Originally posted by Petrushka
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Your Least Favourite Mahler Symphony?
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3rd Viennese School
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Originally posted by makropulos View PostVery interesting. I can see why you both (pilamenon and S-A) think that, but I've never found it overblown - I think it can be quite fun in the right hands (and I think perhaps it needs to be - otherwise the overblown risk is certainly there). It's maybe hard to bring it off. The most successful performances I've heard of it have gone at it hammer and tongs (so to speak) - and above all at quite a quick tempo. So I've tended to think of it as a good movement that's hard to bring off, rather than a less good one that occasionally works.
Re: the last movement of No 7 - Mak, I totally agree with you. For my money, Abbado judges it perfectly in his 1990s Chicago performance (and doubtless too in the subsequent Berlin and Lucerne recordings, which I don't know as well) where it seems a fabulous, clangorous culmination, full of humour and joie-de-vivre. I actually have a private theory about the 7th, which is that it is Mahler writing a tongue-in-cheek parody of a Mahler symphony (and of No 5 in particular - very similar last movements, that of No 7 being pushed to extremes). Difficult to explain, but it's what I hear when I listen to it. It's the one symphony I thought Tennstedt could never bring off - heard him a couple of times, it always seemed to sprawl and sag and almost fall apart."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Ventilhorn
I find that I can only take Mahler symphonies when I am in the right mood. (except Nos 8 and Das Lied, which I absolutely cannot abide, as I stated in a previous post)
At other times I feel almost as if I have drunk one of those over-sweet liqueurs and I feel an urgent need to cleanse my musical palette with a large draft of Bruckner to dilute the mawkish sentimentality of some of Mahler's writing.
That is not to say that he was not a great orchestrator and he certainly always had the ability to bring a lump to ones throat, but in general, I prefer the more straightforward orchestration of Bruckner or the uncomplicated simplicity of Mozart for relaxed listening. I don't really want to be disturbed by musical angst in the way that Mahler's almost autobiographical music sometimes does.
However, a great forerunner who did much to shape the form of musical composition in the 20th century.
VH
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Ariosto
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostMahler 8 - all too long and boring.
(I don't really know if I'm saying that 8 is my least favourite or not. Although saying that any of one them is my 'least favourite' isn't the same as saying that I don't like it - they are all pretty wonderful)
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostPerhaps it's because the two parts are so different."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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barber olly
Originally posted by salymap View PostI prefer 1 to 5 at the moment because I know them so well they cut through my noises [tinnitus].
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