The Fall of the Soviet Union: Why the Superpower Collapsed — Fexingo History

The Last Soviet Composer: Shostakovich's Final Symphony and the Empire's Silence

8 min · 26 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Composer: Shostakovich's Final Symphony and the Empire's Silence

Descripción

In this episode of The Fall of the Soviet Union, Lucas and Luna explore the final years of Dmitri Shostakovich, the Soviet Union's most celebrated composer. They discuss his fraught relationship with the state—from the denunciation in Pravda in 1936 to his forced membership in the Communist Party—and how his music became a coded chronicle of life under Stalin and beyond. The conversation focuses on his last major work, the Viola Sonata, composed in 1975 as he was dying and the Soviet project was still standing. Lucas unpacks how Shostakovich used musical ciphers (DSCH), quotes from his own earlier works, and revolutionary songs like 'Tormented by Grievous Bondage' to create a devastating commentary on suffering and survival. The episode also examines the 1979 testaments published in the West and the controversy over whether Shostakovich truly opposed the regime or was a loyal communist. Through the lens of one dying artist, the hosts illuminate the moral compromises that haunted the Soviet intelligentsia—and how art outlasts empire. #Shostakovich #SovietMusic #ViolaSonata #DSCH #PravdaDenunciation #StalinEra #ZhdanovDecree #Testament #SolomonVolkov #MusicalCipher #SovietIntelligentsia #ColdWarCulture #LastSovietComposer #Gorbachev #Perestroika #History #FexingoHistory #SovietUnion Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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151 episodios

Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Envoy: How Shevardnadze Bet on the End

The Last Soviet Envoy: How Shevardnadze Bet on the End

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the role of Eduard Shevardnadze, Mikhail Gorbachev's foreign minister, whose relentless push for disarmament and withdrawal from Eastern Europe ultimately dismantled the Soviet empire from within. They trace his journey from a Soviet loyalist in the Georgian KGB to a key architect of the end of the Cold War. The conversation covers the Shevardnadze-Gorbachev partnership, the 'New Thinking' doctrine, the decision not to intervene in the 1989 revolutions, the fall of the Berlin Wall, the reunification of Germany against Soviet hardliner opposition, and Shevardnadze's dramatic resignation in December 1990 warning of impending dictatorship. They also touch on his later role in Georgia's Rose Revolution. This episode reveals how one man's decision to abandon empire helped seal the USSR's fate. #Shevardnadze #Gorbachev #Perestroika #NewThinking #ColdWar #EasternEurope #BerlinWall #GermanReunification #SovietForeignPolicy #Resignation #RoseRevolution #Georgia #WarsawPact #Disarmament #Glasnost #History #FexingoHistory #USSR Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

11 de jul de 20267 min
Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Coup: How the GKChP Tried to Save an Empire

The Last Soviet Coup: How the GKChP Tried to Save an Empire

August 1991. The Soviet President is on vacation in Crimea when a shadowy committee of hardliners—the GKChP—declares a state of emergency and sends tanks into Moscow. In this episode, Lucas and Luna revisit the three days that sealed the USSR's fate. They walk through the coup's clumsy execution: the bewildering 'Fairy Tale' press conference, Boris Yeltsin's tank-top defiance, the nervous soldiers who refused to fire. They explore why the plotters—Kryuchkov, Yazov, Pavlov—thought they could freeze history, and how Gorbachev's wiretapped phone calls revealed his isolation. They also examine the quieter drama: the Leningrad mayor's resistance, the Baltic republics' pivot to independence, and the moment the world realized the Soviet military would not shoot its own people. This is the story of a coup that wasn't a coup, a last gasp that became a death rattle. #GKChP #AugustCoup #SovietCollapse #Moscow #BorisYeltsin #MikhailGorbachev #SovietUnion #Perestroika #Glasnost #ColdWar #WhiteHouseMoscow #VladimirKryuchkov #DmitryYazov #ValentinPavlov #AlexanderRutskoi #Leningrad #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Vote: How a Referendum Doomed the Union

The Last Soviet Vote: How a Referendum Doomed the Union

In March 1991, Mikhail Gorbachev called a nationwide referendum on preserving the Soviet Union. Over 76% of voters said 'yes' — yet less than nine months later, the USSR ceased to exist. This episode unpacks the contradiction: how a democratic mandate for unity became the legal and moral wedge that tore the country apart. Lucas and Luna explore the mechanics of the March 17, 1991 referendum, the six republics that boycotted it, and the competing 'yes' on Yeltsin's Russian presidency that fundamentally changed the question. They trace how the referendum's ambiguous wording allowed both unionists and nationalists to claim victory, how the results were weaponized in the Novo-Ogaryovo negotiations, and how the August Coup shattered the fragile consensus the vote had built. The episode also looks at the lesser-known referendum in Ukraine on December 1, 1991, where over 90% voted for independence — including in heavily Russian-speaking regions. A story of how asking the wrong question at the right moment can change history. #SovietUnion #Referendum1991 #Gorbachev #Yeltsin #NovoOgaryovo #UkrainianIndependence #AugustCoup #Perestroika #Glasnost #USSR #RussianHistory #ColdWarHistory #MikhailGorbachev #BorisYeltsin #History #FexingoHistory #1991 #CollapseOfUSSR Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
Portada del episodio The Last Soviet Wedding: Marriage at the Empire's End

The Last Soviet Wedding: Marriage at the Empire's End

In the final years of the USSR, the state-run wedding ceremony — the ZAGS — became a strange battleground between official ideology and private desire. This episode follows one couple, Natasha and Sergei, who married in Moscow in December 1991, just weeks before the Soviet flag was lowered. Their story illuminates how the crumbling system still controlled everyday rituals: the mandatory Palace of Weddings, the state-issued champagne, the Lenin corner in every reception hall. We explore the history of Soviet marriage law from the 1917 decrees that abolished church weddings to the 1969 family code that required two weeks' notice, blood tests, and a civil ceremony. We hear about the underground wedding trade — black market dresses, bribed officials, samizdat wedding cards. And we examine how the collapse of the Soviet economy turned even a simple marriage into a test of survival. Drawing on memoirs, oral histories, and rare archival footage of a 1991 ZAGS ceremony, this episode reveals the intimate side of an empire's last days. #SovietWeddings #ZAGS #Moscow1991 #NatashaAndSergei #SovietFamilyCode #LastSovietMarriage #Perestroika #Glasnost #SovietRituals #StateCeremony #WeddingBribery #Samizdat #LeninCorner #SovietChampagne #USSR #History #FexingoHistory #SovietLife Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

9 de jul de 20266 min
Portada del episodio The Last Soviet General Strike: Miners Who Broke the Kremlin

The Last Soviet General Strike: Miners Who Broke the Kremlin

In the summer of 1989, 300,000 coal miners walked off the job in Kuzbass, Donbass, and Vorkuta. Their strikes weren't about communism or capitalism — they demanded soap, tea, and real political power. This episode follows the miners' committees that bypassed the Communist Party, the Republic of Kuzbass that briefly declared sovereignty, and how the strike committees became the first independent workers' movement in Soviet history. We explore the role of Vyacheslav Golikov, the Mezhdurechensk strike that started it all, and why Gorbachev's concessions only accelerated the collapse. For listeners who already know the familiar story of Yeltsin and the tanks, this is the ground-level view: how ordinary citizens — armed with nothing but picket signs and a willingness to stop production — brought the Soviet economy to its knees. #SovietUnion #CoalMiners #1989Strikes #Kuzbass #Donbass #Vorkuta #Perestroika #Gorbachev #VyacheslavGolikov #Mezhdurechensk #StrikeCommittees #WorkersMovement #EconomicCollapse #RepublicOfKuzbass #SovietHistory #ColdWar #EasternEurope #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

9 de jul de 20265 min