|
|
![]() |
| You are HERE >> Music : General |
Classical
Composer
Biography: Gustav Mahler
by
Betty
Fry
January
29, 2002
|
Gustav
Mahler was born in 1860 of Jewish parents, and was one of fourteen
children.
His father was a small town brewer, running the equivalent of today's
off-licence.
Although something of a bully – he is known to have mistreated his wife
– he appears to have encouraged his son's evident musical gifts and, at
ten, Gustav Mahler was giving his first recital.
My present feelings of frustration with things that are not going well prompted me to put the Third Movement of his ‘Symphony No.1 in D Major' The mood is set with the round-song ‘Freres Jacques' made deeply somber; a double bass ponderously intones the usually jolly music in a minor key, and muffled drum beats add to the funereal air. Other themes intervene, including a lilting Jewish dance, both sad yet sprightly. Another more touching interlude is one of Mahler's own songs. Then the march returns before finally dying away to soft cymbal strokes. The echoes of Jewish music in this movement recall his childhood in the small town of Iglau, now known as Jihlava in the Czech Republic. Mahler finished this symphony in 1888, the year in which he became musical director of the Royal Opera in Budapest. This was a first step in his meteoric rise as a conductor, which culminated in his appointment in 1897 to the post of Musical Director of the Vienna Court Opera – one of the most coveted positions in the world of music, but only at the expense of converting from Judaism to Catholicism. This may also explain why he often juxtaposed music of sorrow or anguish, with music from everyday life, as he does in this symphony. In this capital of the old Austro-Hungarian Empire, most government and other important public posts were open only to Roman Catholics. Mahler was born a Jew, so in order to secure the coveted post he became a convert. But there remained a conflict in his mind between the faith he was born into, and the one he adopted for the sake of his career. Almost certainly this contributed to the emotional struggles that Mahler expressed so passionately through his music. In
1901 the 41 year old Mahler met the lovely young music student Alma
Schindler,
and married her the following year. At the time he was working on his ‘Fifth
Symphony No. 5 in C sharp minor'
Scored
for just strings and harp this is one of Mahler's sweetest melodies.
The
music seems to progress like a series of deep breaths rising to one
great
yearning sigh before subsiding again at the very end. This piece is a
deeply
reflective interlude in an otherwise stormy and dramatic symphony that
bursts with the exhilaration of life.
The
middle aged Mahler might have thought that the prospect of family life
had passed him by when he met and married Alma. He was certainly
overjoyed
when she bore him two children. But tragedy soon struck when the elder
child died from diphtheria. Then Mahler himself was told he had an
incurable
heart condition, and his unrelenting work rate no doubt hastened his
own
death at the age of 51.
Gustav
Mahler was once quoted as saying ‘The symphony must be like a world; it
should contain everything'. To achieve this, he wrote music for huge
orchestras,
which sometimes had voices added as well. The second movement from his
‘Symphony No.3 in D minor'
‘What
the Flowers Tell Me' is indeed written for a very large orchestra,
but the composer uses the instruments sparingly, as though each were
the
bloom of some wildflower. It opens with a solo oboe playing a simple,
peasant
like tune. Violins then take over, making the movement sound more
romantic.
Then
there are some rapid restless passages, as if a sudden breeze were
scattering
blossom from the trees, before the piece ends
as
quietly and peacefully as it began.
Mahler's
life and career spanned the end of one era and the beginning of
another.
The degree of personal expression and descriptive content of many of
his
works represent the last word, or perhaps I should say note, of the
19th
Century Romantic musical world of Liszt,
Wagner, and Tchaikovsky.
But as his own style developed, so his harmonies, and the sounds he
drew
from the orchestra pointed the way for such 20th Century masters as
Schoenberg
and Webern.
But
he was also a great conductor, and here again he was a pivotal figure.
He outshone all other conductors before him, and those of his own time
too, in his fierce dedication to the task. He spared neither himself,
nor
anybody else, in his desire to raise the standards of performance to
new
heights. He was the first all-powerful maestro, and the model for many
other famous conductors of our century.
This
man who composed ten huge and complex symphonies, plus a massive song
cycle
called ‘The Song of the Earth'
In
fact this was true. For almost the whole of his working life, Mahler
was
in charge of an opera house. Only during summer vacations did he get a
chance to compose. At these times he would retreat to his country home
and shut himself away in a small summer hut to work in peace on his
gigantic
projects.
In
the music of his symphonies and song cycles Mahler encompassed every
kind
of human experience, from child-like innocence and wonder to anguish
and
despair, and at the same time pushed musical form or construction to
new
limits. Listening to his music can be a truly overwhelming experience.
|
|
More Articles
by this
Consultant, Click Here
|
Legal & Privacy Notices |