Arnold Schoenberg 894000
Sergei Rachmaninov + S Rachmaninoff 558000
And Schoenberg ahead of Rachmaninov! As said, we're finally moving on!
PT
Anyone who thinks Schoenberg is more popular than Rachmaninoff is drinking some very strange koolaid. Rather, it suggests that, however interesting Google Fights is (and I had a lot of fun playing with it just now), its not giving results that coincide with what we'd normally think of as real world popularity.
There are, I think, 3 good indicators of "popularity" of composers:
1. Concert performances of major orchestral works
2. Polls of public listening preferences
3. Sales (CD/LP and download)
I think a real gauge of popularity would require all three of those indicators. A lot of people do not buy music, but they do listen to the radio. Some go to concerts but rarely if ever buy music. Some people go to concerts and buy CDs, but never listen to the radio.
It's really difficult to get at sales figures of Amazon for music, and I don't use iTunes, so I don't know if sales figures are accessible there.
However, I did look at the performance numbers for American Orchestras for the 2006-2007 Season. This is all U.S. Orchestras that are members of the League of American Orchestras (formerly known as American Orchestra League). This includes almost every orchestra in the U.S., but would not include performances by a festival orchestra put together during summer festivals, that sort of thing. But basically, every established orchestra in the U.S.
In all, there were 3,710 concerts, featuring performances of 11,501 works by 601 composers.
Here are the 20 most performed works during the season:
Brahms SYMPHONY NO. 2 = 72
Tchaikovsky SYMPHONY NO. 6 = 69
Shostakovich SYMPHONY NO. 5 = 66
Brahms SYMPHONY NO. 1 = 62
Rimsky-Korsakov SCHEHEREZADE = 62
Brahms CONCERTO FOR VIOLIN = 62
Beethoven SYMPHONY NO. 3 = 58
Brahms CONCERTO FOR PIANO, NO. 1 = 54
Berlioz SYMPHONIE FANTASTIQUE = 52
Beethoven SYMPHONY NO. 5 = 51
Rachmaninoff RHAPSODY ON A THEME OF PAGANINI = 48
Tchaikovsky CONCERTO FOR VIOLIN = 48
Brahms SYMPHONY NO. 4 = 48
Mendelssohn CONCERTO FOR VIOLIN = 46
Tchaikovsky SYMPHONY NO. 4 = 45
Beethoven CONCERTO FOR VIOLIN = 45
Beethoven SYMPHONY NO. 6 = 45
Beethoven SYMPHONY NO. 9 = 45
Debussy LA MER = 44
Bruch CONCERTO FOR VIOLIN = 43
Tchaikovsky CONCERTO FOR PIANO = 43
Here is a quick tally of the number of major works by composers programmed for performance. These numbers are for Major Symphonic Works -- i.e., concertos, symphonies, or other multi-movement, lengthy works (like Respighi's Pines of Rome, Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade, Rachmaninoff's Symphonic Dances, Debussy's La Mer, etc).
Note: These numbers differ somewhat from the list of most performed works above. Best I can figure out how they are tallying their numbers works like this -- for example, Debussy's La Mer was programmed for performance by 20 orchestras during the season. Some of those orchestras performed it several times, resulting in the count of 44 performances above. My list below indicates the number of orchestras who scheduled each major symphonic work by a composer for performance, not the number of times it was performed. So similarly, as another example, Scheherazade was scheduled by 26 orchestras during the season (my list below) and played 62 times (the list above).
So, with that confusion dispensed with, here are the total number of times Mahler Symphonies were programmed by U.S. orchestras in the 2006-2007 season:
M1 = 18
M2 = 8
M3 = 6
M4 = 12
M5 = 8
M6 = 2
M7 = 5
M9 = 2
M10= 4
Other Orchestral Works = 4
Total U.S. Performances = 69
Compare that to the number of major symphonic works programmed by other composers.
Beethoven = 296
Mozart = 233
Brahms = 176
Tchaikovsky = 137
Dvorak = 113
Rachmaninoff = 94
Stravinsky=91
Bach = 86
Strauss = 83
Prokofiev = 69
Mahler = 69Sibelius = 67
Schumann = 63
Ravel = 51
Rimsky-Korsakov = 46
Saint-Saens = 42
Schubert = 35
Debussy = 34
Respighi = 32
Vaughan Williams = 23
Bruckner = 22
Schoenberg = 14 (Verklarte Nacht = 7)
So, Mahler makes it into the top 10. (But sorry, Schoenberg is nowhere near Rachmaninoff.)
As for radio listener polls, I seem to remember seeing polls from BBC and from Australia ABC in the past, but since the performance results are limited to the U.S., maybe the radio listener's poll should be limited to the U.S. as well. The only poll I am familiar with (maybe someone can contribute results from other stations) are the polls conducted annually by WQXR in New York. Now, I would not pretend that the results from WQXR coincide with national classical music interest. But it is probably the single largest listening audience of any classical radio station in the country.
The WQXR Top 10 Favorite Works for 2007-2008
1 Beethoven Symphony No. 9 in d, Op. 125 "Choral"
2 Beethoven Symphony No. 7 in A, Op. 92
3 Beethoven Symphony No. 5 in c, Op. 67
4 Dvorak Symphony No. 9 in e, Op. 95 "From the New World"
5 Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat, Op 73 "Emperor"
6 Mahler Symphony No. 2 in c, "Resurrection"
7 Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2 in c, Op. 18
8 Beethoven Symphony No. 6 in F, Op. 68 "Pastoral"
9 Stravinsky Le Sacre du Printemps (Rite of Spring)
10 Mozart Requiem in d, K 626
So, Mahler once again appears in the top 10. So does Rachmaninoff -- sorry, no Schoenberg. However, as evidence that this listening audience may not be particularly representative of the rest of the country, there is Stravinsky at #9.
The list, though, has not really changed much over the past half-decade. Here is the poll for 2002-2003:
1: Beethoven: Symphony No 9 “Choral”
2: Beethoven: Symphony No 5
3: Beethoven: Symphony No 7
4: Vivaldi: Four Seasons
5: Beethoven: Piano Concerto No 5 “Emperor”
6: Bach: Brandenburg Concerti
7: Beethoven: Symphony No 6 “Pastorale”
8: Dvorak: Symphony No 9 “From the New World”
9: Mahler: Symphony No 2 “Resurrection”
10: Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No 2
Instead of Stravinsky, we see another outlier -- Vivaldi. The real question to me is: Where's Brahms. But if you go further in the list, you find him.
Top 40 favorites -- composers with multiple works:
Beethoven = 6
Mozart = 5
Brahms = 3
Rachmaninoff = 3
Mahler = 3
Tchaikovsky = 3
Bach = 3
So, in sum, I'd say that Mahler is in the Top 10 of composers in terms of performances by U.S. orchestras and his symphony No. 2 is among the most popular of all major classical works among a pretty sophisticated audience of classical radio listeners.
If you want to check my numbers (I was never much good at math), here is a link to the League of American Orchestras performance data.
http://www.americanorchestras.org/knowledge_center/orr_current.html