Gustav Mahler
"Imagine the universe beginning to sing and resound," Mahler wrote of his Symphony No. 8, the "Symphony of a Thousand." "It is no longer human voices; it is planets and suns revolving." Mahler was late Romantic music's ultimate big thinker. In his own lifetime he was generally regarded as a conductor who composed on the side, producing huge, bizarre symphonies accepted only by a cult following.
Born in 1860 in Kalischt, Bohemia, he came from a middle-class family. He entered the Vienna Conservatory in 1875, studying piano, harmony, and composition in a musically conservative atmosphere. Nevertheless, he became a supporter of Wagner and Bruckner, both of whose works he would later conduct frequently, and became part of a social circle interested in socialism, Nietzschean philosophy, and pan-Germanism. Around 1880, he began conducting and wrote his first mature work, Das klagende Lied. Mahler's conducting career advanced rapidly, moving him from Kassel to Prague to Leipzig to Budapest; he was usually either greatly respected or thoroughly despised by the performers for his exacting rehearsals and perfectionism. In 1897 he became music director of the Vienna Court Opera and then, a year later, of the Vienna Philharmonic. Mahler's conducting career permitted composition only during the summers, in a series of "composing huts" he had built in picturesque rural locations. He reserved this time for symphonies, all of them large-scale works, and song cycles. He completed his first symphony in 1888, but it met with utter audience incomprehension. In Das Lied von der Erde (The Song of the Earth), he merged the two forms into an immense song-symphony. The Viennese public largely failed to understand his music, but Mahler took their reactions calmly, accurately predicting that "My time will yet come." Meanwhile, his autocratic ways as a conductor alienated musicians. In 1901, the press and the musicians essentially forced his resignation from the Philharmonic. He married a young composition student, Alma Schindler in 1902, and they soon had two daughters. By 1907 Mahler was increasingly away from Vienna, conducting his own works, and thus he resigned from the opera as well. Just after accepting the position of principal conductor of New York's Metropolitan Opera, but before leaving Vienna, Mahler's older daughter, age four, died from scarlet fever and diphtheria, and he learned he himself had a defective heart valve. In New York, he was impressed by the caliber of talent and quickly gained audience approval. In 1909 he became conductor of the New York Philharmonic, which he found much more agreeable than opera work by this time. The following year, he had a triumphant premiere of his massive Symphony No. 8 in Munich. Despite the professional successes, his personal life suffered another blow when his and Alma's marriage began to deteriorate. They stayed together, and after he became ill in February 1911, she saw to it that he made it back to Vienna, where he died on May 18.
The conductors Bruno Walter, Otto Klemperer, Willem Mengelberg, and Maurice Abravanel kept Mahler's legacy alive, and Mahler's are now among the most often recorded of any symphonies. His frequent incorporation of vocal elements into symphonic writing brought to full fruition a process that had begun with Beethoven's Symphony No. 9, demonstrating his music's firm roots in the Germanic classical tradition. However, it was his huge tapestries of shifting moods and tones, ranging from tragedy to bitter irony (often explicitly indicated in performance directions), from café music to evocations of the sublime, that portended a century in which multiplicity ruled.
© Rovi Staff /TiVo
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Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Kerstin Thorborg, Carl Martin Ohmann
Classique - Paru chez Int - Bertus le 11 oct. 2016
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Symphony No. 4, Adagio from Symphony No. 10
Classique - Paru chez Pipeline Music le 9 juin 2006
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Gustav Mahler, Symphony No. 4 In G
Classique - Paru chez Classical.com Music le 16 févr. 2009
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Mahler: Symphony Nos. 5 & 7 "The Song of the Night " (Gustav Mahler, Kyril Kondrashin, Moscow RTV Large Symphony Orchestra)
Classique - Paru chez Denon le 1 janv. 2009
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Symphony No.1 In D Major, "Titan"
The Ljubljana Symphony Orchestra
Musique symphonique - Paru chez Stradivari Classics le 1 janv. 1987
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Mahler
Classique - Paru chez Cobra Entertainment LLC. le 26 nov. 2013
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Mahler: Symphony No. 1 in D Major "Titan" & Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen
Gustav Mahler, Igor Markevitch, Orchestre National de France, Orchestra Sinfonica Nazionale della RAI di Torino, Eugenia Zareska, Carl Schuricht
Classique - Paru chez Stradivarius le 30 janv. 1989
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Mahler: The Song of The Earth
Classique - Paru chez Tuxedo Music le 4 avr. 2013
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Mahler: Lieder
Gustav Mahler, Friedrich Rückert, Hermine Haselbock, Russell Ryan
Classique - Paru chez Bridge Records le 9 août 2011
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Mahler: Symphony No. 1
Prague Symphony Orchestra, Libor Pešek
Classique - Paru chez Clarton, Edit, Music Vars Corporation, s. r. o. le 15 déc. 1998
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Classically Mahler
Classique - Paru chez UME - Global Clearing House le 11 janv. 2021
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Kubelik Conducts Mahler: Symphony No. 1
Classique - Paru chez Urania le 21 avr. 2022
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Mahler: Kindertotenlieder, Prokofiev: Symphony No. 3
Classique - Paru chez Pipeline Music le 28 nov. 2006
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Gustav Mahler, Symphony No. 1 In D (Titan)
Classique - Paru chez Classical.com Music le 16 févr. 2009
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Mahler: Symphonies 1 & 3
Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra
Classique - Paru chez BPO Live le 6 juin 2005
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Gustav Mahler, Los Grandes de la Música Clásica
Classique - Paru chez Piros - Lucas le 2 juil. 2015
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Brahms, Mahler: Lieder
Johannes Brahms, Gustav Mahler, Alma Maria Mahler-werfel
Classique - Paru chez UME - Global Clearing House le 22 mai 2021
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Mahler: Symphony No. 5 (Studio)
Classique - Paru chez Phoenix USA le 1 nov. 1988
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Classical Creations: Mahler
Classique - Paru chez UME - Global Clearing House le 9 sept. 2022
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Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde
Radio Symphony Orchestra Ljubljana, Zeger Vandersteene, Glenys Linos
Classique - Paru chez Blaricum CD Company (B.C.D.) B.V. le 17 mars 2014
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Gustav Mahler, Symphony No. 1 In D ('Titan')
Classique - Paru chez Classical.com Music le 16 févr. 2009
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