Originally posted by ahinton
View Post
What I think is going on here (and I could be wrong) is this:
When there are two or more versions of a work of art, it is conventional - almost a rule - to take the later one as being authoritative. Not in all circumstances (if, say, the work was revised fifty years later and senility comes into play etc) - but generally if the decision appears to be final and was made not too long after the earlier judgement. Matthews isn't stupid and he knows that the weight of "authority" naturally lies with Mahler's second decision: it is the way he himself performed it and also how he asked for it to be published. In the absence of compelling contradictory evidence, we would almost always defer to this later, (apparently) final decision.
The question of "mistakes" does not and cannot enter this matter: the author has the final say. We might think it could be improved, but that is too bad: it is not our work to meddle with and alter.
So Matthews, who prefers to earlier version, has a problem. It is not enough to argue that the musical logic lies with him, and not with Mahler. He also has to counter the "authority" of Mahler himself - when that authority is usually taken to be the ultimate, incontrovertible, unalterable verdict. So what does he do? He attempts to undermine Mahler's authority on the grounds that he was overcome by irrational forces etc. Essentially, Matthews has gone for a version of the "not in his right mind" argument. And the only way he can do this is to rely on Alma's (highly unreliable) testimony.
You may read it differently, of course.......
Comment