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GUSTAV MAHLER

7th July 1860 --- 18th May 1911

Gustav Mahler(born 1860, Kaliste, Bohemia, Austrian Empire--died 1911, Vienna, Austria), Austrian-Jewish composer and conductor noted
for his 10 symphonies and various songs with orchestra,  which drew together many different strands of Romanticism.  Although his music
was largely ignored for 50 years after  his death, Mahler was later  Stevenarded as an important  forerunner of 20th-century  techniques of
composition and an acknowledged influence on such composers as Arnold Schoenberg, Dmitry Shostakovich, and Benjamin Britten.

Mahler was the son of an Austrian-Jewish tavern keeper  living in the Bohemian  village of Kaliste  (German: Kalischt),  in the southwestern
corner of the modern  Czech Republic,  a few months later the  family moved to the nearby  town of Jihlava (German: Iglau),  where Mahler
spent his childhood and youth.  These simple facts provide a first clue to his tormented personality,  he was afflicted by racial tensions from
the beginning of his life.  As part of a German-speaking Austrian minority,  he was an outsider among the indigenous  Czech population and
as a Jew,  an outsider  among that Austrian minority,  later  in Germany,  he was an outsider  as both an Austrian from  Bohemia and a Jew.

Mahler's life  was also complicated  by the tension  existing between his parents.  His father,  a self-educated  man of fierce vitality,  he had
married a delicate woman from a cultured family, and, coming to resent her social superiority, he resorted to physically maltreating her.  In
consequence Mahler was alienated  from his father and had a strong mother fixation,  which even manifested itself physically,  a slight limp
was unconsciously adopted in imitation of his mother's lameness.  Furthermore,  he inherited his mother's weak heart,  which was to cause
his death at the age of 50. Finally, there was a constant childhood background of illness and death among his 11 brothers and sisters.

This unsettling early background may explain the nervous tension, the irony and skepticism, the obsession with death, and the unremitting
quest to discover  some meaning in life  was to pervade Mahler's life and music.  But it does not explain the prodigious energy,  intellectual
power, and inflexibility of  purpose that  carried him to  the heights as both a  master conductor  and a composer.  The positive elements in
his makeup stemmed no doubt from his father's side of the family, as did his great physical vitality.  Despite his inherited heart trouble,  he
was an extremely active man--a ruthless musical director, a tireless swimmer, and an indefatigable mountain walker.

His musical talent revealed itself early and  significantly.  Around the age of four,  fascinated by the military music at  a nearby barracks and
the folk music sung by the Czech working people, he reproduced both on the accordion and on the piano and began composing pieces of his
own. The military and popular styles, together with the sounds of  nature became main sources of his mature inspiration. At 10 he made his
debut as a pianist in Jihlava and at 15 was so proficient musically that he was accepted as a pupil at the Vienna Conservatory. After winning
piano and  composition prizes and  leaving with a diploma,  he supported himself  by sporadic  teaching while trying to win  recognition as a
composer.  He failed to  win the Conservatory's  Beethoven  Prize for  composition with his  first significant work,  the cantata  Das klagende
Lied (completed 1880; The Song of Complaint), he turned to conducting for a more  secure livelihood, reserving  composition for the lengthy
summer vacations.

The next 17 years saw  his ascent to the top  of his chosen profession.  From conducting musical farces  in Austria, he  rose through various
provincial opera houses,  including important engagements at Budapest and Hamburg,  became artistic director of the  Vienna Court Opera
in 1897, at the age of 37. As a conductor he had won general acclaim, but as a composer,  during this first creative period,  he immediately
encountered the public's lack of  comprehension that was to confront  him for most of his career.  Since Mahler's conducting life centred in
the traditional manner on the opera house,  it is at first surprising that his whole mature  output was entirely symphonic  (his 40 songs are
not  true lieder  but embryonic  symphonic movements,  some of which, in fact,  provided a partial basis for  the symphonies).  But Mahler's
unique aim  partially influenced by the school of Richard Wagner and Franz Liszt, was essentially autobiographical--the musical expression
of a personal view of the world and for this purpose, song and symphony were more appropriate than  the dramatic medium of opera: song
because of  its inherent  personal lyricism,  and symphony  (from the Wagner and Liszt  point of view) because of  its subjective expressive
power.

Each of Mahler's  three  creative  periods produced a symphonic trilogy.  All of his three  symphonies of his first  period were  conceived on a
programmatic basis  (i.e. founded on a nonmusical story or idea),  the actual programs  (later discarded) being  concerned with establishing
some ultimate ground for existence in a world dominated by pain, death,  doubt  & despair.  To this end, he followed  the example of Ludwig
van Beethoven's  Symphony No. 6 in F Major  (Pastoral) and Hector Berlioz'  Symphonie fantastique in  building symphonies  with more than
the then  traditional four movements,  that of Wagner's music-dramas  in expanding the time span, enlarging  the orchestral resources,  and
indulging in uninhibited emotional expression; that of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 in D Minor (Choral) in introducing texts sung by soloists
and chorus,  and that of  certain  chamber works by  Franz Schubert  in introducing music  from his  own songs  (settings  of poems from the
German folk anthology Des Knaben Wunderhorn [The Youth's Magic Horn] or of poems by himself in a folk style).

These procedures, together with Mahler's own tense and rhetorical style, phenomenally vivid orchestration,  and ironic use  of popular style
music, resulted in  three symphonies  of unprecedentedly  wide contrasts  but unified by his unmistakable  creative personality  and his firm
command of  symphonic structure.  The program of the purely orchestral Symphony No. 1 in D Major  (1888, one of its f ive movements was
later discarded) is autobiographical of his youth,  the joy of life becomes clouded over by an  obsession with death  in the macabre "Funeral
March in the Manner of Callot"  (basically a parody of popular music), which is eventually routed in the arduous and brilliant finale. The five
movement Symphony No. 2 (1894,  popular title Resurrection) begins with  the death obsession (the first movement's  "funeral ceremony")
and culminates in an avowal of the Christian belief in immortality  (a huge finale portraying the Day of Judgment and ending  with a setting
of the 18th-century German writer Friedrich Klopstock's "Resurrection" ode involving soloists and chorus). The even vaster Symphony No.3
in D Major (1896),  also including a soloist and chorus, presents in six movements a Dionysiac vision of a great chain of being, moving from
inanimate nature to human consciousness and the redeeming love of God.

The religious element in these works is highly significant. Mahlers disturbing early background, coupled with his lack of an inherited Jewish
faith (his father was a freethinker),  resulted in a state of metaphysical torment,  which he resolved temporarily by identifying himself with
Christianity. That this was a genuine impulse there can be no doubt,  even if there was an element of expediency in  his becoming baptized
early in 1897, because it  made it easier for him to be appointed to the Vienna Opera post. The 10 years there represent  his more balanced
middle period.  His newfound faith  and now his new high  office brought a full and confident maturity,  which was further  stabilized by his
marriage in 1902 to Alma Maria Schindler, who bore him two daughters, in 1902 and 1904.

As the director of the Vienna Opera  (and for a time of  the Vienna Philharmonic Concerts),  Mahler achieved an unprecedented  standard of
interpretation and performance, which proved an almost unapproachable model for those who followed him.  A fanatical idealist,  he drove
himself and his artists with a truely ruthless energy that had proved a continual inspiration and with a  complete disregard for his personal
considerations that won him many enemies who worked for his dismissal. At this time too, he made a number of tours and became famous
over much of Europe as a conductor.  He continued his  recently acquired habit  of devoting his summer vacations,  in the Austrian Alps,  to
composing and vsince in his case this  involved a ceaseless expenditure of  spiritual and nervous energy,  he thereby  placed an intolerable
double strain on his frail constitution.

Most of the works of this middle period reflect the fierce dynamism of Mahler's full maturity. An exception is Symphony No. 4 (1900 known
popularly as the Ode to Heavenly Joy) which was more of a pendant to the first period and conceived in six movements (two of which were
eventually discarded), it has a Wunderhorn song finale for soprano, which was  originally intended as a movement for  Symphony No.3 and
which evokes a naive peasant conception of the Christian heaven. At the same time, in dispensing with an explicit program and chorus and
coming near  to the normal orchestral symphony,  it does foreshadow the middle-period trilogy, Nos. 5, 6, and 7.  These were all just purely
orchestral, with a new, hardedged, contrapuntal clarity of instrumentation, and devoid of programs altogether, yet each clearly embodies a
spiritual  conflict that reaches  a conclusive  resolution. No. 5 (1902.  popularly called Giant) and No. 7 (1905,  popularly called  Song of the
Night) move from darkness to light, though the light seems not the illumination  of any afterlife but the sheer exhilaration of  life on Earth.
Both symphonies have five movements.  Between them stands the work Mahler  Stevenarded as his Tragic Symphony  the  four-movement
No. 6  in A Minor (1904),  which moves  out of  darkness  only with difficulty,  and then back into total night. From these  three symphonies
onward, he ceased to adapt his songs as whole sections or movements but in each he introduced subtle allusions either to his Wunderhorn
songs or to his settings of poems by  Friedrich Reckert, including the cycle  Kindertotenlieder (1901-04), Songs on the Deaths  of Children).

At the end of this period he composed his monumental Symphony No.8 in E Flat Major (1907) for eight soloists, double choir and orchestra
a work known as the Symphony of a Thousand, owing to the large forces it requires, though Mahler gave it no such title.  This stands apart
because its a later reversion to the expansive metaphysical tendencies of the first period and represents a consummation of them: the first
continuously choral and orchestral  symphony ever composed.  It could be called at once a massive  statement of human  aspirations and a
cry for illumination,  from both the religious  and the humanistic points of view.  The first of  its two parts,  equivalent to  a symphonic first
movement, is a setting of the medieval Catholic Pentecost hymn Veni Creator Spiritus; part two, amalgamating the three movement  types
of the traditional symphony, has for its text the mystical closing scene of J.W. von Goethe's, Faust drama the  scene of Faust's redemption.
The work marked the climax of Mahler's confident maturity but since what followed was disaster of which, he really  believed he had had a
premonition  in composing his Tragic Symphony, No.6.  This work had revealed for  the first time a superstitious element in his personality.
The finale originally  contained three climactic  blows with a large hammer,  representing "the three blows of fate which fall on a hero,  the
last one  felling him as a tree is felled (he subsequently removed the final blow from the score). Afterward he identified these as presaging
the three blows that fell  on himself in 1907, the last of which portended  his very own death, his resignation was  demanded at the Vienna
Opera, his three year old daughter, Maria, died, and a doctor diagnosed his fatal heart disease.

Thus began Mahler's last period, in which, at only the age of 47, he became a wanderer again. He was obliged to make a new reputation for
himself as a conductor in the United States directing performances at the Metropolitan Opera and becoming conductor of the Philharmonic
Society of New York; yet he went back  each summer to the Austrian countryside to compose his last works.  He returned finally to Vienna,
to die there,  in 1911. The three works  constituting his last  period trilogy, none of which  he ever heard,  are Das Lied von der Erde (1908,
The Song  of the Earth),  Symphony No.  9 (1910),  and Symphony No. 10  in F Sharp Major,  left unfinished in the form of  a comprehensive
full length sketch  (though a full  length performing version has been made  posthumously).  The first of the three again  revealed Mahler's
superstition, beginning as a song cycle (to a Chinese poem in German translations),  it then grew into "A Symphony for Tenor, Baritone (or
Contralto) and Orchestra." Yet, he would not call it "Symphony No. 9,"  believing, on the analogy of  Beethoven and Bruckner,  that a ninth
symphony must be its composer's last.  When he afterward began the actual No. 9, he said,  half jokingly, that the danger was over,  since
it was "really the tenth"; but in fact, that symphony became his last, and No. 10 remained in sketch form when he died.

This last period trilogy marked an even more decisive break with the past than had the middle period trilogy. It thus represents a threefold
attempt to come to terms with modern man's  fundamental problem--the reality of death,  which in his case had effectively  destroyed the
religious faith he had opposed to death as an imagined event. Das Lied von der Erdea six movement "song-cycle symphony" as opposed to
the  two part "oratorio  symphony," No. 8  views the  evanescence of all  things human i n veiled poetic terms--sardonic, wistful,  and grief
stricken by turns  until  it finds a  sad consolation in the beauty of  the Earth that  endures after the individual is no  longer  alive to  see it.

In the four movement No. 9, is a purely orchestral,  the confrontation with death becomes an anguished personal one,  evoking horror  and
bitterness in Mahlers most modern and prophetic movement, the "Rondo Burleske," and culminating in a finale of heartbroken resignation.
The finales of both these works end with  an extraordinary, long  drawn  disintegration of the musical texture,  suggesting dissolution,  and
the more extreme case in No.9 was for long thought to be Mahlers final comment on human existence. Growing familiarity with the sketch
of No.10, however, has suggested that he broke through to a more positive attitude: its five movements deal with the same conflict as the
two preceding works, but the resignation attained at the end of the finale is entirely serene and affirmative.

Modern critical opinion recognizes Mahler's powerful influence during  a period of musical transition.  In his works may  be found pervasive
elements foreshadowing the radical methods employed in  the 20th century,  these elements include "progressive tonality"  (ending a work
in a different key from the initial one) dissolution of tonality  (obscuring the perception of key through the constant use of  chromaticism or
harmonies  not belonging  to that key),  a breakaway from harmony  produced  by the entire  orchestra in favour  of a contrapuntal  texture
(based on interwoven melodies) for groups of solo instruments within the full orchestra; the principle of  continually varying themes rather
than merely restating them,  ironic quotation of popular styles  and of sounds from everyday life (bird calls,  bugle signals, etc.)  and on the
other hand a new way of formally unifying the symphony through the adoption of techniques subtly derived from Liszts "cyclic" method the
carrying over of themes from one movement of a work to others).In terms of the personal content of his art, it can be said of Mahler,  more
than of any  other composer,  that he  lived out  the spiritual torment of  disinherited modern man in his art,  and that the man is the music.

Copyright 1994-1998 Encyclopaedia Britannica

Last Updated on May 2025
By Steven Ritchie

And now for the Music

Thanks to Robert Van Herk for the music below.

(1397)"Symphony No.1 in D Major (1888) Mov.1". Sequenced by Robert Van Herk.

(1398)"Symphony No.1 in D Major (1888) Mov.2". Sequenced by Robert Van Herk.

(558)"Symphony No.1 in D Major (1888) Mov.3". Sequenced by Reinhold and Robert Van Herk.

Thanks to Jean-Franuois Lucarelli for the music below.

(3689)"Symphony No.1 in D Major (1888) Mov.4". Sequenced by Jean-Franuois Lucarelli.

(4305)"Symphony No. 2 in C Minor, Mov.1". Sequencer Unknown.

(4304)"Symphony No. 2 in C Minor, Mov.2". Sequencer Unknown.

(4303)"Symphony No. 2 in C Minor, Mov.3". Sequencer Unknown.

(1394)"Symphony No.4, Mov.1". Sequencer unknown.

(561)"Symphony No.4, Mov.2". Sequencer unknown

(1395)"Symphony No.4, Mov.3". Sequencer unknown

(562)"Symphony No.4, Mov.4". Sequencer unknown

(559)"Symphony No.5, Mov.4, Adagietto (Info by Ashley Barnett)". Sequenced by Luis E Juan.

(1396)"Symphony No.5, Mov.5". Sequencer unknown

NEW (4670)"Symphony No.6, Mov.1". Sequencer Unknown.

NEW (4669)"Symphony No.7, Mov.5". Sequencer Unknown.

NEW (4668)"I do not know the title". Sequencer Unknown.

NEW (4667)"I do not know the title". Sequencer Unknown.

Thanks to Joe Monzo for the music below.

(3691)"Symphony No.7 in E Minor Mov.1". Sequenced by Joe Monzo.

Thanks to Andreas Frank for the music below.

(3690)"Symphony No.9 in D Major Mov.4". Sequenced by Andreas Frank.

(560)"Das Lied Von Der Erde". Sequenced by Jun Nishio

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