Festive Overture
Dmitri Shostakovich wrote the Festive Overture long before its first public performance.
The premiere was held on 6 November 1954 at the Bolshoi Theatre, where the overture was performed by the theatre’s symphony orchestra under the baton of Aleksandr Melik-Pashayev.
The Festive Overture quickly became popular among musicians and the public. During the 1954/1955 concert season, it was performed several times in Moscow: on 27 November in the Grand Hall of the Conservatory at Shostakovich’s concert-portrait (Moscow State Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor Samuil Samosud), on 28 November during another concert-portrait at the House of Scientists (the same performers as on 27 November), on 7 March and 22 April 1955 in the Grand Hall of the Conservatory (the same performers); on 23 February in Leningrad in the Grand Hall of the Philharmonic (Leningrad State Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, conductor Yevgeni Mravinsky) and on 22 April (Leningrad State Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, conductor Karl Eliasberg). The following season, the overture was also performed repeatedly in auditoriums of Moscow10 and Leningrad. Around the same time, the first overseas premieres of the overture were held—it was performed on 16 November 1955 in the USA by the Utah Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Maurice Abravanel, and on 16 February 1956, the composition was performed by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Dimitri Mitropoulos. In 1962, the overture was performed for the first time in Great Britain: on 27 August during the London Royal Albert Hall ‘Prom’ by the Philharmonic Orchestra of the BBC under the baton of George Hurst and on 3 September during the Edinburgh Festival dedicated to Shostakovich’s oeuvre in Asher Hall by the Royal Scottish National Orchestra under the baton of Alexander Gibson.
Shostakovich’s Festive Overture was repeatedly performed during prominent international events—for example, at the 6th and 7th World Youth and Student Festivals, the first of which was held in Moscow in July-August 1957, becoming the largest event of this kind, and the second in July-August 1959 in Vienna. On 19 July 1980, the introductory fanfares of the overture sounded as a peculiar musical symbol at the opening ceremony of the 22nd Summer Olympic Games held in Moscow.
The full score of the Festive Overture was first published in 1955 (Muzfond, Moscow). The next publication appeared in 1970 (Muzyka Publishers, Moscow). In 1984, the score was printed in Vol. 11 of Dmitri Shostakovich’s Collected Works (Muzyka Publishers, Moscow). Several arrangements of the overture were also published—Valery Petrov’s for large wind orchestra (Muzgiz, Moscow, 1958), Mikhail Vakhutinsky’s for wind orchestra (Muzyka Publishers, Moscow, 1977), for piano four hands by Emin Khachaturian (Sovetskiy kompozitor Publishers, Moscow, 1960) and Aron Bubelnikov (Muzgiz, Leningrad, 1961). The score was first published overseas in 1957 in New York (Leeds Publishers); then the overture was printed twice by Edwin F. Kalmus Publishers (Boca Raton, USA). In 1997, the score was published by a Japanese publishing house, Zen-On Music (republished with Sikorski in 2012). There are also several adaptations of the overture for wind orchestra published overseas: by Donald Hunsberger (MCA Music, 1965; republished in 2000 by Schirmer and Hal Leonard), Peter Kitson (Kirklees Music, 1992) and Takeda Takakhashi (De Haske, 1997) and others.