Mahler addicts are 'likely' to 'become' losers for one very obvious reason:
Listening to the music for much of your time will rob you of valuable time that you could use towards advancing your career and promotion. This is why those who are most successful don't know, don't listen to classical music; they simply don't have time for all that.
It's just one reason and there are other reasons.
John,
HI John,
I'm a fellow MIT alum as well, although only for undergrad (course 2, I'm guessing you were course 6?), I was never the PhD let alone MS/MEng material! Not too many Mahler fans when I went there, sure, lots of musicians, but not too many Mahlerites.
I think you bring up a great point, and there have been great responses by Barry and Amphissa and everyone actually.
Without a doubt I agree with the observation that Mahlerites tend to be "losers". The activity of listening to music and collecting recordings of the same work is obsessive and at its very nature extremely anti-social. I think we can assume we all fall into this group since the threads here are comparative threads about Mahler recordings. Even if you go to concerts with other people, you're still going to experience something deeply personal that is not interactive.
While obsession can lead to success, in this specific case I don't think it does (unless your name is Tony Duggan and your only interaction is with Mahlerites!). Successful people and leaders usually don't spend time holed up in a room listening to music hours on hours comparing nuances between 10 recordings of the same piece. I do! I've been collecting music, specifically multiple recordings of the same piece, since I was about 16. I heard Mahler very young, around that age, and fell in love. I also loved Bruckner and Scriabin and Ravel. Classical music is already introspective, but these brutes take introspection to another level. And unfortunately introspection is rather anti-social, and at a young age won't bring you any closer to your goal of becoming a CEO, a business leader, or whatever you define as being a traditional embodiment of success.
As I've gotten older I have to admit that I am trying to shed this sort of behavior. It is very obsessive. My wife hates it when I put on headphones and listen to music, as she knows that I'm cutting myself off not only from her but from the real world. I also notice that very few women exhibit this sort of behavior (few? I've never heard of any to be honest), it is exclusively male. I mean, in the grand scheme of things, it's ridiculous. I have at least 10 recordings of every Mahler symphony. Any normal person would say that is borderline crazy.
I also have a background in music, I studied music since 6, I wanted to become a pianist since high school, I just didn't have the discipline (listening to too many Mahler recordings when I should have been practicing!). None of my childhood friends who actually became professional classical musicians are obsessive about recordings or things like that. As a musician, I look at them as being successful - they are able to make a career out of the thing they love. They don't have their favorite Mahler this, conductor that, oh, nevermind... this topic is a whole different thread I think.
In a way music is not too dissimilar from drugs when taken to an extreme level. Mahler is extreme. Collecting Mahler is even more extreme. Seems like this board is a support group for our shared addiction.