Gustav Mahler(1860-1911)
- Music Department
- Composer
- Writer
Gustav Mahler is largely considered one of the most talented symphonic
composers of the late 19th Century and early 20th Century. His musical
output comprised mainly of symphonic and song cycles requiring mammoth
orchestras and often choruses. Sadly, Mahler never experienced
popularity as a composer during his lifetime, not nearly as much as
Beethoven, Mozart, Wagner, or even Tchaikovsky, but his talents as
interpretive artist on the conductor's podium earned him many accolades
and prestigious assignments as music director to famous orchestras.
Mahler was born in Kaliste, Bohemia on July 7, 1860, to a distillery
manager father and a homemaker mother. Gustav was the second of twelve
children, of which five died in infancy and three others did not live
to mature adulthood. The constant conflicts between Gustav's
domineering and abusive father and his weak mother helped to shape his
compositional style, always reflecting on the struggle between good and
evil, happy and sad, strong and weak, etc. Mahler showed musical talent
at an early age, and by the age of eight years, he was already
composing music influenced by military marches played at the nearby
barracks. His parents eagerly encouraged his music studies, sending him
to private tutors and ultimately to the Vienna Conservatory
(1875-1878). Mahler's studies at the Conservatory got off to a slow
start, but the final year at school was marked with him winning several
composing awards. After graduation, for want of paying composing work,
Mahler instead started conducting, typically directing light operas at
second-rate orchestras. His insistence on complete artistic control of
the entire production, from the stage costumes to the dramatic routines
to how each and every note in the opera was played, earned him few
friends among the orchestral players and performers but many positive
reviews from critics. It was during these ten years after graduation
from the Conservatory in which Mahler really began serious orchestral
composing. Works written during this time included Das Klagend Lied
(1880), Lieder Eines Fahrenden Gesellen (Songs of a Wayfarer) (1884),
and his First Symphony (1888). It must be noted that Mahler conducted
the premieres of each of his orchestral works. However, the premiere of
his First, in Budapest in November 1889, was deemed a critical failure,
since the audience was unaccustomed to the sound of this complex,
modern work. Yet the First is perhaps his most approachable symphony,
containing many Austrian Lieder themes and simple melodies. And, still,
with a performance time of 55 to 60 minutes, it is his shortest
symphony! Failures of Mahler the composer did not daunt Mahler the
conductor, as his successes with the operas of Mozart, Wagner, and even
some brand new works from Tchaikovsky earned him a reputation as a
brilliant interpretive artist. Still, Mahler persevered, composing the
Second Symphony (1892), a mammoth work of five movements requiring a
full orchestra, female choral soloists, two choirs, an offstage brass
band, and a pipe organ. His Third Symphony (1896) took this one step
further, a six movement symphonic journey typically taking one hour and
forty minutes to perform. During this time, Mahler was busy conducting
orchestras and opera companies in Kassel (1883), Prague (1885), Leipzig
(1886), Budapest (1888), Hamburg (1891), and Vienna (1894), but it was
the musical director position at the Vienna Court Opera that he was
aiming for. First, he had to overcome some family problems (both his
parents died within months of each other, a younger brother fled to the
United States, and another younger brother committed suicide), but,
more importantly, Mahler's Jewish faith stood in the way of his career
goal (Vienna was largely anti-Semitic during this time). To
accommodate, he accepted a Roman Catholic baptism, and was promptly
appointed musical director of the Vienna Hofoper Court Opera. Mahler's
tenure at the Hofoper was tumultuous yet productive; he composed his
Fourth Symphony (1901), thereby completing what many music historians
agree wraps up his "Early Symphonies." His Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh
Symphonies (1903, 1904, 1905 respectively), all purely orchestral, make
up his intermediate works. Although these works are increasingly modern
and complex, they still contain some wonderful lyrical passages,
especially the divinely beautiful Adagio from his 5th. Also, during
this time he married Alma Schindler (a composer of fair talent
herself), and they had two daughters, Maria (born 1902), and Anna (born
1904). Still, as director of The Hofoper, Mahler brought new high
standards of performance unmatched anywhere else in the world. 1907
brought three tragic events to Mahler's life (ironically foreshadowed
by the three "hammer blows" present in the Finale of his 6th Symphony):
First, he was forced to resign from the Hofoper in somewhat acrimonious
circumstances (chiefly disagreements as to what artistic direction he
wanted to take the Hofoper), second, the diagnosis of the valve defect
in his heart, and third, the death of his elder daughter (of Scarlet
Fever). But by this point in his career Mahler had reached worldwide
popularity as an orchestral and operatic conductor, and new work was
not difficult to find. But it was composing that fueled his passions;
The Eighth Symphony (1908) began the final series of Mahler's works.
The Eighth is another work of Biblical proportions; a standard
performance requires a full orchestra with enlarged brass and woodwind
sections, eight soloists (three sopranos, two altos, a tenor, baritone,
and bass), two full mixed choirs, a children's choir, several
"unconventional" orchestral instruments (guitars, a harmonium, a piano,
and a celesta), and, again, a pipe organ. Mahler disliked the alternate
title bestowed upon this symphony, A Symphony of a Thousand, but
indeed, during the premiere (in Munich in 1910), over one thousand
performers were present. Amazingly, this lengthy and difficult work
(only two movements but requiring 80-90 minutes to perform), was a huge
success at its premiere; in attendance were many famous musicians,
businesspeople, and royal families. Concluding Mahler's final works
were Das Lied von der Erde (1908), the Ninth Symphony (1909), and an
unfinished Tenth Symphony (1911), all of which he did not live to see
or hear performed. The completed portions of the Tenth contain
references to how Mahler lamented his crumbling marriage (by this time
Alma was having an affair) yet it is considered perhaps the most pure
form of Mahler's music (it contains many elements of modern 20th
Century music). It was during concluding a winter season of conducting
the New York Philharmonic Society in the spring of 1911 in which the
heart condition diagnosed four years earlier caught up with Mahler; he
traveled back to Austria to spend his final days near his family. He
died late in the evening of May 18. Mahler's legacy took a long time to
mature. His music, although complex and full of vivid imagery, failed
to become popular in musical circles until fifty years after his death;
it was primarily the efforts of Leonard Bernstein, Herbert von Karajan,
Otto Klemperer, and, more recently, Simon Rattle , who have introduced
the works of Mahler to many. Mahler himself declared, "My time will
come."