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User:Pablo Tornielli/sandbox

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Testing:

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References

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  1. ^ Kovnatskaya, Ludmila (2005). "An Episode in the Life of a Book". In Brown, Malcolm Hamrick (ed.). A Shostakovich Casebook. Indiana University Press. p. 113. ISBN 9780253218230. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  2. ^ Fay, Laurel E. (2005). "Volkov's Testimony Reconsidered". In Brown, Malcolm Hamrick (ed.). A Shostakovich Casebook. Indiana University Press. p. 48. ISBN 9780253218230. Retrieved 31 March 2017. Maxim gave a comparable assessment to the British musicologist David Fanning, who asked him in 1991 if his attitude toward Testimony had changed in any way: "No, I would still say it's a book about my father, not by him. The conversations about Glazunov, Meyerhold, Zoshchenko are one thing. But it also contains rumours, and sometimes false rumours. It's a collection of different things —real documentary fact and rumour. But what's more important is that when we take this book in our hands we can imagine what this composer's life was like in this particular political situation —how difficult, how awful it was under the Stalin regime."