Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra - Mahler: Symphonies Nos 1-10 & Das Lied von der Erde (2012) [BDRip]
BAND/ARTIST: Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra
- Title: Mahler: Symphonies Nos 1-10 & Das Lied von der Erde
- Year Of Release: 2012
- Label: RCO [RCO 12102]
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) [24bit-96kHz-5.0]
- Total Time: 15:14:11
- Total Size: 36 gb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Symphony No. 1
Conducted by Daniel Harding
Performance Dates: September 30, October 1 and 2, 2009
This performance recorded live on September 30, 2009
Daniel Harding is a young British conductor who has risen incredibly fast in a rather short amount of time, helped along by some felicitous mentoring by Sir Simon Rattle. Harding brings a youthful insouciance to his interpretation of Mahler's First, often given the soubriquet "The Titan". Things don't get off to a particularly promising start, with some minor synchronization issues in the "calm before the storm" opening which might remind some less classically inclined listeners just a little bit of the opening motive of the original Star Trek theme. But once the orchestra kicks into gear, Harding marshals the forces extremely well and his conducing of the almost lunatic Ländler second movement is quite impressive. The minor keyed Bruder Martin (AKA Frère Jacques) is another highlight, but the final bristling movement proves to be this performance's true touchstone. Harding shapes the dynamics very well and the orchestra plays with incredible vigor and precision.
Symphony No. 2
Conducted by Mariss Jansons
Ricarda Merbeth, Soprano
Bernarda Fink, Mezzo-Soprano
Performance Dates: December 3, 4, and 6, 2009
This performance recorded live on December 3. 2009
Mahler was preoccupied with extremely weighty matters throughout his compositional life, and his Second Symphony (The Resurrection) deals with two interrelated subjects which were something of an obsession for the composer, death and the afterlife. One of the nice bonuses of this box set is that it includes a performance of Totenfeier (Funeral Rites), which is an early version of this symphony's first movement. That first movement is indicative of what evidently distances the composer from some listeners, for it segues from brooding minor key ruminations to sudden bursts of glorious major key passages at the drop of a veritable hat. But that's part of the dialectic that makes Mahler such a compelling figure in modern music. Mariss Jansons is able to bridge these huge changes in tempo, style and key with grace and élan, and this is in fact one of the better performances of the Second that I've heard recently. The singing by Bernarda Fink (a mezzo taking the role typically assigned to an alto) is especially lovely. Jansons' handling of the potentially unruly final movement is also very impressive, with finely nuanced transitions between the many contrasting moods and themes. Keep your eyes peeled for some brief but fun looks at the brass contingent out in an antechamber during this movement, helping to create one of Mahler's "spatial" effects. (Also note the somewhat comical sight of a clarinet player back in the concert hall putting in ear plugs before a particularly tempestuous moment.) One odd thing about this performance: the audience applauds between the first and second movements. That's a definite "no no" in the hoity toity world of classical music.
Symphony No. 3
Conducted by Mariss Jansons
Bernarda Fink, Mezzo-Soprano
Performance Dates: February 3, 4, and 5, 2010
This performance recorded live on February 3 and 4, 2010
The Third Symphony is a not piece for the faint of heart or the tender of posteriors, for even a "quick" performance of this incredibly huge masterpiece typically runs well over an hour and a half (for the record, this performance clocks in at a somewhat lengthier than usual 103 minutes, including breaks). Mendelssohn was famous for writing music for A Midsummer Night's Dream, but Mahler envisaged this symphony as a sort of Summer's Midday Dream, a walking if not waking fantasy that incorporated the composer's rather eclectic religious sensibilities by invoking everything from Pan to Nature in one hugely disparate piece of orchestral writing. Once again Mariss Jansons forges a uniquely consistent approach to all of the roiling content which can make this incredibly long piece often seem inchoate to the point of chaos. The orchestra plays with fine luster, including some gorgeous solos by the concertmaster in the first movement. Once again the audience applauds between movements, but in this case it's a bit more understandable, since Bernarda Fink (once again taking a role typically assigned to an alto) makes her entrance between the first and second movements (though she doesn't sing until the fourth). Also once again we get a brass player in the antechamber watching the proceedings on closed circuit television and offering his contributions from a distance. I personally wish Fink had been mixed a little higher, something that afflicts many of the sung moments in this set, but at least part of this imbalance issue may be due to the peculiar layout of this hall, where the soloists in several of these outings are placed in back of the orchestra, just slightly in front of the larger choral masses.
Symphony No. 4
Conducted by Ivan Fischer
Miah Persson, Soprano
Performance Dates: April 22 and 23, 2010
This performance recorded live on April 22 and 23, 2010
Mahler's Fourth is an often ebullient and uncommonly melodic piece, and as such it's the perfect place to start for those wanting to test the Mahler symphonic waters. The Fourth makes a perfect companion piece to Prokofiev's Classical Symphony, for both traffic in a sort of Haydn-esque musical vocabulary, albeit one highly colored by chromaticism and odd orchestral effects. What's so pleasant in this interpretation helmed by the great Ivan Fischer is how malleable the phrasing is in what is at times an almost Neoclassical symphony. The first movement is especially notable in this regard, with wonderfully drawn out cadences and other "give and take" that makes this rather remarkably facile in terms of trundling down a symmetrically organized structure with a rather elastic approach to time and phrasing. Opera superstar Miah Persson offers a wonderfully heartfelt and lyrical "The Heavenly Life", one of Mahler's most effortlessly melodic offerings. (As an aside to those of you who are familiar with it, listen to how similar some of the musical content and orchestral flourishes are to Prokofiev's later Lieutenant Kije Suite.
Symphony No. 5
Conducted by Daniele Gatti
Performance Dates: June 23, 24, and 25, 2010
This performance recorded live on June 25, 2010
There's little doubt that Mahler had at least a little Beethoven on his mind as he wrote his Fifth. The opening trumpet motive seems almost like a topsy turvy version of Beethoven's iconic opening motive for his Fifth Symphony. Instead of Beethoven tracing of a minor triad from the fifth to the minor third, Mahler (literally) inverts that idea, starting on the tonic, then tracing upward to the minor third, fifth and ultimately the octave. There's the same "fatalistic" content to Mahler's Fifth as has often been ascribed to Beethoven's, but the two obviously couldn't be more different in terms of size, scope and ultimate musical content. Conductor Daniele Gatti may be one of the lesser known leaders to some coming to this set, but he has been a champion of Mahler's music for some time and has conducted a Mahler cycle of his own with his Orchestre National de France. He does a commendable job for the most part with this gargantuan piece, though the orchestra seems occasionally a bit timid on some entrances, leading to some minor collisions and intonation problems, mostly with the brass. I personally would have preferred a bit more precision to the playing in the second movement, which Gatti invests with a lot of energy if not a lot of nuance.
Symphony No. 6
Conducted by Lorin Maazel
Performance Dates: October 20, 21, 22 and 24, 2010
This performance recorded live on October 20, 2010
Former wunderkind Lorin Maazel has carved out a rather formidable career as a conductor and he does an admirable job with what is often seen, rightly or wrongly, as one of Mahler's more "problematic" symphonic opuses. What's odd about this perception is that in some ways the Sixth remains Mahler's most conventional piece of symphonic writing, albeit in the case of Mahler "conventional" is of course a decidedly relative term. There are still the astounding leaps of emotional content, and even the more formal supposed peccadilloes of not clearly delineating what "key" the piece is in (the first movement makes a mockery of keys, with a main motive which repeatedly ping pongs back and forth between A major and A minor). This is also the symphony that has had a somewhat muddled history in terms of how the movements should be ordered, but Maazel and the Royal Concertgebouw follow the now more or less conventional approach of placing the Scherzo second and the Andante third. This symphony is also notable for its use of percussion, including a lot of tympani, glockenspiel and, in the final movement, a hammer! (You might be forgiven in you think that's Gallagher wielding the huge "weapon", as the percussionist brings it down with so much force little pieces of wood go flying every which way.)
Symphony No. 7
Conducted by Pierre Boulez
Performance Dates: January 20 and 21, 2011
This performance recorded live on January 20 and 21, 2011
Not to be too cavalier about bandying about soubriquets, one might understand if this symphony's subtitle Song of the Night (given to it by others, not the composer) might be slightly reworked, with a tap of the hat to Mozart, as A Big Night Music. Yet another gargantuan piece that spans five movements and runs for close to eighty minutes, the Seventh continues several ideas that were put forth in the Sixth, including tempestuous changes in tempi and pure musical content, as well as an intentional ambiguity in tonal centers, fostered once again by parallel major and minor triads. It's notable that erstwhile provocateur Pierre Boulez conducts this piece, for in many ways this is one of Mahler's most "in your face" symphonies, one which completely confused audiences and critics at the time of its premiere and remained one of the composer's least appreciated pieces for decades afterwards. Part of this is no doubt due to the symphony's almost halting, stuttering introduction of various motifs which on first (and perhaps even second) listen don't have much to do with each other, but there's certainly a wealth of inspiration running throughout the work, perhaps most apparent to uninitiated listeners in some of the gorgeous, more relatively quiet and lyrical, writing for solo brass. Also note the use of such atypical instruments as the acoustic guitar in the fourth movement.
Symphony No. 8
Conducted by Mariss Jansons
Christine Brewer, Soprano
Camilla Nylund, Soprano
Maria Espada, Soprano
Stephanie Blythe, Mezzo-Soprano
Mihoko Fujimura, Alto
Robert Dean Smith, Tenor
Tommi Hakala, Baritone
Stefan Kocan, Bass
Performance Dates: March 4 and 6, 2011
This performance recorded live on March 4 and 6, 2011
In many ways Mahler's Eighth is my favorite among his symphonies, if for no other reason than the astoundingly sumptuous choral opening movement, which I have often referred to as Ode to Joy: The Next Generation. Veni, Creator Spiritus is among Mahler's most supremely melodic achievements, and here under the formidable baton of Mariss Jansons, it becomes a surprisingly rhythmic offering as well. Jansons quite artfully shapes the dotted rhythms that are inherent in the opening phrase, drawing a more pointed syncopated interpretation than I personally am used to hearing. The orchestral and choral forces of this immense piece can be overwhelming, but Jansons shapes everything very intelligently, letting the symphony "breathe" in appealing moments of ebb and flow. The one qualm I had with this particular performance is in the sound mixing. The soloists are almost completely subsumed by the orchestral forces at times, to the point where they almost seem to be mute, simply moving their lips with no sound emitting. Otherwise, though, this is a glorious performance of an almost immaculately conceived symphonic masterpiece.
Symphony No. 9
Conducted by Bernard Haitink
Performance Dates: May 11, 12, 13 and 15, 2011
This performance was recorded live on May 13 and 15, 2011.
My introduction to Mahler came courtesy of a boyfriend of one of my elder sisters, a man who back in the day ran a classical music record shop out of his spacious apartment. My sister had taken me over to meet him one day, and the guy took one look at me and handed me an LP box set, stating, "You need to go home and listen to this. Now." It turned out to be the (even in those days) old Columbia set of Bruno Walter conducting Mahler's Ninth and Das Lied von der Erde. Some might consider this jumping head first into the deep end of Mahler, but for me personally it was a transcendent listening experience and though I was initially in those days more immediately drawn to Das Lied than to the Ninth, I've realized in the (many) ensuing years that the Ninth probably had a more profound impact on my developing musical consciousness and overall psyche. The Ninth has often been termed Mahler's farewell to the world, and it has an elegiac, almost resigned quality to it a lot of the time. That said, it is among Mahler's most supremely meditative pieces (even in its more raucous sections) and the final movement is certainly among the greatest orchestral achievements of all time. Bernard Haitink, the conductor many of us who grew up listening to the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra most associate with the troupe and who is now its Conductor Laureate, effortlessly leads his longtime home orchestra through their paces, exacting a wealth of emotionally nuanced content out of the score while never sacrificing overall architecture. There's a really fine balance Haitink achieves between the almost lethargic slow sections and the more vividly energetic dance elements, like Mahler's favorite, the Ländler, which in the Ninth becomes almost a demonically inspired orgy of sound.
Symphony No. 10
Conducted by Eliahu Inbal
Performance Date: June 30, 2011
This performance recorded live on June 30, 2011
Mahler's Tenth is easily his most problematic symphony from a number of standpoints. From a purely technical perspective, Mahler left the symphony unfinished at the time of his death, with only the first movement, a haunting Adagio, in a completed enough form to warrant easy performance, and in fact it was only the Adagio that most people heard for some time after Mahler's death. A number of high profile composers were enlisted by Mahler's widow to get the short score and orchestrated passages into some sort of workable condition, but it fell to musicologist Deryck Cooke to come up with the version which is most often used for performances and recordings today, and which is in fact used for this performance. To get back to some of the problems inherent in this symphony for a moment, though, on an emotional level, Mahler was in a complete state of personal disarray during the composition of this piece, and it shows quite clearly in the often halting, dissonant tenor of the piece. Mahler was more than aware that his health was failing and his days were numbered, but perhaps even more debilitating was his discovery of his wife's infidelity. The Tenth is therefore a troubled and troubling listening experience, full of aching quandary and a roiling musical subtext. While Cooke's efforts were no doubt well intended, I've personally always had an issue with them, for they seem like someone pretending to be Mahler, especially with regard to orchestral effects that seem lifted from other, completed, Mahler symphonies like pieces assembled for a patchwork quilt. Eliahu Inbal does a formidable job of knitting all of the trauma and turmoil together into a mostly satisfying whole, however, and despite what one may think of Cooke's efforts, there's always that ravishing Adagio, which is almost entirely Mahler's own doing.
Totenfeier and Das Lied von der Erde
Conducted by Fabio Luisi
Anna Larsson, Alto
Robert Dean Smith, Tenor
Performance Dates: May 18 and 20, 2011
This performance recorded live on May 18 and 20, 2011
This "bonus" disc of sorts gathers together two pieces which aren't formally part of Mahler's actual symphonic oeuvre, but which are in their own way inseparable from it. As discussed above, Totenfeier serves as a sort of "first draft" for the opening movement of Mahler's Second Symphony, and as such offers a compelling window into the composer's redevelopment of already existing material for other uses. Das Lied von der Erde was in a very real way Mahler's true Ninth Symphony, having been composed directly after the Eighth and featuring a subtitle which overtly describes it as "A Symphony for Tenor, Contralto and Large Orchestra", though perhaps only too aware of the so-called "curse of the ninth" refused to number the piece and include it as part of his more formal symphonic output. (That "curse" proved to be only too true for Mahler, who expired before he could finish his Tenth Symphony.) Das Lied von der Erde is a gorgeously lyrical "song symphony" which includes Oriental motifs as a sort of musical homage to the texts, which were culled from ancient Chinese poetry. Mahler protégé Bruno Walter considered Das Lied to be his mentor's most personal musical composition, an opinion evidently shared by Mahler himself. This is an often stunning interpretation, with incredible color coaxed from the orchestra by conductor Fabio Luisi, though I once again wished that the singers had been mixed a little bit more forward.
:: TRACKLIST ::
BD1
Conduct by Daniel Harding
01 - I. Langsam, Schleppend. Wie ein Naturlaut
02 - II. Kraftig bewegt, doch nicht zu schnell
03 - III. Feierlich und gemessen, ohne zu schleppen
04 - IV. Sturmisch bewegt
BD10
01 - I. Introduction
02 - II. Adagio
03 - III. Scherzo
04 - IV. Purgatorio
05 - V. Scherzo - Finale
BD11
01 - Das Trinklied vom Jammer der Erde
02 - Der Eisame im Herbst
03 - Von der Jugend
04 - Von der Schonheit
05 - Der Trunkene im Fruhling
06 - Der Abschied
07 - Das Ende
BD2
Conduct by Mariss Jansons
01 - I. Allegro maestoso
02 - II. Andante moderato
03 - III. In ruhig fliessender Bewegung
04 - IV. Urlicht Sehr feierlich, aber schlicht
05 - V. Finale Im Tempo des Scherzos - Kraftig - langsam - Misterioso
BD3
Conducted by Mariss Jansons
01 - I. Kraftig, Entschieden
02 - II. Tempo di menuetto - Sehr massig
03 - III. Comodo, Scherzando, Ohne Hast
04 - IV. Sehr langsam, Misterioso
05 - V. Lustig im Tempo und keck im Ausdruck
06 - VI. Langsam - Ruhevoll - Empfunden
BD4
Conducted By Ivan Fischer
01 - I. Bedachtig, nicht eilen
02 - II. In gemachlicher Bewegung, ohne Hast
03 - III. Ruhevoll, poco adagio
04 - IV. Sehr behaglich
BD5
Conducted by Daniele Gatt
01 - I. Trauermarsch
02 - II. Sturmisch bewegt, mit grosster Vehemenz
03 - III. Scherzo
04 - IV. Adagietto
05 - V. Rondo
06 - VI. Finale
BD6
Conducted by Lorin Maazel
01 - I. Allegro energico, ma non troppo. Heftig, aber markig
02 - II. Scherzo Wuchtig
03 - III. Andante moderato
04 - IV. Finale Allegro moderato - Allegro energico
BD7
Conducted by Pierre Boulez
01 - I. Langsam - Allegro con fuoco
02 - II. Nachtmusik Allegro moderato
03 - III. Scherzo Schattenhaft
04 - IV. Nachtmusik Andante amoroso
05 - V. Rondo - Finale
BD8
Conducted by Mariss Jansons
01 - Veni, creator spiritus
BD9
Conducted by Bernard Haitink
01 - I. Andante comodo
02 - II. Im Tempo eines gemachlichen Landlers - Etwas tappisch und sehr derb
03 - III. Rondo - Burleske Allegro assai
04 - IV. Adagio - Sehr langsam und noch zuruckhaltend
Conducted by Daniel Harding
Performance Dates: September 30, October 1 and 2, 2009
This performance recorded live on September 30, 2009
Daniel Harding is a young British conductor who has risen incredibly fast in a rather short amount of time, helped along by some felicitous mentoring by Sir Simon Rattle. Harding brings a youthful insouciance to his interpretation of Mahler's First, often given the soubriquet "The Titan". Things don't get off to a particularly promising start, with some minor synchronization issues in the "calm before the storm" opening which might remind some less classically inclined listeners just a little bit of the opening motive of the original Star Trek theme. But once the orchestra kicks into gear, Harding marshals the forces extremely well and his conducing of the almost lunatic Ländler second movement is quite impressive. The minor keyed Bruder Martin (AKA Frère Jacques) is another highlight, but the final bristling movement proves to be this performance's true touchstone. Harding shapes the dynamics very well and the orchestra plays with incredible vigor and precision.
Symphony No. 2
Conducted by Mariss Jansons
Ricarda Merbeth, Soprano
Bernarda Fink, Mezzo-Soprano
Performance Dates: December 3, 4, and 6, 2009
This performance recorded live on December 3. 2009
Mahler was preoccupied with extremely weighty matters throughout his compositional life, and his Second Symphony (The Resurrection) deals with two interrelated subjects which were something of an obsession for the composer, death and the afterlife. One of the nice bonuses of this box set is that it includes a performance of Totenfeier (Funeral Rites), which is an early version of this symphony's first movement. That first movement is indicative of what evidently distances the composer from some listeners, for it segues from brooding minor key ruminations to sudden bursts of glorious major key passages at the drop of a veritable hat. But that's part of the dialectic that makes Mahler such a compelling figure in modern music. Mariss Jansons is able to bridge these huge changes in tempo, style and key with grace and élan, and this is in fact one of the better performances of the Second that I've heard recently. The singing by Bernarda Fink (a mezzo taking the role typically assigned to an alto) is especially lovely. Jansons' handling of the potentially unruly final movement is also very impressive, with finely nuanced transitions between the many contrasting moods and themes. Keep your eyes peeled for some brief but fun looks at the brass contingent out in an antechamber during this movement, helping to create one of Mahler's "spatial" effects. (Also note the somewhat comical sight of a clarinet player back in the concert hall putting in ear plugs before a particularly tempestuous moment.) One odd thing about this performance: the audience applauds between the first and second movements. That's a definite "no no" in the hoity toity world of classical music.
Symphony No. 3
Conducted by Mariss Jansons
Bernarda Fink, Mezzo-Soprano
Performance Dates: February 3, 4, and 5, 2010
This performance recorded live on February 3 and 4, 2010
The Third Symphony is a not piece for the faint of heart or the tender of posteriors, for even a "quick" performance of this incredibly huge masterpiece typically runs well over an hour and a half (for the record, this performance clocks in at a somewhat lengthier than usual 103 minutes, including breaks). Mendelssohn was famous for writing music for A Midsummer Night's Dream, but Mahler envisaged this symphony as a sort of Summer's Midday Dream, a walking if not waking fantasy that incorporated the composer's rather eclectic religious sensibilities by invoking everything from Pan to Nature in one hugely disparate piece of orchestral writing. Once again Mariss Jansons forges a uniquely consistent approach to all of the roiling content which can make this incredibly long piece often seem inchoate to the point of chaos. The orchestra plays with fine luster, including some gorgeous solos by the concertmaster in the first movement. Once again the audience applauds between movements, but in this case it's a bit more understandable, since Bernarda Fink (once again taking a role typically assigned to an alto) makes her entrance between the first and second movements (though she doesn't sing until the fourth). Also once again we get a brass player in the antechamber watching the proceedings on closed circuit television and offering his contributions from a distance. I personally wish Fink had been mixed a little higher, something that afflicts many of the sung moments in this set, but at least part of this imbalance issue may be due to the peculiar layout of this hall, where the soloists in several of these outings are placed in back of the orchestra, just slightly in front of the larger choral masses.
Symphony No. 4
Conducted by Ivan Fischer
Miah Persson, Soprano
Performance Dates: April 22 and 23, 2010
This performance recorded live on April 22 and 23, 2010
Mahler's Fourth is an often ebullient and uncommonly melodic piece, and as such it's the perfect place to start for those wanting to test the Mahler symphonic waters. The Fourth makes a perfect companion piece to Prokofiev's Classical Symphony, for both traffic in a sort of Haydn-esque musical vocabulary, albeit one highly colored by chromaticism and odd orchestral effects. What's so pleasant in this interpretation helmed by the great Ivan Fischer is how malleable the phrasing is in what is at times an almost Neoclassical symphony. The first movement is especially notable in this regard, with wonderfully drawn out cadences and other "give and take" that makes this rather remarkably facile in terms of trundling down a symmetrically organized structure with a rather elastic approach to time and phrasing. Opera superstar Miah Persson offers a wonderfully heartfelt and lyrical "The Heavenly Life", one of Mahler's most effortlessly melodic offerings. (As an aside to those of you who are familiar with it, listen to how similar some of the musical content and orchestral flourishes are to Prokofiev's later Lieutenant Kije Suite.
Symphony No. 5
Conducted by Daniele Gatti
Performance Dates: June 23, 24, and 25, 2010
This performance recorded live on June 25, 2010
There's little doubt that Mahler had at least a little Beethoven on his mind as he wrote his Fifth. The opening trumpet motive seems almost like a topsy turvy version of Beethoven's iconic opening motive for his Fifth Symphony. Instead of Beethoven tracing of a minor triad from the fifth to the minor third, Mahler (literally) inverts that idea, starting on the tonic, then tracing upward to the minor third, fifth and ultimately the octave. There's the same "fatalistic" content to Mahler's Fifth as has often been ascribed to Beethoven's, but the two obviously couldn't be more different in terms of size, scope and ultimate musical content. Conductor Daniele Gatti may be one of the lesser known leaders to some coming to this set, but he has been a champion of Mahler's music for some time and has conducted a Mahler cycle of his own with his Orchestre National de France. He does a commendable job for the most part with this gargantuan piece, though the orchestra seems occasionally a bit timid on some entrances, leading to some minor collisions and intonation problems, mostly with the brass. I personally would have preferred a bit more precision to the playing in the second movement, which Gatti invests with a lot of energy if not a lot of nuance.
Symphony No. 6
Conducted by Lorin Maazel
Performance Dates: October 20, 21, 22 and 24, 2010
This performance recorded live on October 20, 2010
Former wunderkind Lorin Maazel has carved out a rather formidable career as a conductor and he does an admirable job with what is often seen, rightly or wrongly, as one of Mahler's more "problematic" symphonic opuses. What's odd about this perception is that in some ways the Sixth remains Mahler's most conventional piece of symphonic writing, albeit in the case of Mahler "conventional" is of course a decidedly relative term. There are still the astounding leaps of emotional content, and even the more formal supposed peccadilloes of not clearly delineating what "key" the piece is in (the first movement makes a mockery of keys, with a main motive which repeatedly ping pongs back and forth between A major and A minor). This is also the symphony that has had a somewhat muddled history in terms of how the movements should be ordered, but Maazel and the Royal Concertgebouw follow the now more or less conventional approach of placing the Scherzo second and the Andante third. This symphony is also notable for its use of percussion, including a lot of tympani, glockenspiel and, in the final movement, a hammer! (You might be forgiven in you think that's Gallagher wielding the huge "weapon", as the percussionist brings it down with so much force little pieces of wood go flying every which way.)
Symphony No. 7
Conducted by Pierre Boulez
Performance Dates: January 20 and 21, 2011
This performance recorded live on January 20 and 21, 2011
Not to be too cavalier about bandying about soubriquets, one might understand if this symphony's subtitle Song of the Night (given to it by others, not the composer) might be slightly reworked, with a tap of the hat to Mozart, as A Big Night Music. Yet another gargantuan piece that spans five movements and runs for close to eighty minutes, the Seventh continues several ideas that were put forth in the Sixth, including tempestuous changes in tempi and pure musical content, as well as an intentional ambiguity in tonal centers, fostered once again by parallel major and minor triads. It's notable that erstwhile provocateur Pierre Boulez conducts this piece, for in many ways this is one of Mahler's most "in your face" symphonies, one which completely confused audiences and critics at the time of its premiere and remained one of the composer's least appreciated pieces for decades afterwards. Part of this is no doubt due to the symphony's almost halting, stuttering introduction of various motifs which on first (and perhaps even second) listen don't have much to do with each other, but there's certainly a wealth of inspiration running throughout the work, perhaps most apparent to uninitiated listeners in some of the gorgeous, more relatively quiet and lyrical, writing for solo brass. Also note the use of such atypical instruments as the acoustic guitar in the fourth movement.
Symphony No. 8
Conducted by Mariss Jansons
Christine Brewer, Soprano
Camilla Nylund, Soprano
Maria Espada, Soprano
Stephanie Blythe, Mezzo-Soprano
Mihoko Fujimura, Alto
Robert Dean Smith, Tenor
Tommi Hakala, Baritone
Stefan Kocan, Bass
Performance Dates: March 4 and 6, 2011
This performance recorded live on March 4 and 6, 2011
In many ways Mahler's Eighth is my favorite among his symphonies, if for no other reason than the astoundingly sumptuous choral opening movement, which I have often referred to as Ode to Joy: The Next Generation. Veni, Creator Spiritus is among Mahler's most supremely melodic achievements, and here under the formidable baton of Mariss Jansons, it becomes a surprisingly rhythmic offering as well. Jansons quite artfully shapes the dotted rhythms that are inherent in the opening phrase, drawing a more pointed syncopated interpretation than I personally am used to hearing. The orchestral and choral forces of this immense piece can be overwhelming, but Jansons shapes everything very intelligently, letting the symphony "breathe" in appealing moments of ebb and flow. The one qualm I had with this particular performance is in the sound mixing. The soloists are almost completely subsumed by the orchestral forces at times, to the point where they almost seem to be mute, simply moving their lips with no sound emitting. Otherwise, though, this is a glorious performance of an almost immaculately conceived symphonic masterpiece.
Symphony No. 9
Conducted by Bernard Haitink
Performance Dates: May 11, 12, 13 and 15, 2011
This performance was recorded live on May 13 and 15, 2011.
My introduction to Mahler came courtesy of a boyfriend of one of my elder sisters, a man who back in the day ran a classical music record shop out of his spacious apartment. My sister had taken me over to meet him one day, and the guy took one look at me and handed me an LP box set, stating, "You need to go home and listen to this. Now." It turned out to be the (even in those days) old Columbia set of Bruno Walter conducting Mahler's Ninth and Das Lied von der Erde. Some might consider this jumping head first into the deep end of Mahler, but for me personally it was a transcendent listening experience and though I was initially in those days more immediately drawn to Das Lied than to the Ninth, I've realized in the (many) ensuing years that the Ninth probably had a more profound impact on my developing musical consciousness and overall psyche. The Ninth has often been termed Mahler's farewell to the world, and it has an elegiac, almost resigned quality to it a lot of the time. That said, it is among Mahler's most supremely meditative pieces (even in its more raucous sections) and the final movement is certainly among the greatest orchestral achievements of all time. Bernard Haitink, the conductor many of us who grew up listening to the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra most associate with the troupe and who is now its Conductor Laureate, effortlessly leads his longtime home orchestra through their paces, exacting a wealth of emotionally nuanced content out of the score while never sacrificing overall architecture. There's a really fine balance Haitink achieves between the almost lethargic slow sections and the more vividly energetic dance elements, like Mahler's favorite, the Ländler, which in the Ninth becomes almost a demonically inspired orgy of sound.
Symphony No. 10
Conducted by Eliahu Inbal
Performance Date: June 30, 2011
This performance recorded live on June 30, 2011
Mahler's Tenth is easily his most problematic symphony from a number of standpoints. From a purely technical perspective, Mahler left the symphony unfinished at the time of his death, with only the first movement, a haunting Adagio, in a completed enough form to warrant easy performance, and in fact it was only the Adagio that most people heard for some time after Mahler's death. A number of high profile composers were enlisted by Mahler's widow to get the short score and orchestrated passages into some sort of workable condition, but it fell to musicologist Deryck Cooke to come up with the version which is most often used for performances and recordings today, and which is in fact used for this performance. To get back to some of the problems inherent in this symphony for a moment, though, on an emotional level, Mahler was in a complete state of personal disarray during the composition of this piece, and it shows quite clearly in the often halting, dissonant tenor of the piece. Mahler was more than aware that his health was failing and his days were numbered, but perhaps even more debilitating was his discovery of his wife's infidelity. The Tenth is therefore a troubled and troubling listening experience, full of aching quandary and a roiling musical subtext. While Cooke's efforts were no doubt well intended, I've personally always had an issue with them, for they seem like someone pretending to be Mahler, especially with regard to orchestral effects that seem lifted from other, completed, Mahler symphonies like pieces assembled for a patchwork quilt. Eliahu Inbal does a formidable job of knitting all of the trauma and turmoil together into a mostly satisfying whole, however, and despite what one may think of Cooke's efforts, there's always that ravishing Adagio, which is almost entirely Mahler's own doing.
Totenfeier and Das Lied von der Erde
Conducted by Fabio Luisi
Anna Larsson, Alto
Robert Dean Smith, Tenor
Performance Dates: May 18 and 20, 2011
This performance recorded live on May 18 and 20, 2011
This "bonus" disc of sorts gathers together two pieces which aren't formally part of Mahler's actual symphonic oeuvre, but which are in their own way inseparable from it. As discussed above, Totenfeier serves as a sort of "first draft" for the opening movement of Mahler's Second Symphony, and as such offers a compelling window into the composer's redevelopment of already existing material for other uses. Das Lied von der Erde was in a very real way Mahler's true Ninth Symphony, having been composed directly after the Eighth and featuring a subtitle which overtly describes it as "A Symphony for Tenor, Contralto and Large Orchestra", though perhaps only too aware of the so-called "curse of the ninth" refused to number the piece and include it as part of his more formal symphonic output. (That "curse" proved to be only too true for Mahler, who expired before he could finish his Tenth Symphony.) Das Lied von der Erde is a gorgeously lyrical "song symphony" which includes Oriental motifs as a sort of musical homage to the texts, which were culled from ancient Chinese poetry. Mahler protégé Bruno Walter considered Das Lied to be his mentor's most personal musical composition, an opinion evidently shared by Mahler himself. This is an often stunning interpretation, with incredible color coaxed from the orchestra by conductor Fabio Luisi, though I once again wished that the singers had been mixed a little bit more forward.
:: TRACKLIST ::
BD1
Conduct by Daniel Harding
01 - I. Langsam, Schleppend. Wie ein Naturlaut
02 - II. Kraftig bewegt, doch nicht zu schnell
03 - III. Feierlich und gemessen, ohne zu schleppen
04 - IV. Sturmisch bewegt
BD10
01 - I. Introduction
02 - II. Adagio
03 - III. Scherzo
04 - IV. Purgatorio
05 - V. Scherzo - Finale
BD11
01 - Das Trinklied vom Jammer der Erde
02 - Der Eisame im Herbst
03 - Von der Jugend
04 - Von der Schonheit
05 - Der Trunkene im Fruhling
06 - Der Abschied
07 - Das Ende
BD2
Conduct by Mariss Jansons
01 - I. Allegro maestoso
02 - II. Andante moderato
03 - III. In ruhig fliessender Bewegung
04 - IV. Urlicht Sehr feierlich, aber schlicht
05 - V. Finale Im Tempo des Scherzos - Kraftig - langsam - Misterioso
BD3
Conducted by Mariss Jansons
01 - I. Kraftig, Entschieden
02 - II. Tempo di menuetto - Sehr massig
03 - III. Comodo, Scherzando, Ohne Hast
04 - IV. Sehr langsam, Misterioso
05 - V. Lustig im Tempo und keck im Ausdruck
06 - VI. Langsam - Ruhevoll - Empfunden
BD4
Conducted By Ivan Fischer
01 - I. Bedachtig, nicht eilen
02 - II. In gemachlicher Bewegung, ohne Hast
03 - III. Ruhevoll, poco adagio
04 - IV. Sehr behaglich
BD5
Conducted by Daniele Gatt
01 - I. Trauermarsch
02 - II. Sturmisch bewegt, mit grosster Vehemenz
03 - III. Scherzo
04 - IV. Adagietto
05 - V. Rondo
06 - VI. Finale
BD6
Conducted by Lorin Maazel
01 - I. Allegro energico, ma non troppo. Heftig, aber markig
02 - II. Scherzo Wuchtig
03 - III. Andante moderato
04 - IV. Finale Allegro moderato - Allegro energico
BD7
Conducted by Pierre Boulez
01 - I. Langsam - Allegro con fuoco
02 - II. Nachtmusik Allegro moderato
03 - III. Scherzo Schattenhaft
04 - IV. Nachtmusik Andante amoroso
05 - V. Rondo - Finale
BD8
Conducted by Mariss Jansons
01 - Veni, creator spiritus
BD9
Conducted by Bernard Haitink
01 - I. Andante comodo
02 - II. Im Tempo eines gemachlichen Landlers - Etwas tappisch und sehr derb
03 - III. Rondo - Burleske Allegro assai
04 - IV. Adagio - Sehr langsam und noch zuruckhaltend
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