The fair author’s manuscript of the Concertino for two Pianos, op. 94, is kept in the Glinka State Central Museum of Musical Culture, and the rough draft is kept in Dmitri Shostakovich’s Archive. The Concertino was first published in 1955 by the USSR Music Foundation. It came out no later than September, which is shown by the author’s presentation inscription on the copy kept in Dmitri Shostakovich’s Archive: “To dear Maxim Shostakovich, first performer of this composition, from your loving D. Shostakovich. 26/IX 1955, Moscow”. Subsequently, during the composer’s life time, the Concertino was republished several times (in 1966, 1970, and 1975) by Muzyka Publishers.
There are rather a large number of various minor differences between the 1966 edition (edited by Elena Khoven) and the author’s manuscript and the 1955 edition, which is very close to the author’s manuscript. In particular, in the edition edited by Elena Khoven, a well-known pedagogue (she was Maxim Shostakovich’s professor at the Central Music School), great attention is given to instructional and didactic aspects, for example, to the fingering, which is totally absent in the author’s manuscript. the later editions reproduce Elena Khoven’s edition.Unfortunately, there is no information about the extent to which this edition was coordinated with the author.
In 1983, another edition of the Concertino came out in Volume 13 of Dmitri Shostakovich’s Collected Works (Muzyka Publishers, Moscow), which was also based on the 1966 version. this edition, which was the least successful of all, totally left out the composer’s rehearsal numbers, which are vital for the performers, from the music text without any explanation.
When preparing this publication, the texts of the author’s manuscript and first lifetime edition were used. In some cases, versions of the texts in the 1966 and later editions were taken into account.