So starts the blurb for tonight's Performance on 3. So much for the likes of Haydn and Mozart then.
Gustav Mahler knew that no great composer wrote more than nine symphonies
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Cellini
I'm afraid at 8.00pm I've pressed the off switch! Andante Comodo - more like Adagio ... I'm afraid this orchestra and its conductor are extremely third rate!
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Roehre
Originally posted by Bryn View PostOh he certanly wrote a tenth. It's just that he called it the 9th.
Mahler cannot have known that Dvorak composed nine symphonies (as only five had been published and numer one had gone astray and didn't resurface until the 1930s, and the number of Schubert symphonies during his lifetime was estimated as eight (the great C-major D.944 is numbered in the Gesamtausgabe as no.7, and in German speaking countries most of the time until recently numbered as such)
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Originally posted by Roehre View Postand the number of Schubert symphonies during his lifetime was estimated as eight (the great C-major D.944 is numbered in the Gesamtausgabe as no.7, and in German speaking countries most of the time until recently numbered as such)
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There is at least no doubt how many symphonies Beethoven wrote so if this oft-quoted story of Mahler's supposed superstition has any basis in fact then he could only have been thinking of Beethoven or possibly Bruckner. I haven't got as far as this in the de la Grange biography but it would not surprise me if he debunks this myth. Is it another of the very many inventions of Alma, perhaps? This story has always sounded a bit unlikely to me anyway.Last edited by Petrushka; 08-02-11, 22:36."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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