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Perspectives
Evocations of Mahler:
“Mahlerian” Music by Others
emotional qualities (particularly
Angst
), and the inclusion of widely
disparate musical styles within a single piece. Although it is
encouraging that “Mahlerian” seems, on balance, a positive term, its
over-use has reduced its descriptive qualities. This article limits the
term “Mahlerian” to works with either a strong emotional resemblance
to Mahler’s music or those which appear to allude to specific works by
Mahler. This allusion may include an auditory similarity or an apparent
structural resemblance of at least some portion of the work to a
Mahlerian model.
by David B. Ellis
“Mahlerian” is an adjective whose time has more than come. When it
occurs, the word is used to connote length, large orchestration, wild
COMPOSER
WORK
YEAR
MAHLERIAN ASSOCIATION
Karłowicz
“Rebirth” Symphony
1902 Symphonies Nos. 1 and 2
Foerster
Symphony no. 4
1905 Symphony no. 2
Suk
“Asrael” (Symphony)
1905 Symphony no. 2
, Das Lied von der Erde
Webern
Langsamer Satz
1905 Symphony no. 4
Webern
Six Pieces, Op 6
1909 Symphony no. 2
Zemlinsky
Six Songs, Op 13
1913 Symphony no. 9
Berg
Three Pieces, Op 6
1914 Symphonies Nos. 6,7, and 9
Irgens-Jensen
Japanischer Frühling
1919
Das Lied von der Erde
Zemlinsky
Lyric
Symphony
1922
Das Lied von der Erde
Krenek
Symphony no. 2
1922 Symphonies Nos. 6 and 10
Miaskovsky
Symphony no. 6
1923 Symphony no. 6,
Das Lied von der Erde
Berg
Wozzeck
1925 Symphony no. 2
,
“Revelge”
Zemlinsky
Sinfonietta
1934 Symphony no. 5
Berg
Violin Concerto
1935 Symphony no. 5,
Das Lied von der Erde
Shostakovich
Symphony no. 10
1953
Das Lied von der Erde
Rochberg
Music for the Magic Theater
1965 Symphony no. 9
Berio
Sinfonia
1968 Symphony no. 2
Crumb
Ancient Voices of Children
1970
Das Lied von der Erde
Rochberg
Caprice Variations
1970 Symphony no. 5
Rochberg
String Quartet no. 3
1972 Symphonies Nos. 4, 5, and 9
Rochberg
Violin Concerto
1975 General emotional resemblance
Gorecki
Symphony no. 3
1976
Kindertotenlieder
Silvestrov
Symphony no. 5
1982 Symphony no. 5
Schnittke
String Quartet no. 3
1983 “Der Tamboursg'sell”
Adams
Harmonielehre
1985 Symphonies Nos. 4,5, and 10
Rochberg
Symphony no. 5
1985 Symphony no. 9
Schnittke
Cello Concerto no. 1
1986 General emotional resemblance
Schnittke
Piano Quartet
1988 Piano Quartet
Schnittke
Concerto Grosso no. 4
/
Symphony no. 5
1988 Symphonies Nos. 2 and 6, Piano Quartet
Korndorf
Hymn III (in Honor of Gustav Mahler)
1990 Symphony no. 4
Silvestrov
Dedication
(Symphony for Violin & Orch.)
1991 Symphony no. 9
Silvestrov
Stufen
1994
Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen
Bell
Mahler in Blue Light
1996
Das Lied von der Erde
Naturlaut vol. 4 no. 1
2
The summary table contains a list of arguably “Mahlerian” works, along
with my hearing of their association with Mahler’s music. The works in
bold type are those which I would particularly recommend as
suggestions for further listening to someone who wanted to hear music
similar to that of Mahler. (Boldface type, or its lack, should not be taken
as any implication of artistic quality). In order to keep this article within
space constraints, I have omitted coverage of Benjamin Britten
1
and of
Dmitri Shostakovich, except for the latter’s Tenth Symphony. Mahler’s
influence on Shostakovich was profound and can be heard in so many
works that the subject is beyond the scope of this article.
Tchaikovsky ‘s Fifth musically, since both Karłowicz and Tchaikovsky
use mottos (in E Minor) to represent fate, and then transform those
mottos to E Major rebirth/triumph in their respective Finales.
Foerster, Suk
Both Josef Bohuslav Foerster (1859-1951) and Josef Suk (1874-1935)
shared Mahler’s Bohemian heritage. Foerster was with Mahler in
Hamburg and attended the funeral of Hans von Bülow, at which
Klopstock’s ode “Auferstehung” was sung. It was Foerster who first
“guessed the secret” that Mahler would use this ode as the words for
the Finale of his “Resurrection” Symphony.
6
In 1905 Foerster
composed what I think of as a smaller scale, Czech “Resurrection” as
his Fourth Symphony, titled “Easter Eve”. The first movement is a
funeral march “Calvary” in C Minor (mirroring Mahler’s funeral march in
the same key), followed by two shorter inner movements – “A Child’s
Good Friday” and “The Charm of Solitude”- and a Finale in C Major
(the parallel major rather than Mahler’s relative major of E-flat) titled
“The Victory of Holy Saturday” with an organ, without a chorus, but
with a triumphant nature similar to that of Mahler’s “Resurrection”
Symphony.
Hans Rott
Before expanding on the summary table, adherence to the title
compels mention of one of the most Mahlerian pieces of all, the
Symphony in E Major (1878) by Hans Rott (1858-1884). It is not
included in the table because the thesis of this article implies influence
by Mahler, but Rott’s Symphony predates Mahler’s First Symphony by
ten years. The beginning of Rott’s Scherzo (the third movement of his
Symphony in E) sounds, to my ears, quite close to the beginning of the
Scherzo (“Ländler”) of Mahler’s First Symphony. This same passage,
however, was definitely used by Mahler in the Scherzo of his Second
Symphony.
2
Rott’s slow movement (the second movement) contains
two passages which seemingly furnished Mahler with material for the
Adagio of his own Third Symphony.
3
Josef Suk married the daughter of Antonin Dvorak, and composed his
“Asrael” Symphony as a memorial to both his wife and her father after
their deaths in 1904. (Asrael is the angel of death in Muslim
mythology). The combination of the Symphony’s five movements,
approximately one hour in length, large orchestra, and “fate”motif
virtually compels the “Mahlerian” adjective, which is fully deserved in
this piece. The final C-Major transfiguration of the fate motif (previously
hammered on the timpani like that motif in Mahler’s Sixth Symphony),
combines both the tonality and the emotional feeling of acceptance of
the end of
Das Lied von der Erde,
but composed three years earlier.
Karłowicz
The similarities between Mahler and the “Rebirth” Symphony of
Mieczyslaw Karłowicz (1876-1909) are programmatic rather than
musical.The score translates the title of the symphony into German as
“Auferstehung”, which of course is the title of Mahler’s Second
Symphony. Karłowicz wrote an extensive “poem” whose words for the
first movement begin “Requiem aeternam…Dreary, ominous singing,
mingling with the fumes of incense, flows from the coffin of shattered
youthful dreams.” Near the end of the movement the poem states “But
now the hour for the miracle seems to be approaching…It seems about
to be become triumphant…No…Too early…That also was an illusion.
And because the nearer the moment of rebirth seemed to be, the
stronger and more distressing is the disappointment.”
4
Zemlinsky, Irgens-Jensen
Alexander von Zemlinsky (1871-1942) and Ludvig Irgens-Jensen
(1894-1969) have at least one thing in common: orchestral song cycles
modeled on
Das Lied von der
Erde
. Zemlinsky is well known as a
teacher and as the composer of the
Lyric Symphony
, which he stated
was based on Mahler’s
Das Lied von der Erde
. In his
Lyrische
Symphonie
(
Lyric Symphony)
Zemlinsky set seven poems by the
Indian author Rabindrath Tagore, to be sung alternately by soprano
and baritone. The poetry evokes the world-weariness found in the texts
that Mahler used for
Das Lied
, although Zemlinsky’s music resembles
more the style that Schoenberg used in the first part of the cantata
Gurrelieder
than any music by Mahler.
Karłowicz’s poem goes on at great length about the struggles of the
soul to achieve rebirth, and in rendering the ideas in the Symphony,
Karłowicz composed a work in four movements, which takes about
forty minutes to perform.. The poem for the final movement has the
soul advancing toward victory: “Only one step more! But it is still too
early. There is still one more trial…It is a hard trial, perhaps the hardest
of all. But the soul’s power is mighty….”and so forth to final rebirth.
These words are extremely close to Mahler’s description of his First
Symphony in his 1894 letter to Richard Strauss in which he explains
why Strauss could not excise a major portion of the Finale:
The Norwegian Irgens-Jensen composed
Japanischer Frühling
as a
nine-song cycle for soprano and piano in 1919 and orchestrated it in
1957. The texts are from a volume of Japanese poems translated into
German by Hans Bethge, whose
Die chinesische Flöte
was Mahler’s
source for the texts he used in
Das Lied von der Erde
. The Japanese
poems evoke a melancholy similar to those of
Das
Lied
. Here, in
translation, is the final Japanese poem, titled “Permanence in Change:”
In the passage you mention, the denouement is only an illusion (in the
true sense of the word a ‘false conclusion’). I needed to turn back, for
the whole being to touch rock bottom, before a real victory could be
obtained. The battle I was concerned with was the one in which victory
is always furthest away when the fighter thinks it is at hand. That is the
essence of any spiritual combat. It is not easy to be a hero!
5
Despite these verbal similarities to the programs of Mahler’s first two
symphonies, Karłowicz’s “Rebirth” Symphony is much more akin to
1
Donald Mitchell’s studies on Mahler, particularly
Songs and Symphonies of Life
and Death
, reprinted. (Woodbridge, England: The Boydell Press, 2002) provide
details on this influence, particularly pp. 604-5.
2
James L. Zychowicz, “Gustav Mahler’s Motives and Motivation in his
“Resurrection” Symphony: The Apotheosis of Hans Rott,” in
For the Love of
Music: Festschrift in Honor of Theodore Front on his 90
th
Birthday
, edited by
Darwin F. Scott (Lucca, Italy: LIM Antiqua, 2002), p. 137-63.
3
Peter Franklin
, Mahler: Symphony No. 3
(Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1991), pp. 75-76.
4
Mieczyslaw Karłowicz, “
Rebirth
” Symphony in E minor (Krakow: Polskie
Wydawnictwo Muzyczne, 1993), p. xxii-xxvi. (no translator listed)
5
Quoted by Henry-Louis de La Grange in
Mahler, vol. 1
(Garden City, N.Y.:
Doubleday & Co., 1973) p. 758.
The cherry tree blossomed. Black and young
My hair fell about my head, as I danced.
The cherry tree blossomed. Fresh and young
It shimmered, - my hair had turned gray.
Today the cherry tree blossoms again.
Heavenly young
Its blossoms smile down as always,-
My hair turning white, I stand deep in thought.
7
These words evoke the end of
Das Lied
much more closely than does
the music, which is wistfully romantic and pentatonic, like the middle
songs of
Das Lied
. However, there is no analogue to Mahler’s “Der
Abschied” beyond the text quoted above, which requires approximately
two minutes to perform – the entire cycle is about 25 minutes in
duration.
Zemlinsky’s Sinfonietta, Op 23 evokes the Scherzo of Mahler’s Fifth
Symphony in its first movement according to Adorno
8
and the Finale of
6
La Grange,
op. cit
., p.294.
7
Ludvig Irgens-Jensen,
Japanischer Frühling
, Simax CD PSC 1164, translation
by Thilo Reinhard.
Naturlaut vol. 4 no. 1
3
Mahler’s Fifth in its third and final movement according to A. Peter
Brown.
9
However, Zeminsky seems closer to Mahler in his set of Six
Songs, Op 13 (the so-called “Maeterlinck” Lieder), the last of which has
been described as “heavily influenced by” Mahler’s Ninth Symphony.
10
This association was seemingly recognized in the June 2004 concert
of the Northwestern University Symphony Orchestra, which paired
these two works.
between 1923 and 1926, having met her in 1922, the year in which he
composed his Second and Third Symphonies. His stated goal then
was “to be Gustav Mahler’s successor as a symphonic composer.”
17
Krenek’s Second Symphony, although lacking conventional key
centers, is certainly approachable as compared to post- 1945 serial
pieces. It takes over an hour to perform, and its large orchestra
inspired Krenek to recall that:
Berg, Webern
Because Alban Berg (1885-1935) and Anton von Webern (1883-1945)
are among the most studied composers of the twentieth century, my
comments will only deal with subjective auditory resemblances to
Mahler’s music. The fourth of Webern’s
Six Pieces for Orchestra
is a
funeral march, which culminates in a percussion crescendo (probably
the loudest moment of all of his works) very much like that
representing the graves bursting open in the Finale of Mahler’s
“Resurrection” Symphony. (In fact, Webern’s
Six Pieces
for
Orchestra
preceded, without intermission, Mahler’s Second Symphony in a
concert at the 2003 Edinburgh Festival)
11
Webern’s
Langsamer Satz
is
a nine-minute movement for string quartet based upon the second
theme of the slow movement of Mahler’s Fourth Symphony.
12
For a long time I have thought this must be the loudest piece of
music I have ever heard, with the exception, possibly, of Milhaud’s
Orestie
. That work, however, includes a huge choir.
18
The very end of Krenek’s Symphony calls for repeated
fff
blows on the
timpani, bass drum, and tam-tam which give a strong sense of finality
in spite of the lack of tonality. Krenek stated that if an epithet were to
be attached by an historian to his works this should be called his
“Tragic” Symphony. The Finale of this work has the character of the
desperate Finale of Mahler’s Sixth Symphony and also alludes to,
although loudly, the three note theme played by the cellos and basses
just before the final outburst of the “fate”motif at the very end of
Mahler’s work. There is also an Adagio episode for violins in Krenek’s
Finale which resembles the Adagio of Mahler’s Tenth Symphony.
19
The Mahlerian aspects in Berg’s compositions are strong and varied.
Berg’s
Three Pieces for Orchestra
, Op 6 are based on three Mahler
symphonies, respectively the first movement of the Ninth, the Scherzo
of the Seventh, and the fourth movement of the Sixth.
13
The third
piece, the “Marsch” includes five hammer blows, thus strengthening
the resemblance to the Finale of the Sixth with its three (or later, two)
hammer blows. Berg’s Violin Concerto includes a chorale as an
important part of its overall structure similarly to Mahler’s Fifth
Symphony, and that chorale concludes on “a chord that is almost
certainly…a quote”
14
of the final chord of
Das Lied
, which
accompanies the repeated word “ewig.”
Miaskovsky
Nicolai Miaskovsky (1881-1950) composed 27 symphonies, of which
the Sixth is by far the longest (about 65 minutes) and also the only one
to use a chorus. It appeared in nine seasons of the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra between 1927 and 1940; its popularity leading to
Miaskovsky’s commission to compose his Symphony no. 21 for the
Fiftieth Anniversary season of the Orchestra. The closest direct
Mahlerian allusion is in the second movement Scherzo, whose trio
features a celesta-dominated theme very similar to the transitional
theme (between the march theme and the “Alma” theme) of the first
movement of Mahler’s Sixth Symphony (the main theme of
Miaskovsky’s first movement also resembles the march theme of
Mahler’s first movement). However, a more compelling emotional
resemblance comes near the end of Miaskovsky’s Finale with a brief
choral passage setting a Russian sacred chant depicting the
separation of the soul from the body, with the body resting in the
mother-earth while the soul ascends to the judgment of God. As
Stephen E. Hefling has noted in describing
Das Lied von der Erde
,
“Mahler had envisaged the moment of the soul’s departure from earth
in three of his earlier symphonies -- the Second, Fourth, and Eighth”.
20
And it is the conclusion of
Das Lied
that the ending of Miaskovsky’s
Sixth Symphony calls to mind, as it shifts from the minor to the major
while the violins ascend apparently toward heaven.
Moreover,
Wozzeck
, Berg’s first opera, includes a percussion
crescendo (the end of scene two of act three) like that of the
“Resurrection” Symphony and Webern’s
Six Pieces
for Orchestra
. In
act one, scene three of
Wozzeck
a military band plays on stage
followed by the character Marie’s singing the words of “Soldaten,
Soldaten” to the same tune as the words of “Ach Bruder, ach Bruder”
in Mahler’s
Wunderhorn
song “Revelge,” which itself contains effects
that suggest a military band. Finally, the orchestral interlude before the
final scene of the opera (entitled “Invention on a key”) conveys the
emotional feel of Mahler’s music well enough to elicit the comment that
“
Wozzeck
was the best opera that Gustav Mahler never wrote!”
15
Krenek
Perhaps the best known Mahlerian connection of the composer Ernst
Krenek (1900-91) was his preparation of the Adagio and “Purgatorio”
movements of Mahler’s Tenth Symphony for their Vienna performance
of October 1924.
16
In addition, he was married to Anna Mahler
8
A. Peter Brown,
The Symphonic Repertoire
, vol. 4:
The Second Golden Age of
the Viennese Symphony
:
Brahms, Bruckner, Dvorak, Mahler, and Selected
Contemporaries
(Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2003), p. 801.
9
Brown,
ibid
.
10
Derrick Puffett, “Berg, Mahler and the Three Orchestral Pieces Op
.
6”, pp. 111-
44 in
The Cambridge Companion to
Berg
edited by Anthony Pople (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1997) p. 121.
11
This concert of August 22, 2003 was reviewed in
Naturlaut
, Vol. 2, No. 3.
12
Henry Louis de La Grange,
Gustav Mahler, vol. 3
:
Vienna: The Triumph and
Disillusion (1904-1907)
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), p. 117.
13
Puffett,
op. cit
., p. 121-122.
14
Robert P. Morgan, “The Eternal Return: Retrograde and Circular Form in
Berg,” pp.111-40 in
Alban
Berg: Historical
and Analytical Perspectives
, ed by
David Gable and Robert P. Morgan (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991).
15
John Rea, “
Wozzeck
– Alban Berg’s Masterful Operatic”,
La Scena Musicale
, 8
(May 2000), www.scena.org/lsm/sm5-8/wozeck-en.htm.
16
Ernst Krenek, Symphony No. 2, (Vienna: Universal Edition, 2002), Christoph
Schlüren, Preface to the score, no pagination.
Shostakovich
Although most of the music by Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-75) is
beyond the scope of this article, one allusion deserves mention: the
horn call in the third movement of the Shostakovich Tenth Symphony,
which comes close to a direct quotation of the opening horn call from
Das Lied
. This horn theme is simultaneously a musical signature for
the first name of Elmira Nazirova, a composition student of
Shostakovich in the early 1950s. Shostakovich wrote numerous letters
to Nazirova while composing the Tenth Symphony, and they provide
strong evidence for the above references.
21
Moreover, Mahler’s
Das Lied von der Erde
was special to
Shostakovich, as indicated by the Polish composer Krzysztof Meyer:
17
Christoph Schlüren,
op. cit
.
18
Christoph Schlüren,
op. cit
.
19
Claudia Zenck, “The Historical Place of Krenek’s Second Symphony”,
unpublished paper, 1978) quoted by John Stewart,
Ernst Krenek: The Man and
His Music
(Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 1991), p. 401.
20
Stephen E. Hefling,, “Das Lied von der Erde” pp.438-66 in
The Mahler
Companion
, ed. by Donald Mitchell and Andrew Nicholson (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1999), p. 441.
21
Nelly Kravetz, “A New Insight into the Tenth Symphony of Dmitry
Shostakovich” in
Shostakovich in
Context,
ed. by Rosamund Bartlett (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2000), p. 159-74.
Naturlaut vol. 4 no. 1
4
He always raved about Mahler.When I asked him which of his
symphonies he rated highest, he hesitated and answered: “The First,
to be sure, also the Second…and the Third…and also the Fourth, Fifth,
Sixth, and Seventh…and the Eighth is marvellous…and the Ninth! And
also the Tenth! But if someone told me that I had only one more hour
to live, I would want to listen to the last movement of
The Song of the
Earth
.”
22
In this section of the quartet, then, Rochberg does not merely write in
the language of late romanticism, or imitate the general style of Mahler,
but rather he goes further, to create the specific ambience of the
Mahler Ninth Symphony, which evokes, in a very Proustian sense, the
listener’s psychological experiences of this work.
27
The third movement of the quartet, a set of variations was arranged by
Rochberg into the 18 minute
Transcendental Variations
for string
orchestra. The fourth movement of Mahler’s Ninth Symphony is
present near the very end of the
Variations
, although late Beethoven is
heard by some listeners as the major inspiration of the movement
taken as a whole.
28
However, the Quartet as a whole has been
summarized as “a quartet…which sounded like the one that Mahler
might have written”.
29
Similarly, the great Mahler conductor Jascha Horenstein said “one of
the saddest things about leaving this world is not to hear
Das Lied von
der Erde
any more.”
23
Berio, Crumb
The
Sinfonia
(1968) of Luciano Berio (1925-2004) is possibly the most
complex assemblage of musical quotations and allusions in Western
music. A listing of these for the twelve minute third (middle) movement
of this half hour piece requires 14 pages.
24
The tempo marking for this
movement is
In ruhig fliessender Bewegung
, the same tempo
indication that Mahler used for the third movement of his Second
Symphony, which, through its almost complete quotation, provides the
musical skeleton for Berio’s movement. Additionally, Berio begins the
fourth movement of his
Sinfonia
with the same first two notes that
Mahler used to begin the fourth movement of his Second Symphony
(“Urlicht”). Berio referred to his third movement as a “hommage, this
time to Gustav Mahler (whose work seems to bear within it the weight
of the entire history of music)”.
25
Other easily discernible quotations
include Debussy’s
La Mer
, Ravel’s
La Valse
, Strauss’
Der
Rosenkavalier
, and Stravinsky’s
Rite of Spring
.
Similarly, when Rochberg’s Violin Concerto was premiered in 1975, the
Chicago
Tribune
review began with the question to the critic from a
fellow attendee: “How did you like Mahler’s Violin Concerto?” I would
agree with that sentiment, particularly for the original version just
recently issued on a Naxos CD.
30
Rochberg’s Fifth Symphony,
commissioned and premiered by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra,
includes close allusions to Mahler’s Ninth Symphony (this is one of at
least three Rochberg pieces to reference the Ninth).
Gorecki
Those familiar with the Third Symphony of Henryk Gorecki (b. 1933)
may wonder what connection it could possibly have with Mahler.
Providing a brief background for those less familiar with the work will
then lead to my view of a structural resemblance. Gorecki’s Third
Symphony, subtitled the
Symphony of Sorrowful Songs
, is comprised
of three movements for soprano and orchestra requiring a little less
than an hour to perform. The texts, sung in Polish, include a fifteenth-
century lamentation, a brief prayer written on the walls of a Gestapo
cell by an eighteen-year-old Polish girl in 1944, and a folk song
portraying a mother’s grief for her dead son. The musical textures are
string dominated, tempi are uniformly slow, and dynamics reach
fortissimo in only a few measures. There is also enough repetition and
lack of harmonic change in each movement to cause many to classify
the symphony as a “minimalist” work.
The American composer George Crumb (b. 1929) juxtaposes flamenco
and Bach along with a quotation from “Der Abschied” in his
Ancient
Voices of Children
(1970). Mahler is a less significant component of
quotation here than in Berio’s
Sinfonia.
26
Rochberg
George Rochberg (b. 1918) antedated Berio’s
Sinfonia
by three years
in this “collage” technique of multiple quotations with his
Music for the
Magic Theater
. Rochberg includes significant portions, although
arranged for a chamber ensemble of 15 players, from the first and
fourth Movements of Mahler’s Ninth Symphony, along with Mozart’s
Divertimento, K.287, Beethoven’s String Quartet, op. 130, and various
quotations from Webern, Varese, Stockhausen and others. Rochberg’s
Caprice Variations
(1970) continue the collage technique with
variations devoted to Beethoven, Brahms, Schubert, and the Third
Movement of Mahler’s Fifth Symphony, all within the context of
Paganini’s famous Caprice no. 24.
Despite -- or because of -- the above characteristics the Symphony
has been recorded at least 13 times since its 1976 premiere, with the
performance by Dawn Upshaw and conducted by David Zinman
having already sold well over one million copies. It is almost certain
that this CD has had more sales than all of the recordings ever made
of all of the other 32 pieces on my list. More detail on the popularity of
Gorecki’s Third Symphony can be found in Michael Steinberg’s
The
Symphony
.
31
The third and final song of Gorecki’s Third Symphony
contains three verses (about half of the movement’s duration) in A
minor in which the mother laments the loss of her son, with these
concluding words
In his Third String Quartet (1972) Rochberg moved from quotation and
collage to including lengthy passages composed in the style of past
composers. Its five movements encompass the styles of Bartok, late
Beethoven, and Mahler along with the dissonance of Rochberg’s own
earlier serial style. Its most Mahlerian section is its fifth movement
Finale: Scherzos and Serenades, in which I hear the third movement of
Mahler’s Fourth (the first variation of the principal theme beginning at
m. 107) and the fifth movement of Mahler’s Fifth Symphony (the first
string fugato beginning in m. 55). However, for others this same
Rochberg movement can evoke some aspects of Mahler’s Ninth
Symphony:
22
Quoted in Elizabeth Wilson, Shostakovich:
A Life Remembered
(Princeton,N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1994) p. 465.
23
Gustav Mahler, Symphony No. 9, Music & Arts CD 235, 1986, notes by Tanya
Buchdahl.
24
David Osmond-Smith
, Playing on Words: A Guide to Luciano Berio’s Sinfonia
(Royal Musical
Association Monographs, No. 1)
(Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1987), p. 95.
25
John Webb, “Schnittke in Context”,
Tempo
182 (1992): 20.
26
Crumb’s
Songs, Drones, and Refrains of Death
(1968) is also reminiscent of
Mahler according to Steven M. Bruns “’In stilo Mahleriano’ Quotation and Allusion
in the Music of George Crumb”,
The American Music Research Center Journal
3,
(1993): 9-39.
Perhaps the poor child
Lies in a rough ditch,
And instead, he could have been
Lying in his warm bed.
At this point the key changes to an “unsullied diatonic A major”
32
to
accompany the ecstatic final stanza
27
Jay Reise, “Rochberg the Progressive”, Perspectives of New Music, 19
(February 1981), p. 395-407.
28
Raymond Tuttle, review of Naxos CD 8.559115, 2003,
www.classical.net/music/recs/reviews/n/nxs59115a.html.
29
Peter Graeme Woolf, review of Naxos CD 8.559115, April 2004,
www.musicalpointers.co.uk/reviews/cddvd/ROCHBERGViolinConcerto.htm.
30
The original version is over 50 minutes in length. Isaac Stern requested cuts
prior to the premiere which reduced the Concerto to about 35 minutes, to the
particular detriment of the last movement
31
Michael Steinberg,
The Symphony
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995),
pp.169-77.
Naturlaut vol. 4 no. 1
5
Oh sing for him,
God’s little song-birds,
Since his mother cannot find him.
And you, God’s little flowers,
May you blossom all around
So that my son may sleep a happy sleep.
33
Nikolai Korndorf (1947- 2001) composed three hymns for orchestra, of
which the third was commissioned in honor of Gustav Mahler. Its 35
minutes of stable tonality do not contain a single accidental. Korndorf
identifies the Mahlerian elements to include the “pure, celestial timbre
of the soprano solo” (as in Mahler’s Fourth Symphony) and his use of
off-stage trumpets.
41
There is a brief return of A-minor material before an orchestral
postlude in A major. A clear Mahlerian analogue for this song is “In
Diesem Wetter”, the fifth and final song of the
Kindertotenlieder
. The
first half of the song in duration (four stanzas) is in the minor key (D
Minor) and expresses the parent’s anguish over the loss of the
children. The final stanza moves to D major, supporting the consolation
of the parent’s “broad, lyrical, diatonic melody”
34
:
Schnittke
Until last November, I was unaware of any particular Mahlerian
associations in the music of Alfred Schnittke (1934-98
)
. My awakening
was an overwhelming performance of Schnittke’s Concerto Grosso
4/Symphony 5 conducted by Cliff Colnot and the Civic Orchestra of
Chicago (the training orchestra for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra).
The sheer physical impact of this music requires live performance,
which is also true for Mahler’s symphonies. At the conclusion of the
piece’s four movements, my initial response was that the movement
was a worthy successor to the Finale of Mahler’s Sixth. And this was
after having heard, in the second movement, fragments of Mahler’s
Piano Quartet of 1876.
Sheltered by God’s hand,
They are resting, as if in their mother’s house.
35
As in Gorecki’s ending, there is an extensive orchestral postlude in the
tonic major. The similarities of textual imagery between the two
composers’ texts are also striking.
As further support for a Mahlerian connection, Luke Howard has
surveyed the many citations of influence on the Gorecki Third.
36
“But
perhaps more surprising is the composer conspicuous by his absence
from these lists: Gustav Mahler. Cited often by Gorecki as one of his
most important influences, Mahler set crucial musical precedents that
emerge in Gorecki’s Third Symphony. In works such as
Das klagende
Lied
,
Kindertotenlieder
,
Das Lied von der Erde
, and the Second,
Fourth, and Eighth Symphonies, Mahler also explored in the vocal-
orchestral medium the same themes that inform Gorecki’s Third: death
and heaven, child-like innocence, grief and redemption.”
37
The explanation for the presence of the Piano Quartet is that Mahler
completed only one movement of the quartet and left only a few
sketches for a second movement. Schnittke, in 1988, composed a
second movement based on Mahler’s sketches and thus created a
Mahler/Schnittke Piano Quartet. Also in 1988, the Royal
Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam commissioned for its
centenary a symphony from Schnittke, which he fulfilled with two
movements of “Concerto Grosso”, the second of which is an
orchestration of his new piano quartet movement, and two further
movements of “Symphony”. According to Ronald Weitzman,
Schnittke’s piece is “surely modeled on Mahler’s Second”, although
“any hint of resurrection is resolutely crushed.”
42
He describes the
fourth and final movement as “a funeral march of stark originality,
ferocious even by Schnittke’s standards, where the hammer – blows
make those in Mahler’s Sixth sound as timid taps by comparison.” In
fact, Schnittke’s score, unlike Mahler’s Sixth and Berg’s
Three Pieces
for Orchestra
, Op. 6, does not include the hammer as an instrument.
However, the spirit of Weitzman’s comments is correct based on the
ferocity of what I heard the Civic Orchestra produce in Orchestra Hall.
Silvestrov, Korndorff
The three works of the Ukrainian Valentin Silvestrov (1937- ) identified
here share the characteristics of length, slow tempi, low dynamics, and
nostalgic beauty. The Fifth Symphony has been “nominated” by Soviet
Russian music expert David Fanning “as the finest symphony
composed in the former Soviet Union since the death of
Shostakovich”.
38
The Adagietto from Mahler’s Fifth Symphony, a
portion of which is expanded upon and eventually recapitulated, plays
a crucial role in Silvestrov’s long single movement.
Dedication
, a
symphony for violin and orchestra, was written for Gidon Kremer, who
when listening to his recording “spontaneously shouted out ‘Death in
Venice’. And after a moment, then closer to the truth, ‘Death in Kiev’.”
39
(It is Mahler’s Ninth Symphony alluded to, however, rather than the
Fifth Symphony as implied by Kremer’s comment.)
Stufen
is a cycle of
eleven songs for soprano and piano which take about an hour to
perform. As Fanning states in his review of the work: “Elegy and world-
weariness are the prevailing tones, as though Silvestrov had somehow
climbed inside Mahler’s ‘Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen’ and
miraculously discovered a twin planet.”
40
Schnittke has also incorporated Mahler using the collage technique, for
example in the final movement of the Third String Quartet, where an
allusion to “Der Tamboursg’sell” from
Des Knaben Wunderhorn
is
joined with references to Lassus, Beethoven’s Grosse Fuge, and the
“DSCH” motif.
43
Upon further investigation, it seems that Schnittke is second only to
Shostakovich in being influenced by Mahler. Since there is also a clear
Shostakovich influence in many of Schnittke’s works, any further
distinctions are all but impossible to determine. Even so, Schnittke’s
First Cello Concerto rivals only the Fifth Symphony in Schnittke’s
ouevre for Mahlerian emotional feel. The importance of the concerto
genre for Schnittke has been highlighted by the musicologist Richard
Taruskin:
32
Wilfred Mellers, Round and About Gorecki’s Symphony No. 3,
Tempo
168
(1989): 22-24.
33
Steinberg,
op. cit
., p. 176-77.
34
Peter Russell,
Light in Battle with Darkness: Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder
, (Bern:
Peter Lang, 1991) p. 109.
35
Gustav Mahler,
Kindertotenlieder
, DG CD 431 682-2, 1991.
36
Luke B. Howard, “Motherhood, `Billboard,’ and the Holocaust: Perceptions and
Receptions of Gorecki’s Symphony No. 3,”
The Musical Quarterly
82 (Spring
1998): 131-59.
37
Howard,
op. cit
.
38
David Fanning, review of Silvestrov Symphony No. 5, Sony Classical SK 66
825,
Gramophone Magazine
74 (October 1996): 65.
39
Valentin Silvestrov, Dedication, Teldec CD 4509-99206. Note by Gidon
Kremer.
40
David Fanning, review of Silvestrov
Stufen
, Megadisc MDC 7832.
Gramophone Magazin
e (2003): 69.
With a bluntness and immodesty practically unseen since the days
of Mahler, Schnittke tackles life-against-death, love-against-hate,
good-against-evil, freedom-against-tyranny, and (especially in the
concertos) I-against-the-world.
44
Schnittke was composing his First Cello Concerto for Natalia Gutman
in 1985 when he suffered a stroke so severe that he was pronounced
clinically dead three times. While recovering, he discovered that he
had forgotten all that he sketched out in his head, so he had to start
over.
45
The originally planned three movements, with a short fast
41
Nikolai Korndorf , A New Heaven: Hymn II, Hymn III, Sony Classical SK 66
824, 1996. Interview of Nikolai Korndorf by Ted Levin.
42
Ronald Wieitzman,
Tempo
182 (September 1992):49.
43
John Warnaby,
Tempo
176 (March 1991): 38.
44
Richard Taruskin,
Defining Russia Musically
, (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
University Press, 1997), p. 101.
45
Alexander Ivashkin,
Alfred Schnittke
, (London: Phaidon, 1996) p. 190-91.
Naturlaut vol. 4 no. 1
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