. . . and John, this business about Mahler fundamentally being an existentialist. Naturally, if we walked up to good, old Gus and said, "Gus, you're really an existentialist"; I'm sure his response would be, "what the hell's that?" (I don't think the term had been invented yet, either). But I'm sure he'd be thrilled to sit down and have a conversation about it. If one were to explain in exact detail, what the term "existentialist" means, he might say; "yes, I see what you mean. Perhaps that does describe the way I see things".
Seriously, there's a lot of hand-wringing over whether Mahler was truly Christian or not; and, if so, the extent to which he was sincere or serious about being one. From the viewpoint of most existentialists - but not of the strict Sartre school - it's OK to also be Christian; Muslim; religiously Jewish - whatever - anything - as long as you're basically doing that because it helps you, and it makes you feel better. What basically defines a person as being an existentialist, is simply the acknowledgement that existence - as we know it on earth - precedes essence. In other words, we don't (and can't) possibly know whether we, as individuals, have any kind of "essence" after we die; or if we had any before we were born. In other words, there's no way of fully knowing if there's any kind of plot to the universe; and, if so, what that plot possibly could be. This raises all kinds of ethical problems for those who are religious in nature. How can one know the right things to do, if those things aren't being dictated from a superior source?
This gets into the whole sticky question of truths, and the basic nature of truth in general. That, in turn, segues into the sort of writings and discussions that Heidegger brought up. Heidegger is very wordy, but he really gets into the nitty-gritty of "being", and the nature of truth as it relates to our "beingness". If Mahler had lived long enough to get into the writings of Heidegger - obviously, a fellow German speaker - I think he would have been thoroughly fascinated.
Earlier, I had stated that there was no more "heaven storming" a composer than Gustav Mahler. I think it's interesting to note how heaven is musically represented by Mahler. At the end of the "Resurrection" symphony, the church organ and pious-sounding brass are accompanied by the tolling of deep bells and tam-tams (large gongs of unspecified pitch). This sort of brings the temple to the church, as the gongs introduce an Asiatic flavor. In the fourth symphony, the child's view of heaven is, indeed, sitting around on puffy white clouds; but with plenty of earthly food to devour, and with earthly games to play as well. If Mahler's piano rolls are to be taken seriously, those clouds float along at a fairly good clip, too. But before we get to the fourth movement of the fourth symphony, the climax of the slow movement is the second of Mahler's several portrayals (sp?) of heaven being little more - from the human perspective, that is (hence, existentialist) - as a blinding source of energy - something that can not be fully perceived or viewed by mere mortals. Mahler gives us his first "heavenly portrait" - one in which heaven is sheer, blinding energy - at the climax of the long brass chorale in M3/6. Right at the last cymbal crash, Mahler writes a fully harmonized, fortissimo brass chorale with a pedal point "D" in the bass - the home key of the sympony. Musically speaking, it's as though Bach meets Wagner.
But the greatest of these "sheer energy" portraits of heaven is at the end of the eighth symphony. Here, Mahler brings back the church organ (a huge one!); brings back the gong and cymbals; brings back the solid, fixed pedal point in the bass (accompanied with a bass drum roll, no less), and divides his brass between onstage and offstage forces. In many ways, it sums up all of Western music up to that pre-WWI (pre-disullusionment) point.
So, for Mahler, there may be a heaven. The question is, is it basically an invention of man? Further more, even if heaven does exist on its own, the truth is that we can not fully perceive what it is. Therefore, these fundamental questions still remain: What is it? Why is it there? Who's in charge, if anyone? How does it relate to us? (any Christians out there will surely jump in at this point). Ahhhh, the music of the spheres - don't you love it? (and that, my friends, brings up Part 1 of M8)
Barry