Can anyone recommend a handy guide which goes through the symphonies etc, preferably with music examples? I used to have the Faber Cooke Introduction, but thought there might be something better now.
A guide to Mahler's music
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI haven't read all of it, but the Cambridge Companion to Mahler is good - and goes beyond a mere guide to the symphonies. I also have the Mahler Companion (Oxford) which is certainly bound to be useful, though to my chagrin, I've read none of it!
Thanks anyway.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostHow about this?
Mahler’s 10 symphonies and Das Lied von der Erde are intensely personal statements that have touched wide audiences. This survey examines each of the works, revealing their programmatic and personal aspects, as well as Mahler’s musical techniques.
Paperback less than £20.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/15746702...eniuslink=true
The translation reads really well too.... natural flowing English, even in complex sentences.
So I just ordered one - thanks little puppet!
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I need plenty of reading for this time of year. Just got a 2ndhand copy of the Jensen Schumann biography, and George Saunders' Liberation Day. With the New Scientist Saturnalia & New Year Special and Floros on Mahler, I can navigate the long dark days of retreat and quietude..........Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 21-12-22, 21:00.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI knew of Floros' Bruckner publications and the one on Ligeti, etc. (all much dearer now...); but I never knew about this one. Looking inside it seems really interesting, with great historical/compositional detail, and listening guides rather like those from Carragan on the Bruckner Symphonies.
The translation reads really well too.... natural flowing English, even in complex sentences.
So I just ordered one - thanks little puppet!
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I need plenty of reading for this time of year. Just got a 2ndhand copy of the Jensen Schumann biography, and George Saunders' Liberation Day. With the New Scientist Saturnalia & New Year Special and Floros on Mahler, I can navigate the long dark days of retreat and quietude..........
Hope it lives up to expectations: I found it merely through an internet search, and it looked good and worth drawing attention to.
A lot more detail than in Philip Barford's old BBC Music Guide, anyway.
I hope there'll still be a copy left for silvestrione, though, if others decide to buy it too.
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The Floros book is pretty good although it doesn't really go into much more detail than you'd expect to find in a concert programme or liner note. (Floros has written other more scholarly books about Mahler.) I would strongly recommend it to someone whose knowledge of Mahler's music is basic or less, but I don't think I'd recommend it to people who know the music well. The material on the symphonies in the Cambridge Companion takes up a relatively small proportion of the book, and I didn't much like the pretentious way some of it is written (example: "The abrupt parataxis of differing ‘temporal ruptures’ is treated with particular suppleness in the third movement, the ‘animal piece’ based on Mahler’s Wunderhorn song ‘Ablösung im Sommer’, revealing in microcosm the extent to which the temporality of the subject dictates the progression of the movement.") But I should say I've never come across a book about Mahler's music that I've really liked.
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Originally posted by Alison View PostDavid Vernon: Beauty and Sadness (pub May 2022) is the book you might be looking for.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Beauty-Sadn...ps%2C52&sr=8-2
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostThe Floros book is pretty good although it doesn't really go into much more detail than you'd expect to find in a concert programme or liner note. (Floros has written other more scholarly books about Mahler.) I would strongly recommend it to someone whose knowledge of Mahler's music is basic or less, but I don't think I'd recommend it to people who know the music well. The material on the symphonies in the Cambridge Companion takes up a relatively small proportion of the book, and I didn't much like the pretentious way some of it is written (example: "The abrupt parataxis of differing ‘temporal ruptures’ is treated with particular suppleness in the third movement, the ‘animal piece’ based on Mahler’s Wunderhorn song ‘Ablösung im Sommer’, revealing in microcosm the extent to which the temporality of the subject dictates the progression of the movement.") But I should say I've never come across a book about Mahler's music that I've really liked.
It is very useful to have all these aspects in one place, relating to each other in a smoothly flowing well-written narrative. And those point-to-point listening guides to each movement, with closely described detail accompanying them, are rarely if ever found in CD or Concert notes; very helpful.
Interesting chapter headings to come, such as: "The Eschatological Question as Subject"... "Mahler's Cosmology and its Sources"... "Life after Death as a Subject"....
...should keep this untutored untrained music lover happy for a while at least!Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 22-12-22, 02:01.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI feel that's a little unfair to Floros: take a look at the first chapter on Amazon
I wouldn't want to be seen as unfair on Floros - I have the greatest respect for his writings, I think this is a very well-written book consisting of well-chosen information and insight. It is indeed more detailed than Cooke's volume but I would have preferred it to go further. A more general point about most writing on Mahler (including Floros) is that it tends to lean too heavily on the idea that Mahler's music is basically an autobiography in sound, which I really don't think is the most interesting or appropriate way to look at it - every time I read about the 6th Symphony and see the words "Alma's theme" I feel like shaking the author and demanding that they pay more attention to score and sound than to gossip. But maybe that's just me.Last edited by RichardB; 22-12-22, 08:20.
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Interesting that . I’ve use the phrase Alma’s theme on the lengthy Mahler 6 thread but I’ve no idea who coined it or what basis it has. One can say it sounds like a love theme but why does it ? I suppose if we can Mahler’s work is an autobiography in sound then so are Beethovens 32 piano sonatas …but I’m not sure where it gets us.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostInteresting that . I’ve use the phrase Alma’s theme on the lengthy Mahler 6 thread but I’ve no idea who coined it or what basis it has. One can say it sounds like a love theme but why does it ? I suppose if we can Mahler’s work is an autobiography in sound then so are Beethovens 32 piano sonatas …but I’m not sure where it gets us.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostInteresting that . I’ve use the phrase Alma’s theme on the lengthy Mahler 6 thread but I’ve no idea who coined it or what basis it has. One can say it sounds like a love theme but why does it ? I suppose if we can Mahler’s work is an autobiography in sound then so are Beethovens 32 piano sonatas …but I’m not sure where it gets us.
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