Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: Marginalia on Mahler today
- PART ONE Cultural contexts
- PART TWO Mahler the creative musician
- PART THREE Mahler the re-creative musician
- PART FOUR Reception and performance
- 12 Issues in Mahler reception: historicism and misreadings after 1960
- 13 The history of the International Gustav Mahler Society in Vienna and the Complete Critical Edition
- 14 Musical languages of love and death: Mahler's compositional legacy
- 15 Mahler conducted and recorded: from the concert hall to DVD
- 16 New research paths in criticism, analysis and interpretation
- Appendix: selected discography
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
15 - Mahler conducted and recorded: from the concert hall to DVD
from PART FOUR - Reception and performance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: Marginalia on Mahler today
- PART ONE Cultural contexts
- PART TWO Mahler the creative musician
- PART THREE Mahler the re-creative musician
- PART FOUR Reception and performance
- 12 Issues in Mahler reception: historicism and misreadings after 1960
- 13 The history of the International Gustav Mahler Society in Vienna and the Complete Critical Edition
- 14 Musical languages of love and death: Mahler's compositional legacy
- 15 Mahler conducted and recorded: from the concert hall to DVD
- 16 New research paths in criticism, analysis and interpretation
- Appendix: selected discography
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
If the number of recordings and concert performances is any indication, the post-1960s Mahler boom was not just a passing fancy. Rather, the public has taken Mahler to their collective hearts, assigning him a stature virtually equal to that of the idolized masters of the symphony, Beethoven and Brahms, as their successor. During Mahler's lifetime few but he would have dreamed that his works would achieve such stature. It has been less than a full century since he died, and we are now witnessing what Mahler predicted: that his time has surely come.
Performances by Mahler and his followers
But it was not so when Mahler lived. Despite his celebrity as a conductor, when he tried to foster his own music the results were far from consistently successful. He did have the early encouragement and support of Richard Strauss, who was the first conductor other than Mahler to perform one of the symphonies, giving the First in Weimar in 1894 and the Second in Berlin in 1895.
Mahler premièred all of his orchestral works except the last three (Das Lied von der Erde, the Ninth and the unfinished Tenth) to mixed reactions. As an operatic conductor he had no equal, but as a conductor of symphonic music it would appear that critical and public acclaim was more dearly sought and not always found. In the period c. 1890–1910, continental European audiences and critics measured every new symphonic work against their heroes, Beethoven and Brahms.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Mahler , pp. 243 - 261Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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