Listening to Boulez's (underrated, in my view) Mahler 6 last night, I reflected on the positioning of the horns. As is usual, they were placed next to the trumpets to the right of the conductor.
I recalled a performance of the symphony by Jansons and the Concertgebouw about a decade ago in which he separated them into two lines of four, well to his left, behind the first violins. In this position , they constituted a sort of choir. Their contribution to the tuttis was more defined and the arrangement allowed them to sound antiphonally with the the heavy brass. Very effective, I thought at the time, wondering whether Mahler the conductor would have placed them like this. Or indeed whether Mahler the composer imagined their contributions to the symphony (and perhaps others) to be heard in this way. There seem to be many instances in the symphony where a brass phrase is "answered" by the horns, not unlike the interplay between first and second violins in a Haydn symphony. And we all know how important their placement is in performance.
I recalled a performance of the symphony by Jansons and the Concertgebouw about a decade ago in which he separated them into two lines of four, well to his left, behind the first violins. In this position , they constituted a sort of choir. Their contribution to the tuttis was more defined and the arrangement allowed them to sound antiphonally with the the heavy brass. Very effective, I thought at the time, wondering whether Mahler the conductor would have placed them like this. Or indeed whether Mahler the composer imagined their contributions to the symphony (and perhaps others) to be heard in this way. There seem to be many instances in the symphony where a brass phrase is "answered" by the horns, not unlike the interplay between first and second violins in a Haydn symphony. And we all know how important their placement is in performance.
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