Yesterday, Sunday, I attended a concert with the Tucson Symphony, George Hanson conductor, giving a thrilling, majestic, powerful Mahler 3rd. The orchestral playing was flawless, the solos (trombone especially) were marvelous. The conductor knew the score and it showed. Tempos were perfectly judged. The off-stage posthorn was beautifully played - very effective. The boys chorus and women were great, the alto just fine, too. Those glorious chords at the end were perfectly balanced and the deep sound sent chills up the spine. The audience rose as one to its feet to acclaim the performance. Top notch Mahler tends to do that.
Why do I relate this local event to the rest of you? Because great Mahler abounds everywhere. You don't need to go to Chicago, LA, Cleveland, Vienna, Berlin or London to hear great Mahler. But there, in dry, warm Tucson Arizona was world-class Mahler. I've heard Mahler live conducted by the likes of Bernstein, Maazel, Dudamel, Salonen, Mehta, Rattle, Tennstedt, Dorati, Abbado and others. George Hanson turned out a performance not one whit inferior to those more famous conductors, and frankly better than most! Just last month he did the chamber version of DLVDE and next year he'll be doing the full orchestral version. If you are looking for great Mahler, make it Tucson in January, 2016. Besides that, you can also get the best Mexican food anywhere in the Old Pueblo. (No, I don't work for the Tucson Symphony - I don't even live in Tucson.)