Preceded by "Gustav Mahler — Symphony No.1 (Part 1 & Part 2)"
Continued here: "Gustav Mahler — Symphony No.2 (Part 2)"
The gestation period for the Second Symphony was the longest of any of Mahler’s symphonies, and with nearly 59 months of labor—from the first sketches on July 8th 1888 to the final touches on March 29th 1894—it is only appropriate that the resulting baby should be a musical elephant of grand proportions.
At ~80 minutes (usually a few more, occasionally a few less), it is not the longest of Mahler’s symphonies (the Third is), nor the most opulently orchestrated (the Eight is). But it has one of the boldest opening movements (as “Totenfeier” it could and did stand on its own as a symphonic poem) and a grandiose finale that is composed so that it must, invariably, be overwhelming. For someone who never had any resounding success or external encouragement as a composer, this Second Symphony is almost more impressive than his First.
Moving, in the interim, from jobs in Leipzig via Budapest to Hamburg and dealing with personal tragedies (his sister and mother died), Mahler finally took to working again on the Second in the summer of 1893: he incorporates, transforms, and expands his Wunderhorn songs “Des Antonius von Padua Fischpredigt” (“St.Anthony’s Sermon to the Fishes”) and “Urlicht” into the work as the third and fourth movements*, and returns to the sketches of the slow second movement. (The movement order was actually in limbo for quite some time, which is good to know when that discussion pops back up with the Sixth Symphony.)
Condensing his own thematic analysis of the symphony, Richard Specht describes the four (five) movements’ themes as: “Hero’s lament”, “Reflection” (“A ray of sunlight from the Hero’s past life”), “Life’s Dance of Shadows”, and “Resurrection”. The last movement progresses from anticipating the last judgment and hearing the trumpet of the apocalypse to the chorus of the saints after suspenseful silence which cumulates in a declaration of universal love. Hence the nickname “Resurrection”, especially when Mahler once described the earlier Scherzo with these words: “The world and life become for him [the hero] a disordered apparition; disgust for all being and becoming grip him with an iron fist”. The movement later inspired Luciano Berio for his “Sinfonia”.
Just the last movement, for which Mahler envisioned a grand choir—unfavorable comparison to Beethoven’s 9th by critics be damned—refused to get under way. Only when he attended a memorial service for the great conductor Hans von Bülow did the break-through come. Just a few years earlier von Bülow had reacted very discouragingly when Mahler played through the first movement on the piano for him. Apparently this champion of his contemporaries Wagner, Brahms, and then Richard Strauss, the most important man in German music of his time, had made a face and then said, without a trace of humor: “If what I have heard here is music, I understand nothing about music… compared with this, Tristan is a Haydn symphony.” But now Mahler witnessed the chorale setting of Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock’s secular song “Auferstehn, ja Auferstehn” which enjoyed brief popularity in the 19th century, and he immediately knew he had found the text needed to compose this symphonic-choral apotheosis that leaves no listener since its 1895 Berlin premiere untouched.
G.Mahler, Sy.2, P.Boulez / Schäfer, DeYoung / WPh DG UK | DE | FR G.Mahler, Sy.2, G.Kaplan / Moore, Michael / WPh DG UK | DE | FR |
G.Mahler, Sy.2, I.Fischer / Milne, Remmert / Budapest FO Channel Classics UK | DE | FR |
G.Mahler, Sy.2, C.Abbado / Gvazava, Larsson / Lucerne FO DG UK | DE | FR G.Mahler, Sy.2, C.Abbado / Neblett, Horne / CSO DG UK | DE | FR |
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The font used in the title is “Galadriel Regular”
Find a list of the ex-WETA Mahler Posts here: http://ionarts.blogspot.com/2009/12/mahler-survey.html
Discographies on ionarts: Bach Organ Cycles | Beethoven Piano Sonata Cycles I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX | Beethoven Symphony Cycles Index | Beethoven String Quartet Cycles | Bruckner Symphony Cycles | Dvořák Symphony Cycles | Shostakovich Symphony Cycles | Shostakovich String Quartet Cycles | Sibelius Symphony Cycles | Mozart Keyboard Sonata Cycles
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Thank you excellent. May I ask what the name of the painting is ?
ReplyDeleteYou sure may. (And sorry for getting back so late. No notifications of these comments, sadly.)
ReplyDeleteIt's the excellent Oskar Laske's equally excellent Fischpredigt (1919).