Originally posted by Stanfordian
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Mahler's Music was certainly banned in Nazi Germany (and in occupied countries in the '40s) but it wasn't "virtually forgotten" there in the '20s: Fried recorded the Resurrection in Berlin in 1924, Webern performed Mahler's work regularly (he was even responsible for "converting" Brtitten to the Music, conducting the Fourth Symphony in London in 1933), as did Klemperer, Adler (who conducted the first Ruckertlieder in Berlin in 1930), Horenstein (the first Kindertotenlieder in 1928), and Walter - and Zemlinsky conducted the Fourth in Vienna in 1935; a concert which was broadcast and listened to by Britten). Abroad, Mengelberg programmed the Music regularly until the Nazi occupation - including another broadcast performance of the Fourth in 1934, which Britten also heard and wasn't much impressed by). The first recording of the Fourth Symphony was made in Tokyo (!) in 1930; Stokowski and Ormandy (who made the second recording of the Resurrection in 1935) programmed the Music in the USA - AS DID Schoenberg! - who conducted the LAPO in movements from the Seventh Symphony; a concert that was broadcast and recordings of which can be found on youTube); Talich recorded the first DLvdE in Stokholm in 1934; it was frequent enough in British programmes for RVW to speak disparagingly of it and for Cardus to become enthusiastic about it.
Oops! Forgot to mention the Soviet Union, where it received sufficiently frequent performances in the '20s to impress Shostakovich.
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