Author Topic: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?  (Read 19283 times)

Polarius T

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What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« on: August 26, 2008, 03:55:14 PM »
Apologies if this has already been a topic (no time for searches right now), but StillIvor just made me remember a turning point in my own musical past -- hearing the recording that single-handedly and definitively and permanently converted me to Mahler's music, which was Horenstein's M4 with Margaret Price on Classics for Pleasure. Up to then I had always come out frustrated, feeling oppressed and sad and not understanding the nature of the music at all, based on what I knew of it and expected of it, too. After Horenstein nothing was the same, though further frustrations and another prolonged sense of unfulfilment was sure enough to arise in due time again (only to be relieved in recent years through my exposure to Abbado and his Mahler conducting), as knowledge and familiarity increased. But Horenstein at that point offered something very luminous and liberated (in the sense of the work's seeming to live on and evolve without a human conductor's hand pressing it on) that really opened my ears, Margaret Price's pure voice only completing this almost otherworldly sensation.

So I'm a little piqued as to whether others might have in their past one particular recording or a concert experience that "converted" them to Mahler in a similar fashion.

-PT

Offline Leo K

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #1 on: August 26, 2008, 08:02:34 PM »
I became a Mahlerite in stages...the recording that first amazed me was the Kaplan/LSO M2 (first one on MCA) which I heard in 1989...a year or two after that I tried these all important recordings that have influenced me ever since:

M9 Abbado/VPO
M6 Karajan/BPO

Most of Lenny's DGG Mahler cycle


Then I left Mahler for quite a few years...the recordings that enlightned me, and drove me back to collecting in 2005 were:

M9 Karajan/BPO (live version on DG)

Das Lied von der Erde with Boulez/VPO/DG



It has been one of the best journeys of my life.

--Todd

P.S. I wholeheartly share your enthusiam for Abbado's Mahler...he is the conductor that along with Bertini and Zinman, has suprised me the most. 


« Last Edit: August 26, 2008, 08:09:11 PM by Leo K »

Offline stillivor

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #2 on: August 26, 2008, 10:18:27 PM »
The first Mahler I heard, and it grabbed me, was the last 3 movements of M7. What stayed with me most was the big fat brass tune after the timp. solo opening in the finale.

What really got to me was M6 under F.Charles Adler in a UK superbargain reissue by Delta in the early 60s. The first symphony that hit the bull's-eye. From then I was a Mahlerite

Swftly followed by M5 under Walter and m1 under Leindorf/Boston band.

Mahler has remained top of my premiership ever since.

And there so much music by composer other than Mahler that I love, too. And I don't think ill of anyone who has anyone else top of their favourites.


  Ivor

Offline Russ Smiley

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #3 on: August 27, 2008, 01:49:49 AM »
When I entered college to study engineering, my younger sister, then a high school oboist, said I should investigate Mahler's music.  I play the French horn, and she said Mahler had great parts for the horns. So I went to the university’s stacks in the recordings library, pulled down some Mahler LPs at random, listened to some tracks at random, and concluded that if someone was despondent, Mahler’s music would push that person over the edge!  And there I left the matter until I returned home at Thanksgiving.  My sister had the DG recording of Giulini’s M9 with the CSO (I think it had a Gran Prix du Disc label on it).  I listened with headphones to the recording twice though in one sitting.  I was totally engrossed and have been an admirer of Mahler’s music for three decades since that afternoon.

Russ Smiley

Offline Don

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #4 on: August 27, 2008, 03:08:38 AM »
As a native of Central Illinois, I got to hear Solti and Chicago do M7 live in about 1971-2. One of my first concerts, I was 14-15 and completely blown away by the music and the sound. I got the recording of the work they made around the same time. I think the tour was in conjunction with the recording to be made in Urbana, Il. Anyway... that made me a Mahlerian for life.

My discovery of the 10th in the Ormandy recording in our public library soon after was the icing on the cake.
« Last Edit: August 27, 2008, 10:18:00 PM by Don »
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Offline akiralx

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #5 on: August 27, 2008, 08:28:13 AM »

A friend lent me Klemperer's studio M2 which I didn't get at all. 

I then listened to my father's cassette of Karajan's M6 which I really liked, and so I bought an early CD of Haitink's 1971 M5 which I still think is pretty good - not the most thrilling but with a classical sense of restraint which I like.

I headed off to a record store to get Haitink's M9 (when it was a full price CD set, not a Duo!) but they only had the live Karajan so I got that.

john haueisen

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #6 on: August 27, 2008, 12:52:23 PM »
Way back in college, in the 1960s, during the LP era, for the princely sum of one dollar I got a Crossroads Records recording of Mahler's Titan.  That first made me aware of Mahler as a composer.

But what made me a Mahlerite was hearing Ozawa's M2.  When I heard "the Wave" sound of the timpani, I just knew that this was no ordinary music; no ordinary composer.  This was far more than Taffelmusik or elevator music or transitory pop music--this was something very special.  That conclusion has remained valid for me.

John H

Polarius T

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #7 on: August 27, 2008, 01:07:59 PM »
I just realized there was an entire thread almost like this about a year+ ago, so let me rephrase the question to change the angle a bit. But first a couple of quick comments:

- Todd: Intriguing this longer pause you had between two intensive periods of listening and collecting; what initiated or caused it, if I may ask? I think for most others it seems the obsession has been largely uninterrupted. And I still want to post separately on Boulez "Lied" which I find more and more revelatory with every listening. Wish Abbado had/would still record it; he says he's mostly into the "Abschied" and "Einsame im Herbst" with the rest of it not speaking to him that personally.

- Ivor: you are a walking encyclopedia of modern Mahler performance. (I recall you also attended some of Klemperer's M performances which is sthg still today I'd have on top of my wish list.) (I'm a big Klemp fan.) (DH may take notice.)

- Russ: I find it always so interesting how players get into and hear the kind of music I love (my own background is in the piano but not as an orchestral instrument). (And the Giulini recording makes sense: it's really appealing and not for nothing garnered just about every industry award available at the time.)

- Don: Ditto with Solti live...some ear-opener, must have been; as is indeed CSO anytime, for that matter: guaranteed to make an impact if anything! (Of the U.S. orchestras -- though there are so many really excellent ones -- I like their sound the best btw.) Lucky to have such auspicious beginnings.

- Akiralx: Another interesting thing is that to what I hear around it seems that for most or at least really many it was M6 that first caught them off guard and made them see the light... For me maybe the opposite -- this was possibly the hardest nut to crack.

Now, if I should rephrase the point of interest: What did you have to hear to be able to become a Mahlerite?

For me the answer is fairly straightforward: Like with most things in life, I proceeded to Mahler in wrong order, starting from contemporary music and descending downward on the evolutionary ladder, so to speak; and I think without previous familiarity with three composers phylogenetically following (or preceding, from my reverse angle) Mahler, I would not have been prepared for the revelation M was in the same way at all (that this was no ordinary music, no ordinary composer, as was your sudden but lasting realization, too, John):

Messiaen
Schoenberg
Zemlinsky


Zemlinsky and Schoenberg are of course rather obviously related (has anyone ever initiated a thread on the former's Lyric Symphony btw? If not, someone should), but what in Messiaen finds a kind of counterpart to M is the usage of huge, often descending blocks of sounds and awkward rhythmic patterns; reliance on thematic, rhythmic, and other material classifiable as juvenile and vulgar; greater physical diversification and spread of the orchestra and utilization of spatial effects; use of nonstandard instruments; the obvious challenges of organizing large disparate bodies of music into a coherent whole; and the intentionally naive disposition surfacing on occasion -- one could probably go on.

-pt
« Last Edit: August 27, 2008, 01:14:24 PM by Polarius T »

Offline Seán

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #8 on: August 27, 2008, 07:17:29 PM »
Having listened to Jazz for years and years I found that was gradually growing tired of it and with very little new music writing for Jazz orchestras - my hero, Duke Ellington is dead a long, long time - I started foraging through Classical music recordings looking for something to stimulate me.  I bought dozens of Stravinsky CDs and loved some more than others.  A friend of mine suggested the music of Gustav Mahler to me but warned me that it is "very heavy" music so I mightn't like it.   Duly warned I went out and bought a copy of Mahler's Fifth Symphony by Tennstedt and came to the conclusion that he was right, I didn't like Mahler at all.

Late last year I came across a copy of Abbado/BPO M6 recording on sale for €8 so I bought it and I liked it.  A few days later I came across the von Karajan/BPO M5 for €7, so I bought it.  Well on first hearing it the von Karajan recording really grabbed me, I was hugely impressed.  I couldn't believe the range of tone colours that I was hearing.  These orchestrations were something I had never heard before, I never realised it was possible either.  My interest in Classical music took on a whole new meaning.   I am glad that even though it is thirty later than it should have been that - thanks to HvK and Claudio Abbado - I was introduced to the beautiful world of Gustav Mahler.  Mahler is now an obsession of mine so my quest continues.

It's good to be able to share this with people who don't think I'm nuts!   ;D

Offline Seán

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #9 on: August 27, 2008, 07:21:56 PM »
One of my first concerts, I was 14-15 and completely blown away by the music and the sound. I got the recording of the work they made around the same time.

Fifteen?  Oh you lucky man Don, I envy you.  Ah well I was enchanted by Duke Ellington at that stage of my life!

Offline stillivor

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #10 on: August 27, 2008, 09:30:50 PM »
Given the revised question, I think I needed only two things.

First, my weakness for tunes, satisfied by that M7 finale opening.

Second, my preparedness in my early listening days to listen to anything and everything.

Oh, thirdly [ :-) ], having no preconceptions about what to enjoy.

     Ivor: you are a walking encyclopedia of modern Mahler performance. (I recall you also attended some of Klemperer's M performances which is sthg still today I'd have on top of my wish list.) (I'm a big Klemp fan.) (DH may take notice.)

You're very kind. Alas, I just went to quite a lot of Mahler concerts 64 - 72 or so, when there were big names in London. Then a long gap, then very intermittent visits from my Norwich, Norfolk base.

"Walking encyclopedia"? I wish. [I just now how to make much out of little .]


   Ivor


Offline stillivor

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #11 on: August 27, 2008, 09:31:40 PM »
Oh that works like that. I see.

  Ivor

Offline Don

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #12 on: August 27, 2008, 10:18:59 PM »
I just realized a typo in my response, it was M7 not M& as I typed.  :-\
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Offline Don

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #13 on: August 27, 2008, 10:28:18 PM »
One of my first concerts, I was 14-15 and completely blown away by the music and the sound. I got the recording of the work they made around the same time.

Fifteen?  Oh you lucky man Don, I envy you.  Ah well I was enchanted by Duke Ellington at that stage of my life!

The opening tympani figure of the 4th movement of the 7th still gives me chills!
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Offline John Kim

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Re: What did you have to hear to become a Mahlerite?
« Reply #14 on: August 28, 2008, 04:34:21 AM »
I became a Mahlerite in stages...the recording that first amazed me was the Kaplan/LSO M2 (first one on MCA) which I heard in 1989...a year or two after that I tried these all important recordings that have influenced me ever since:

M9 Abbado/VPO
M6 Karajan/BPO

Most of Lenny's DGG Mahler cycle
Abbado/VPO/DG M9th....an interesting trigger to make anybody a Mahler devotee. Yes, this was one of few first digital recordings I bought back in mid 80's and I was hooked on it for a while. The sound was amazingly spectacular with every instrument clearly audible (it was a very close-up recording). It still is.

John,

 

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