The doorbell makes a shrill, “wheezy” sound. Melodic doorbell ringtones did not appear until much later.
The letterbox on the door with a slot for delivering newspapers and magazines, subscribed to in advance (usually for a year or six months), is a typical attribute of Soviet daily life.
Every morning and evening, the postman would make his rounds of the apartments and drop letters and newspapers into the narrow slot in every door.
What did the Shostakovich family subscribe to besides Pravda and Izvestia, newspapers that were a must for Soviet citizens? Naturally their choice extended to Zvezda, Oktyabr and Novy Mir, so-called thick journals.
An approximate list of the newspapers Shostakovich subscribed to can be found in a short letter the composer wrote to his secretary Rita Kornblum from the House of Composers in Staraya Ruza, where he spent his holiday in the winter of 1972: