeare's tragedy (1931-1932), DSCH
- stage Lady Macbeth du district de Mzensk opera in four acts, nine tableaux (1930-1932), 3 h about , DSCH
- stage Le Grand Éclair comic opera (1933), Le Chant du Monde
- Madrigal for tenor and piano (1933)
- stage La Comédie humaine stage music for a play adapted from Honoré de Balzac by Pavel Soukhotine (1933-1934), Le Chant du Monde
- Les Démons romance for high voice and piano (1936)
- Le Clapotis des eaux song for male choir and orchestra (1937), Le Chant du Monde
- Les Journées de Volotchaïevsk music from the film directed by Georgi and Sergueï Vassiliev, for male choir and orchestra (1936-1937), Le Chant du Monde
- Quatre romances sur des vers de Pouchkine for bass and piano (1936-1937), 12 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Trois romances sur des vers de Pouchkine transcription of the first three melodies of op. 46, for bass voice and small orchestra (1937), Le Chant du Monde
- Un souriceau stupide music for the cartoon directed by Mikhail Tsekhanovsky, for eight solo singers and small orchestra (1939), 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite sur des thèmes finnois seven arrangements of traditional Finnish melodies for soprano (n° 2, 4, 6 and 7), tenor (n° 4, 5, 6 and 7) and chamber orchestra (1939), 12 mn, DSCH
- stage Le Roi Lear stage music for Shakespeare's tragedy, for mezzo-soprano, baritone and orchestra (1940), Le Chant du Monde
- Les Aventures de Korzinkina music from the film directed by Klimenti Mintz, for mixed choir and orchestra (1940), Le Chant du Monde
- stage Modeste Moussorgski : Boris Godounov re-orchestration of the four-act opera with prologue by Mussorgsky (1939-1940), 2 h
- Serment au commissaire du peuple vocals for bass voice, choir and piano (or orchestra) (1941), Le Chant du Monde
- Un grand jour est venu vocals for solo bass, choir and piano (1941), Le Chant du Monde
- Vingt-sept romances arrangements for Leningrad Front concerts, for voice and piano (1941)
- Chant d'un régiment de la garde march for bass voice, mixed choir and piano (1941), Le Chant du Monde
- Six romances sur des vers de poètes anglais for bass and piano (1942), 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Les Joueurs opera based on a short story by Nikolai Gogol (unfinished) (1941-1942), 50 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Léningrad natal suite from the theatrical show La Patrie (1942), 16 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Hymne national four music settings, for voice and piano, choir and piano, choir and orchestra (1943, 1943)
- Six romances sur des vers de poètes anglais version for bass and symphony orchestra (1943), 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Huit chansons populaires anglaises et américaines for bass and chamber orchestra (1943), 16 mn, DSCH
- Gloire à notre patrie soviétique for mixed choir and piano (1943), Le Chant du Monde
- Chant de l'Armée Rouge anthem (1943), Le Chant du Monde
- Annie Laurie arrangement of the Scottish song of the same name, for voice and chamber orchestra (1944), 4 mn, DSCH
- Elle est née vaillante fille de sa patrie for tenor solo, mixed four-part choir and piano (1944), Le Chant du Monde
- La Mer noire for solo bass, male choir and piano (1944), Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Zoya" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for choir and orchestra (1944), 32 mn
- Toast à notre terre natale for solo tenor, mixed choir and piano (1944)
- stage Benjamin Fleischmann : Le Violon de Rotschild one-act opera, after Anton Chekhov, completed and partly orchestrated by Dmitri Shostakovich (1942-1944), 45 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Zoya music from the film directed by Lev Arnstam, for mixed choir and orchestra (1944), 1 h 35 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Un fleuve russe stage music for the performance of the choreographic and vocal ensemble NKVD The Great Russian River (1944), Le Chant du Monde
- La Victoire du printemps two songs with orchestra (1945), 9 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Poème de la patrie patriotic cantata for mezzo-soprano, tenor, two baritones and solo bass, choir and orchestra (1947), 16 mn, DSCH
- Hymne à Moscou for choir and piano (1948)
- Mitchourine music from the movie directed by Alexander Dovzhenko (1948), DSCH
- Rencontre sur l'Elbe music from the film directed by Grigory Alexandrov, for tenor solo, mixed choir and orchestra (1948), Le Chant du Monde
- De la poésie populaire juive vocal cycle for soprano, contralto, tenor and piano (1948), 26 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- De la poésie populaire juive vocal cycle for soprano, contralto, tenor and orchestra (1948), 26 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- La Chute de Berlin music from the film directed by Mikheil Chiaureli (1949), Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "La Chute de Berlin" excerpts selected by Levon Atovmian, for choir and orchestra (1949), 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Le Chant des forêts oratorio for solo tenor and solo bass, children's choir, mixed choir and orchestra (1949), 33 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Bielinski music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev (1950), DSCH
- Marche des champions de la paix for choir and piano (1950), Le Chant du Monde
- Notre chanson for bass, mixed choir and piano (1950), Le Chant du Monde
- Deux romances sur des vers de Mikhaïl Lermontov for voice and piano (1950), 8 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- L'Inoubliable Année 1919 music from the film directed by Mikheil Chiaureli (1951)
- Quatre chants sur des paroles de Evguéni Dolmatovski for high-pitched voice and piano (1950-1951), 15 mn, DSCH
- Dix chants populaires russes for soprano, contralto, tenor, bass, mixed choir and piano (1951), 27 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Le Soleil brille sur notre patrie Patriotic cantata for children's choir, mixed choir and orchestra (1952), 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatre monologues sur des vers de Pouchkine for bass and piano (1952), 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Chansons grecques arranged for voice and piano (1952-1953), Le Chant du Monde
- Deux chants extraits de "Unité" transcribed for voice and piano (1953), Le Chant du Monde
- Poème du travail (Chant de l'Unité) transcription for mixed choir and orchestra of the music of Unity (1953), Le Chant du Monde
- Joan Smith : Oiseau de paix arrangement for voice and piano (1953), DSCH
- Bili potselui song for bass and piano (1954)
- Chant des grands fleuves music for the documentary film directed by Joris Ivens, Joop Huiskens, Robert Ménégoz and Ruy Santos (1954), Le Chant du Monde
- Il y avait des baisers for bass and piano (1954), DSCH
- Cinq romances (Chansons de nos jours) for bass and piano (1954), 12 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Le Premier Détachement music from the film directed by Mikhaïl Kalatozov, for mixed choir and orchestra (1955-1956), DSCH
- Suite de la musique du film "Le Premier Détachement" for choir and orchestra (1956), 40 mn, DSCH
- Chansons espagnoles arrangements of traditional melodies, for mezzo-soprano and piano (1956), 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Trois chœurs pour le quarantième anniversaire de la Révolution d'Octobre for choir and piano (1957), partition perdue
- À la France ! for solo voice, mixed choir and piano (1958)
- stage Moscou - Tcheriomouchki operetta in three acts and five scenes (overture and 39 numbers) (1957-1958), 1 h 45 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Modeste Moussorgski : La Khovanchtchina completed and orchestrated by Shostakovich (1958-1959), 2 h 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Bielinski" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for choir and orchestra (1960), 32 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Satires (Croquis du passé) five romances for soprano and piano (1960), 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde [program note]
- Symphonie n° 13 in B flat minor, "Babi Yar", for bass solo, bass choir and orchestra (1962), 60 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Modeste Moussorgski : Chants et danses de la mort orchestration (1962), 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Katerina Ismaïlova opera in four acts, nine tableaux, revised version of Lady Macbeth of Mztsensk op. 29 (1956-1963), 2 h 45 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Alexandre Davidenko : Deux chœurs arrangement for mixed choir and orchestra of two songs by Alexander Davidenko, excerpts from the oratorio The October Road (1963), 10 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Mitchourine" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for mixed choir and orchestra (1964), 34 mn
- Cinq romances sur des textes de la revue "Le Crocodile" for bass and concert piano (1965), 10 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Préface à l'édition complète de mes œuvres et brève réflexion à propos de cette préface for bass and concert piano (1966), 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Printemps, printemps song for bass and concert piano (1967), 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Sept romances sur des poèmes d'Alexandre Blok vocal and instrumental suite for soprano, violin, cello and piano (1967), 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Sofia Perovskaïa music from the film directed by Lev Arnstam, for female choir and orchestra (1967), Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 14 in G minor, for soprano, bass, string orchestra and percussion (1969), 47 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Le Roi Lear music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev (1970), DSCH
- Six romances sur des vers de poètes anglais version for bass and chamber orchestra of opus 62 (1971), 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Gaetano Braga : Sérénade arrangement of the Leggenda da Valacca (Angel's serenade) by Gaetano Braga, for soprano, mezzo-soprano, violin and piano (1972), DSCH
- Six poèmes de Marina Tsvétaïeva suite for contralto and piano (1973), 18 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Six poèmes de Marina Tsvétaïeva version for contralto and small orchestra (1973-1974), 18 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite sur des poèmes de Michelangelo Buonarroti for bass and piano (1974), 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatre strophes du Capitaine Lebiadkine for bass and piano (1974), 10 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite sur des poèmes de Michelangelo Buonarroti version for bass and orchestra (1974), 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Chanson de la puce arrangement for bass and orchestra by Beethoven, op. 75 n ° 3, Es war einmal ein König (1975), 3 mn, DSCH
- stage L'Histoire du Pope et de son serviteur Balda adaptation as an opera in two acts by Sofia Khentova (1978), 1 h 15 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- A cappella vocal music
- Notre Russie natale s'est aguerrie dans les tempêtes a cappella choral song (1945)
- Dix poèmes sur des textes de poètes révolutionnaires of the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, for children's choir and mixed choir a cappella (1951), 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Deux adaptations de chants populaires russes for four-part choir a cappella (1957), 6 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Fidélité eight ballads for male choir a cappella (1970), 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Unspecified instrumentation
- Franz Schubert : Marche funèbre en fa majeur orchestration by Shostakovich (), DSCH
- Ludwig van Beethoven : Sonate pour piano n° 32 en do mineur op. 111 orchestration of the first movement (Maestoso) (), DSCH
- Ludwig van Beethoven : Sonate pour piano n° 8 en do mineur, "Pathétique", op. 13 orchestration of the second movement (Adagio cantabile) (), DSCH
- stage Les Tsiganes opera after Alexander Pushkin (1919-1920), DSCH
- Terres Vierges stage music for the play by A. Gorbenko and N. Lvov (1929), partition perdue
- Terres en friche stage music for the play by Arkadi Gorbenko and Nikolai Lvov (1930)
- La Compagnie verte overture for Dzerzhinsky's musical (1931), partition perdue
- L'Amour et la haine music from the film directed by Albert Gendelchtein (1934)
- Les Amies music from the film directed by Lev Arnstam (1934-1935)
- Un grand citoyen (partie I) music for the first part of the film directed by Friedrich Ermler (1937)
- Les Amis music from the film directed by Lev Arnstam (1938), DSCH
- Johann Strauss II : Sang viennois re-orchestration of Strauss's operetta by Shostakovich (1941)
- 2001
- Suite de la musique du film "Seule" excerpts selected by Dimitri Smirnov, for wind, percussion and double bass, 26 mn
- 1979
- Suite de la musique du film "L'Histoire du Pope et de son serviteur Balda" excerpts selected by Guénadi Rojdestvensky, for orchestra, 20 mn
- 1978
- stage L'Histoire du Pope et de son serviteur Balda adaptation as an opera in two acts by Sofia Khentova, 1 h 15 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1975
- Chanson de la puce arrangement for bass and orchestra by Beethoven, op. 75 n ° 3, Es war einmal ein König, 3 mn, DSCH
- Sonate pour alto et piano in C major, 29 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "La Nouvelle Babylone" excerpts selected by Guénadi Rojdestvensky, for orchestra, 50 mn
- 1974
- Quatre strophes du Capitaine Lebiadkine for bass and piano, 10 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 15 in E flat minor, 37 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Six poèmes de Marina Tsvétaïeva version for contralto and small orchestra, 18 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite sur des poèmes de Michelangelo Buonarroti for bass and piano, 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite sur des poèmes de Michelangelo Buonarroti version for bass and orchestra, 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1973
- Quatuor à cordes n° 14 in F sharp major, 27 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Six poèmes de Marina Tsvétaïeva suite for contralto and piano, 18 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1972
- Gaetano Braga : Sérénade arrangement of the Leggenda da Valacca (Angel's serenade) by Gaetano Braga, for soprano, mezzo-soprano, violin and piano, DSCH
- 1971
- Intervision six-bar orchestral fragment for Soviet television, DSCH
- Six romances sur des vers de poètes anglais version for bass and chamber orchestra of opus 62, 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 15 in A major, for orchestra, 45 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1970
- Fidélité eight ballads for male choir a cappella, 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Le Roi Lear music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev, DSCH
- Marche de la milice soviétique for wind ensemble, 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 13 in B flat minor, 18 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1969
- Boris Tichtchenko : Concerto pour violoncelle n° 1 re-orchestration, 26 mn, DSCH
- Suite de la musique du film "Une année comme une vie" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra, 22 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 14 in G minor, for soprano, bass, string orchestra and percussion, 47 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1968
- Quatuor à cordes n° 12 in D flat major, 27 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Sonate in G major, for violin and concert piano, 31 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1967
- Concerto pour violon n° 2 in C sharp minor, 29 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Octobre symphonic poem for orchestra, 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Printemps, printemps song for bass and concert piano, 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Prélude funèbre et triomphal for orchestra, 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Sept romances sur des poèmes d'Alexandre Blok vocal and instrumental suite for soprano, violin, cello and piano, 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Sofia Perovskaïa music from the film directed by Lev Arnstam, for female choir and orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- 1966
- Concerto pour violoncelle n° 2 in G major, 36 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Préface à l'édition complète de mes œuvres et brève réflexion à propos de cette préface for bass and concert piano, 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 11 in F minor, 15 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1965
- Cinq romances sur des textes de la revue "Le Crocodile" for bass and concert piano, 10 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Une année comme une vie music from the film directed by Grigori Rochal, for orchestra
- 1964
- Hamlet (tragédie de Shakespeare dans la traduction de Boris Pasternak) music for the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev, Le Chant du Monde
- L'Exécution de Stépane Razine symphonic and vocal poem for solo bass, mixed choir and orchestra, 30 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 10 in A flat major, 22 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 9 in E flat major, 26 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique de film de "Hamlet" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra, 42 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Mitchourine" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for mixed choir and orchestra, 34 mn
- 1963
- Alexandre Davidenko : Deux chœurs arrangement for mixed choir and orchestra of two songs by Alexander Davidenko, excerpts from the oratorio The October Road , 10 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Cinq entractes de l'opéra "Katerina Ismaïlova" for orchestra, 24 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Katerina Ismaïlova opera in four acts, nine tableaux, revised version of Lady Macbeth of Mztsensk op. 29, 2 h 45 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Ouverture sur des thèmes populaires russes et kirghizes in C major, for orchestra, 8 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Robert Schumann : Concerto pour violoncelle in A minor, re-orchestration, 21 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1962
- Modeste Moussorgski : Chants et danses de la mort orchestration, 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 13 in B flat minor, "Babi Yar", for bass solo, bass choir and orchestra, 60 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Tcheriomouchki music from the film (based on the operetta Op. 105) directed by Gerbert Rappaport, for orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- 1961
- Quatuor à cordes unfinished, 8 mn, DSCH
- Suite de la musique du film "Cinq Jours, cinq nuits" selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra, 32 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la trilogie des films "Maxime" excerpts selected by Lévon Atovmian, for orchestra, 20 mn
- Symphonie n° 12 in D minor, "L'Année 1917", for orchestra, 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1960
- Cinq Jours, cinq nuits music from the film directed by Lev Arnstam, for orchestra, DSCH
- Le Carillon de Novorossiïsk La Flamme de la gloire éternelle, for orchestra, 3 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 7 in F sharp minor, 12 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 8 in C minor, 19 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Satires (Croquis du passé) five romances for soprano and piano, 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde [program note]
- Suite de la musique du film "Bielinski" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for choir and orchestra, 32 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1959
- Concerto pour violoncelle n° 1 in E flat major, for cello and orchestra, 29 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Modeste Moussorgski : La Khovanchtchina completed and orchestrated by Shostakovich, 2 h 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1958
- stage Moscou - Tcheriomouchki operetta in three acts and five scenes (overture and 39 numbers), 1 h 45 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- À la France ! for solo voice, mixed choir and piano
- 1957
- Concerto pour piano n° 2 in F major, for piano and orchestra, 18 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Deux adaptations de chants populaires russes for four-part choir a cappella, 6 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Onze variations sur un thème de Glinka for piano
- Symphonie n° 11 in G minor, "L'Année 1905", for orchestra, 60 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Trois chœurs pour le quarantième anniversaire de la Révolution d'Octobre for choir and piano, partition perdue
- 1956
- Chansons espagnoles arrangements of traditional melodies, for mezzo-soprano and piano, 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Le Premier Détachement music from the film directed by Mikhaïl Kalatozov, for mixed choir and orchestra, DSCH
- Quatuor à cordes n° 6 in G major, 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Le Premier Détachement" for choir and orchestra, 40 mn, DSCH
- 1955
- Le Taon music from the film directed by Alexandre Feinzimmer, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Le Taon" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra, 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1954
- Bili potselui song for bass and piano
- Chant des grands fleuves music for the documentary film directed by Joris Ivens, Joop Huiskens, Robert Ménégoz and Ruy Santos, Le Chant du Monde
- Cinq romances (Chansons de nos jours) for bass and piano, 12 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Il y avait des baisers for bass and piano, DSCH
- Suite de la musique du film "L'Inoubliable Année 1919" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra, 24 mn
- Tarentelle for two pianos, 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1953
- Chansons grecques arranged for voice and piano, Le Chant du Monde
- Concertino in A minor, for two pianos, 8 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Deux chants extraits de "Unité" transcribed for voice and piano, Le Chant du Monde
- Joan Smith : Oiseau de paix arrangement for voice and piano, DSCH
- Poème du travail (Chant de l'Unité) transcription for mixed choir and orchestra of the music of Unity, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de ballet n° 4 excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra, 16 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 10 in E minor, for orchestra, 50 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Valse extraite d' "Unité" for orchestra, 3 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1952
- Danses des poupées for piano, 10 mn, DSCH
- Le Soleil brille sur notre patrie Patriotic cantata for children's choir, mixed choir and orchestra, 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatre monologues sur des vers de Pouchkine for bass and piano, 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 5 in B flat major, 30 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de ballet n° 3 excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra, 16 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1951
- Dix chants populaires russes for soprano, contralto, tenor, bass, mixed choir and piano, 27 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Dix poèmes sur des textes de poètes révolutionnaires of the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, for children's choir and mixed choir a cappella, 40 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- L'Inoubliable Année 1919 music from the film directed by Mikheil Chiaureli
- Quatre chants sur des paroles de Evguéni Dolmatovski for high-pitched voice and piano, 15 mn, DSCH
- Suite de ballet n° 2 excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra, 18 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Vingt-quatre préludes et fugues for piano, 2 h 32 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1950
- Bielinski music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev, DSCH
- Deux romances sur des vers de Mikhaïl Lermontov for voice and piano, 8 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Marche allemande for woodwind and percussion, DSCH
- Marche des champions de la paix for choir and piano, Le Chant du Monde
- Notre chanson for bass, mixed choir and piano, Le Chant du Monde
- 1949
- La Chute de Berlin music from the film directed by Mikheil Chiaureli, Le Chant du Monde
- Le Chant des forêts oratorio for solo tenor and solo bass, children's choir, mixed choir and orchestra, 33 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Marche joyeuse in D major, for two pianos, 3 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 4 in D major, 22 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de ballet n° 1 excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra, 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "La Chute de Berlin" excerpts selected by Levon Atovmian, for choir and orchestra, 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1948
- Concerto pour violon n° 1 in A minor, for violin and orchestra, 36 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- De la poésie populaire juive vocal cycle for soprano, contralto, tenor and piano, 26 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- De la poésie populaire juive vocal cycle for soprano, contralto, tenor and orchestra, 26 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Hymne à Moscou for choir and piano
- La Jeune Garde music from the film directed by Sergei Guerasimov, 27 mn, DSCH
- Mitchourine music from the movie directed by Alexander Dovzhenko, DSCH
- Rencontre sur l'Elbe music from the film directed by Grigory Alexandrov, for tenor solo, mixed choir and orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Rencontre sur l'Elbe" excerpts selected by the composer, for mixed choir and orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- 1947
- Ouverture de fête in A major, for orchestra, 5 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Pirogov music from the film directed by Grigori Kozintsev, for orchestra, DSCH
- Poème de la patrie patriotic cantata for mezzo-soprano, tenor, two baritones and solo bass, choir and orchestra, 16 mn, DSCH
- Suite de la musique du film "La Jeune Garde" for orchestra, 22 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Pirogov" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for orchestra, 27 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1946
- Quatuor à cordes n° 3 in F major, 33 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie pour cordes after String Quartet No.3, arrangement by Dimitri Sitkovetski, 30 mn, Sikorski
- 1945
- Cahier d'enfant seven pieces for piano, 7 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Des gens simples music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for orchestra, 12 mn, DSCH
- La Victoire du printemps two songs with orchestra, 9 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Mouvement symphonique for orchestra, 7 mn
- Notre Russie natale s'est aguerrie dans les tempêtes a cappella choral song
- Suite du "Ruisseau limpide" for orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 9 in E flat major, for orchestra, 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1944
- Annie Laurie arrangement of the Scottish song of the same name, for voice and chamber orchestra, 4 mn, DSCH
- stage Benjamin Fleischmann : Le Violon de Rotschild one-act opera, after Anton Chekhov, completed and partly orchestrated by Dmitri Shostakovich, 45 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Elle est née vaillante fille de sa patrie for tenor solo, mixed four-part choir and piano, Le Chant du Monde
- La Mer noire for solo bass, male choir and piano, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 2 in A major, 32 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Zoya" excerpts selected by Levon Avtomian, for choir and orchestra, 32 mn
- Toast à notre terre natale for solo tenor, mixed choir and piano
- Trio avec piano n° 2 in E minor, 24 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Un fleuve russe stage music for the performance of the choreographic and vocal ensemble NKVD The Great Russian River, Le Chant du Monde
- Zoya music from the film directed by Lev Arnstam, for mixed choir and orchestra, 1 h 35 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1943
- Chant de l'Armée Rouge anthem, Le Chant du Monde
- Gloire à notre patrie soviétique for mixed choir and piano, Le Chant du Monde
- Huit chansons populaires anglaises et américaines for bass and chamber orchestra, 16 mn, DSCH
- Hymne national four music settings, for voice and piano, choir and piano, choir and orchestra
- Six romances sur des vers de poètes anglais version for bass and symphony orchestra, 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Sonate n° 2 in B minor, for piano, 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 8 in C minor, for orchestra, 1 h 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1942
- Les Joueurs opera based on a short story by Nikolai Gogol (unfinished), 50 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Léningrad natal suite from the theatrical show La Patrie, 16 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Six romances sur des vers de poètes anglais for bass and piano, 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1941
- Chant d'un régiment de la garde march for bass voice, mixed choir and piano, Le Chant du Monde
- Johann Strauss II : Sang viennois re-orchestration of Strauss's operetta by Shostakovich
- Marche solennelle in D flat major, for military orchestra, 6 mn, DSCH
- Mili Balakirev : Polka in F sharp minor, arrangement of a piano piece by Balakirev, for harp duet (or ensemble), 3 mn, DSCH
- Serment au commissaire du peuple vocals for bass voice, choir and piano (or orchestra), Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 7 in C major, "Leningrad", for orchestra, 1 h 12 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Un grand jour est venu vocals for solo bass, choir and piano, Le Chant du Monde
- Vingt-sept romances arrangements for Leningrad Front concerts, for voice and piano
- 1940
- Johann Strauss II : Train de plaisir (polka) polka-gallop op. 281 orchestrated by Shostakovich for integration in a performance of The Gipsy Baron, 2 mn, DSCH
- stage Le Roi Lear stage music for Shakespeare's tragedy, for mezzo-soprano, baritone and orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Les Aventures de Korzinkina music from the film directed by Klimenti Mintz, for mixed choir and orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Modeste Moussorgski : Boris Godounov re-orchestration of the four-act opera with prologue by Mussorgsky, 2 h
- Quintette avec piano in G minor, for two violins, viola, cello and piano, 29 mn about , Le Chant du Monde
- Trois pièces for solo violin, partition perdue
- Vergnügungszug orchestration of Johann Strauss's Polka-Galop, opus 281, 2 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1939
- Suite sur des thèmes finnois seven arrangements of traditional Finnish melodies for soprano (n° 2, 4, 6 and 7), tenor (n° 4, 5, 6 and 7) and chamber orchestra, 12 mn, DSCH
- Symphonie n° 6 in B minor, for orchestra, 30 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Un grand citoyen (partie II) music for the second part of the film directed by Friedrich Ermler, DSCH
- Un souriceau stupide music for the cartoon directed by Mikhail Tsekhanovsky, for eight solo singers and small orchestra, 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1938
- L'Homme au fusil music from the film directed by Sergei Yutkevich, for orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Les Amis music from the film directed by Lev Arnstam, DSCH
- Les Faubourgs de Viborg music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Quatuor à cordes n° 1 in C major, 15 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite n° 2 for jazz orchestra, 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite pour orchestre de jazz n° 2 rebuilt and orchestrated by Gerard McBurney, 7 mn, DSCH
- 1937
- Le Clapotis des eaux song for male choir and orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Le Retour de Maxime music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for orchestra, DSCH
- Les Journées de Volotchaïevsk music from the film directed by Georgi and Sergueï Vassiliev, for male choir and orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Pierre Degeyter : L'Internationale orchestration, DSCH
- Quatre romances sur des vers de Pouchkine for bass and piano, 12 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 5 in D minor, 45 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Trois romances sur des vers de Pouchkine transcription of the first three melodies of op. 46, for bass voice and small orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Un grand citoyen (partie I) music for the first part of the film directed by Friedrich Ermler
- 1936
- Les Démons romance for high voice and piano
- stage Salut, Espagne stage music for a piece by Alexandre Afinoghenov, for orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 4 in C minor, for orchestra, 60 mn about , Le Chant du Monde
- 1935
- Cinq fragments for small orchestra, 9 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- La Jeunesse de Maxime music from the film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Le Ruisseau limpide comedy ballet in three acts, four tableaux, DSCH
- Les Amies music from the film directed by Lev Arnstam
- Suite du ballet "L'Âge d'or" for orchestra, 16 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1934
- L'Amour et la haine music from the film directed by Albert Gendelchtein
- L'Histoire du Pope et de son serviteur Balda music for the cartoon directed by Mikhail Tsekhanovsky, for chamber orchestra, DSCH
- stage La Comédie humaine stage music for a play adapted from Honoré de Balzac by Pavel Soukhotine, Le Chant du Monde
- Moderato in A minor, for cello and piano, 3 mn
- Mouvement symphonique for orchestra, DSCH
- Sonate in D minor, for cello and piano, 28 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite pour orchestre de jazz n° 1, 7 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1933
- Concerto pour piano, orchestre à cordes et trompette n° 1 in C minor, 21 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Le Grand Éclair comic opera, Le Chant du Monde
- Madrigal for tenor and piano
- Passacaglia arrangement by the composer of the intermission between scenes 4 and 5 of Lady Macbeth of the Msensk district, for organ, 6 mn
- Vingt-quatre préludes for piano, 31 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1932
- Chanson sur le contre-plan arrangement for two-part choir and piano
- stage Hamlet incidental music for Shakespeare's tragedy, DSCH
- stage Lady Macbeth du district de Mzensk opera in four acts, nine tableaux, 3 h about , DSCH
- stage Orango satirical opera in three acts and a prologue, 45 mn about
- Rencontre music from the film directed by Friedrich Ermler and Sergey Youtkevich, Le Chant du Monde
- Six romances sur des textes de poètes japonais for tenor and orchestra, 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Six romances sur des textes de poètes japonais transcription of op. 21, for tenor and piano, 13 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de l'opéra "Lady Macbeth du district de Mzensk" excerpts selected by the composer, for orchestra, 26 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique de scène de "Hamlet" suite from the stage music, for small orchestra, 23 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1931
- Deux pièces pour quatuor à cordes, 8 mn, DSCH
- La Compagnie verte overture for Dzerzhinsky's musical, partition perdue
- stage Le Boulon ballet in three acts, seven tableaux, DSCH
- Montagnes d'or music from the film directed by Sergueï Youtkévitch, for orchestra, 1 h 32 mn, DSCH
- stage Rule, Brittania ! stage music for the play by Adrian Piotrovsky, for choir and chamber orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de la musique du film "Montagnes d'or" excerpts selected by the composer, for orchestra, 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite du ballet "Le Boulon" Ballet suite n°5, excerpts selected by Alexander Gaouk, for orchestra, 27 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Tué sous condition music for a music hall revue by Vsevolod Vojévodina and Evguéni Ryss, DSCH
- 1930
- Igor Stravinsky : Symphonie de psaumes transcription for piano four hands, DSCH
- stage L'Âge d'or ballet in three acts, six scenes, DSCH
- Terres en friche stage music for the play by Arkadi Gorbenko and Nikolai Lvov
- 1929
- Christophe Colomb two orchestral pieces, for the opera Le Pauvre Christophe Colomb by Erwin Dressel, 7 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- La Nouvelle Babylone music from the silent film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for orchestra (or theater orchestra), 1 h 25 mn, DSCH
- stage La Punaise stage music for the play by Vladimir Mayakovsky, for male choir and orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- stage Le Coup de feu stage music for the comedy by Aleksandr Bezymensky, for choir and orchestra, 8 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Seule music from the silent film directed by Grigory Kozintsev and Leonid Trauberg, for choir and orchestra, DSCH
- Symphonie n° 3 in E flat major, Premier Mai, for orchestra and mixed choir, 28 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Terres Vierges stage music for the play by A. Gorbenko and N. Lvov, partition perdue
- 1928
- Domenico Scarlatti : Deux pièces transcribed from the sonatas for harpsichord L. 413 (n° 1) and L. 375 (n° 2) for wind orchestra, 7 mn, DSCH
- stage Le Nez satirical opera in three acts and ten tableaux with epilogue, 1 h 50 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite de l'opéra "Le Nez" for tenor, baritone and orchestra, 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1927
- Aphorismes ten pieces for piano, 15 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 2 in B major, dedicated to October, for orchestra and mixed choir, 20 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Vincent Youmans : Tahiti Trot (Tea for two) arrangement for orchestra of the foxtrot from the musical No, no, Nanette, 4 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1926
- Sonate n° 1 for piano, 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1925
- Deux pièces (Prélude et Scherzo) for string octet (double string quartet), 11 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Symphonie n° 1 in F minor, for orchestra, 33 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1924
- Scherzo in E flat major, for orchestra, 4 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Trois pièces for cello and piano, partition perdue
- 1923
- Trio avec piano n° 1 in C minor, 14 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1922
- Deux fables de Krylov for mezzo-soprano, women's choir and orchestra, 8 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Suite en fa dièse mineur for two pianos, 25 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Thème et variations en si bémol majeur for orchestra, 15 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1921
- Cinq préludes for piano, 6 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- L'Ane et le Rossignol for women's choir and orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- La Cigale et la Fourmi for mezzo-soprano and orchestra, Le Chant du Monde
- Nikolaï Rimski-Korsakov : Attente dans la grotte arrangement for soprano and orchestra from Opus 40 no.4 by Rimsky-Korsakov, 2 mn, DSCH
- 1920
- Huit préludes for piano, DSCH
- stage Les Tsiganes opera after Alexander Pushkin, DSCH
- Trois danses fantastiques for piano, 5 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- Trois pièces for piano, 4 mn 20 s, Le Chant du Monde
- 1919
- Dans la forêt piano trilogy, DSCH
- Scherzo in F sharp minor, for orchestra, 5 mn, Le Chant du Monde
- 1917
- Marche funèbre for piano, DSCH
- Date de composition inconnue
- Arthur Honegger : Symphonie n° 3 « Liturgique » transcription for piano four hands, DSCH
- Franz Schubert : Marche funèbre en fa majeur orchestration by Shostakovich, DSCH
- Le Gourdin arrangements of traditional melodies, for bass voice and orchestra, DSCH
- Ludwig van Beethoven : Sonate pour piano n° 32 en do mineur op. 111 orchestration of the first movement (Maestoso), DSCH
- Ludwig van Beethoven : Sonate pour piano n° 8 en do mineur, "Pathétique", op. 13 orchestration of the second movement (Adagio cantabile), DSCH
- Rayok antiformaliste for four bass solo, mixed choir, piano and narrator, 18 mn, DSCH
- Suite de la musique de "Tué sous condition" excerpts selected by Gerard McBurney, for orchestra, 39 mn, DSCH
- Suite pour orchestre de variété, 20 mn, DSCH
Bibliographie
- Liouba BOUSCANT, Les Quatuors à cordes de Chostakovitch : pour une esthétique du sujet, Paris, L’Harmattan, coll. « Univers musical », 2003.
- Dimitri CHOSTAKOVITCH, Lettres à un ami. Correspondance avec Isaac Glikman (1941-1975), Paris, Albin Michel, coll. « Domaine russe », 1994.
- Dimitri CHOSTAKOVITCH, Lady Macbeth de Mzensk ; Le Nez [livret, présentation, analyse des deux opéras], Paris, Premières Loges, Revue Avant-scène opéra, n° 141 », 1991.
- Bertrand DERMONCOURT, Dimitri Chostakovitch, Arles, Actes Sud, coll. « Classica », 2006.
- David FANNING, Laurel E. FAY, Entrée« Shostakovich », in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2e éd., Londres, Macmillan, 2001.
- Pauline FAIRCLOUGH, David FANNING (éd.), The Cambridge Companion to Shostakovich, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2008.
- David FANNING (éd.), Shostakovich studies, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1995.
- Laurel E. FAY, Shostakovich. A Life, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2000.
- Derek C. HULME, Dmitri Shostakovich. A Catalogue, Bibliography and Discography, 3e éd., Lanham, Scarecrow Press, 2002.
- Pascal HUYNH (éd.), Lénine, Staline et la musique: 1917-1953. Paris, Fayard & Cité de la musique, Coll. « Musique », 2010.
- Sofia KENTHOVA, Chostakovitch : la vie et l’œuvre [en russe], Moscou : Kompozitor, 1996 (1ère éd. en deux vol. : 1985-1986).
- Ernst KUHN, Günter WOLTER, Jaschas NEMTSOV, Andreas WEHRMEYER (et al.), Schostakowitsch-Studien [plusieurs volumes d’ouvrages collectifs), Berlin, Ernst Kuhn, 1996-…
- Frans C. LEMAIRE, Le Destin russe et la musique. Un siècle d’histoire de la Révolution à nos jours. Paris, Fayard, Coll. « Les Chemins de la musique », 2005.
- Ian MACDONALD, The New Shostakovich, New edition revised and updated by Raymond Clarke, Londres, Pimlico, 2006 (1ère éd. : Londres, Fourth Estate, 1990).
- Krzysztof MEYER, Dimitri Chostakovitch, Trad. par Odile Demange, Paris, Fayard, Coll. « Bibliothèque des grands musiciens », 1994.
- Grégoire TOSSER, Les dernières œuvres de Dimitri Chostakovitch : une esthétique musicale de la mort (1969-1975), Préface de Michel Guiomar, Paris, L’Harmattan, Coll. « Univers musical », 2000.
- Solomon VOLKOV, Chostakovitch et Staline. L’artiste et le tsar, trad. par Anne-Marie Tatsis-Botton, Monaco, Éditions du Rocher, Coll. « Anatolia », 2005 [éd. orig. 2004].
- Solomon VOLKOV, Témoignage. Les mémoires de Dimitri Chostakovitch, trad. par André Lischke, Paris, Albin Michel, 1980.
- Elizabeth WILSON, Shostakovich. A Life Remembered, Londres & Boston, Faber & Faber, 2006 (1ère éd. : 1994).
Discographie
- Shostakovich Edition (Symphonies, concertos, suites, quatuor à cordes, musique de chambre), 27 CD + DVD, Brilliant Classics, 2006.
- Intégrale des symphonies, Orchestre philharmonique de Moscou, dir. Kirill Kondrachine, 11 CD, Melodiya, 2006.
- Intégrale des quatuors à cordes, Quintette avec piano, Sviatoslav Richter (piano), Quatuor Borodine, 6 CD, Melodiya, 1997.
- Le Nez, Les Joueurs, Eduard Akimov, Valéry Belykh, etc., Orchestre philharmonique de Léningrad, Guennadi Rojdestvenski, 2 CD, Melodiya, 1998.
Vidéographie
Films documentaires
- Dimitri Chostakovitch : Chants et danses de la mort, un film de Marie-Christine Gambart (2003), Naïve, Coll. « Les Leçons de musique de Jean-François Zygel », 2005.
- Dimitri Chostakovitch : Sonate pour alto, un film de Semion Aranovitch et Alexandre Sokourov (1981), Ideale Audience International, 2005.
- Notes interditesetGuennadi Rojdestvenski : profession chef d’orchestre (2004), deux films de Bruno Monsaingeon, Ideale Audience International, 2007.
- Shostakovich Against Stalin : The War Symphonies, un film de Larry Weinstein (1997), Universal Music, 2005.
- Le Voyage de Dimitri Chostakovitch, un film de Oksana Dvornichenko et Helga Landauer (2006), Les Films du paradoxe, 2009.
DVD proposant des œuvres de Chostakovitch
- Le Boulon, Ballet du Bolchoï, Bel Air Media, 2007.
- Lady Macbeth de Mzensk, Nadine Secunde, Christopher Ventris, etc., Symphony Orchestra and Chorus of the Gran Teatre del Liceu (Barcelona), dir. Alexander Anissimov [enreg.live en 2002], EMI, 2004.
- Lady Macbeth de Mzensk, Eva-Maria Westbroek, Christopher Ventris, etc., Chœur du Nederlandse Opera & Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, dir. Mariss Jansons [enreg.live en 2002], Opus Arte Media Productions, 2009.
- Le Nez, Eduard Akimov, Alexander Lomonosov, etc., The Moscow Chamber Opera Theatre, dir. Guennadi Rojdestvenski [enreg. En 1979], Vai, 2010.
- Symphonie n° 1 in Rehearsal and Performance, The Schleswig-Holstein Festival Music Orchestra, dir. Leonard Bernstein, Euro Arts & Harmonia Mundi, 2008.
- Symphonies n° 6 et 9, Orchestre philharmonique de Vienne, dir. Leonard Bernstein, Universal Music & Deutsche Grammophon, 2006.
- Vingt-quatre préludes et fugues op. 87, Tatiana Nikolaïéva (piano), Medici Arts & Harmonia Mundi, 2008.
Liens Internet
- Centre et Association Dimitri Chostakovitch, 19bis, rue des Saints Pères – 75006 Paris, http://www.chostakovitch.org (lien vérifié en mai 2011).
- Éditions Sikorski, http://www.sikorski.de (lien vérifié en mai 2011).