Gustav Mahler: Legacy
In 1897, after months of intrigue and negotiation, during which Mahler converted to the Roman Catholic faith, he was installed as the Music Director of the Vienna Opera House. This was arguably the most prestigious job in the music world, at the end of the 19th century.
The Vienna Opera House photographed around 1890 Photo credit Imagno_Getty |
mahler_schreibtisch |
But the first few years of Mahler's tenure brought a radical new approach to the opera's productions, from the new electric lighting and special effects to the hiring of the latest and most fashionable stage designers.
Mahler's second composing hut at Maiernigg near Klagenfurt on the shores of the Wörthersee in Carinthia |
It is still in private hands, and remarkably unchanged, even down to some of Mahler's original furniture.
Gustav Mahler stayed at Villa Siegel in Maiernigg on the worthersee lake in Austria |
Mahlers_Komponierhäuschen |
Alma Maria Mahler |
In March they were married, and that summer was the first of five perfect annual vacations, when Mahler's creativity was unstoppable: the 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th symphonies were completed here.
The Adagio from the 5th was probably the closest he ever got to an undisguised outpouring of love and happiness.
Yet, in his 7th Symphony (as in almost all his works), there were memories of past grief, irony and self-doubt. In the scherzo movements in particular, as MTT explains, strange instruments and uncomfortable juxtapositions combine to create a sense of unease.
Or were these all premonitions? The "hammer-blows of fate" from the 6th Symphony seemed to be meant for Mahler himself when, in the summer of 1907, his much-loved daughter died of diptheria during a night-time thunderstorm at the lakeside house.
In turn, Mahler was diagnosed with heart-disease, left the lake house for ever and, after a series of bitter misunderstandings, quit his job with the Vienna Opera.
New York seemed to offer new beginnings to the couple.
Mahler at the Vienna Court Opera, 1903. |
Das Lied von der Erde |
In these last years, however, Mahler reached new heights of creativity by escaping back to his beloved European mountains.
Here he wrote The Song of the Earth, the masterful 9th Symphony (in which, as MTT explains, Mahler utterly reveals himself) and the heart-breaking and unfinished 10th.
In 1911, aged just 51, Mahler died.
Mahler's grave in the Grinzing cemetery, Vienna |
At his austere graveside in the pretty Vienna suburb of Grinzing, MTT pays homage to him, explaining his pivotal importance both in the history of music and in MTT's own life.
*original post date July 7, 2012
*Source:video.pbs.org
Wonderful! Happy Birthday Mahler. I was listening to the Adaggiato of his Fifth Symphony last week...beautiful stuff.
ReplyDeleteGlad you like this, Okei....
ReplyDeleteMusic always liked
to tell stories, even,
without the use of words.
What we can hear
in particular in
the Adagietto is
tenderness, dreaming,
and a sense of yearning,
full of hope.
The Adagietto from
Gustav Mahler's Symphony No 5
is one of the best-known,
least-understood and
most abused pieces in
the entire canon
of classical music.
In its rightful place,
it is the 4th movement:
Adagietto - Sehr langsam (Very slow)
it is one of the great
symphonies of the
late Romantic period,
composed in 1902 and
given its first performance
in Cologne in October 1904.
In the case of Mahler's
little Adagietto,
it had been composed as
a love token and wrote
this music when he had
just fallen in love
with Alma Schindler,
who was later to become his wife.
Thanks for the background! But played very slowly, it seems some have misinterpreted it as sad...
ReplyDelete