Generally, I like Mahler, especially 1-5, 7, 9 and Das Lied...
The 8th I blow hot and cold over - sometimes I'm in the mood for it, more often I'm not.
But 6, no matter who's conducting or playing, never does it for me. I can't shake the feeling that Mahler set out to write a self-conciously 'tragic' work and the drama (from the trudgy, over-emphatic 'march' at the beginning) to the notorious 'three hammer blows of fate' at the end always strikes me as being too thickly laid on. The effect is a bit like being cornered by some teenager in a Goth outfit, anxious to show you his self-inflicted scars and bend your ear about how grim life is.
In actual fact, of course, the impulse for the symphony came from genuinely tragic events in Mahler's own life - but I think these find far more moving (and restrained) expression in the Kindertotenlieder (and, for that matter, Das Lied).
So, it would be fair to say, I'm no fan of the 6th (is it significant that it seems to be programmed significantly less than GM's other works? It has a reputation for being 'difficult' to interpret), though the slow movement is pleasant.
The 8th I blow hot and cold over - sometimes I'm in the mood for it, more often I'm not.
But 6, no matter who's conducting or playing, never does it for me. I can't shake the feeling that Mahler set out to write a self-conciously 'tragic' work and the drama (from the trudgy, over-emphatic 'march' at the beginning) to the notorious 'three hammer blows of fate' at the end always strikes me as being too thickly laid on. The effect is a bit like being cornered by some teenager in a Goth outfit, anxious to show you his self-inflicted scars and bend your ear about how grim life is.
In actual fact, of course, the impulse for the symphony came from genuinely tragic events in Mahler's own life - but I think these find far more moving (and restrained) expression in the Kindertotenlieder (and, for that matter, Das Lied).
So, it would be fair to say, I'm no fan of the 6th (is it significant that it seems to be programmed significantly less than GM's other works? It has a reputation for being 'difficult' to interpret), though the slow movement is pleasant.
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