Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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Mahler
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBut I'm not in any way running down recordings relative to live performances! I'm just remarking that very often one recording or another (or that unforgettable evening in Norwich Town Hall) might be a distraction.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostQuoting myself, since this doesn't appear to have generated a response:
Do people actually disagree with this?
I realise that Mahler's popularity dates more or less from the advent of LP and then stereo recording, but I sometimes have the impression that "Mahler" for some consists of a selection of petrified performances (themselves receding into the past) rather than a living body of work which, as people say of Shakespeare, evolves in its relevance to different times and is to a greater or lesser extent renewed in each performance. I've heard more live Mahler in the last couple of years than in the previous 20, not always in stellar presentations, but this has deepened my appreciation of the music in quite a different way from what I get out of listening to a recording. This is a whole dimension which often seems to be undervalued.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostIn the sense that it becomes a "benchmark" against which all other performances/recordings are weighed in the balance and found wanting, you mean?
In answer to S_A, I wouldn't say the whole answer is to be found in the score. A work of music is more than what the composer wrote, it also evolves through its performance and reception history, which, crucially, is both open-ended and independent of the composer's intentions in so far as those are known in detail. In the case of Mahler, there are recordings by conductors who had first-hand experience of the composer's own performances and I wouldn't say this in itself makes Walter or Klemperer (very different musical personalities of course!) more authoritative or authentic than Boulez or Jonathan Nott. Mahler's scores, unlike those of Satie, are quite detailed, but this doesn't shrink the space of possibilities latent in them (principally because of their sonic and expressive complexity and polyvalence), it just gives it a different shape as it were. As you might imagine I have much experience in reading such scores and "hearing" the music from reading, but that's a very different experience from actually hearing the music, and certainly no substitute for it, especially since as a non-conductor I have limited grasp of the techniques needed to bring a "vision" from the score to a sounding reality (though I know it when I hear it, I think).
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Oakapple
Does anyone know whether there are two mandolins in Mahler's 8th?
I read an article this morning in the Spectator that said there were and the Wikipedia entry says so too, and this surprised me, but looking at the orchestral parts only one is specified.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostBy 'eck we're bringing out the Mahler refuseniks. I tend to like 1-5 so much that it's taking me an age to move on to 6-9 and the bit of 10. It's probably irrational I always feel there's something intangible about other people's tinkering so and completions - Mahler 10, Bruckner 9, Payne's 3 based loosely on Elgar - but it's irrational also that I really like orchestrations of piano works and piano versions of orchestral works.
Sorry, nothing more profound to offer - only an old git's memories.
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Originally posted by Oakapple View PostDoes anyone know whether there are two mandolins in Mahler's 8th?
I read an article this morning in the Spectator that said there were and the Wikipedia entry says so too, and this surprised me, but looking at the orchestral parts only one is specified.
However, there is this general comment at the bottom of the list.
Per un grande coro e molti strumenti a corda bisogne radioppiare i primi strumenti a fiato.
I don't think that a mandolin comes in that category (wind), though.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostThe study score I have (Universal, UE3000) has in the orchestra list (singular) Mandolino.
However, there is this general comment at the bottom of the list.
Per un grande coro e molti strumenti a corda bisogne radioppiare i primi strumenti a fiato.
I don't think that a mandolin comes in that category (wind), though.
Strings
2 mandolins
2 harps (preferably doubled)
1st violins
2nd violins
violas
cellos
I will check my Dover score, too.
double basses
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Oakapple
From as much as I can gather, it seems Mahler wrote for one mandolin but one edition of the score says another one would be preferable. The article I read said that Mahler demanded two, and I don't think he went that far. It's a review of a new book out called The Eighth: Mahler and the World in 1910, by Stephen Johnson.
I'm surprised there hasn't been a thread on the 8th; maybe I should have started one with my question. I remember when it was performed at the Proms some years ago and there was an oft repeated (aren't they all?) trailer in which one of Promenaders said Mahler was "out of his skull when he wrote it". That used to irritate me. (Maybe it was someone who posts on this forum.)
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Originally posted by Oakapple View Post. . . I remember when it was performed at the Proms some years ago and there was an oft repeated (aren't they all?) trailer in which one of Promenaders said Mahler was "out of his skull when he wrote it". That used to irritate me. (Maybe it was someone who posts on this forum.)
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Oakapple
That would make more sense, Bryn, as I think those compositions were more daring and innovative than what Mahler wrote.
And yet I cannot get this image out my head of a young man with a young woman beside him saying those words on television and sounding slightly mad himself, which I always associate with a performance of the 8th due on the first night of the Proms.
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Originally posted by Oakapple View PostThat would make more sense, Bryn, as I think those compositions were more daring and innovative than what Mahler wrote.
And yet I cannot get this image out my head of a young man with a young woman beside him saying those words on television and sounding slightly mad himself, which I always associate with a performance of the 8th due on the first night of the Proms.
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