Gustav Mahler {1860 - 1911} Symphony No.5 Gustav Mahler has come to enjoy a unique position in the music of our own time. He was able to revivify the...
Gustav Mahler {1860 - 1911}
Symphony No.5
Gustav Mahler has come to enjoy a unique position in the music
of our own time. He was able to revivify the symphony of Austro-German tradition, creating
in it a poignant expression of sorrow, a sense of Weltschmerz, but encompassing a much
wider range of feeling. He was able to enlarge the symphony, not only by an expansion of
form and an enlargement of the orchestra itself, but by the use of song, a logical
extension of Beethoven's Choral Symphony, including and summarising a whole tradition of
music.
Mahler was born in Bohemia in 1860 into a relatively humble
Jewish family of no great intellectual or cultural pretensions. His father, at one time
little more than a pedlar, came to own a successful business that included a distillery
and several taverns. At the same time he read w hat he could, in an attempt to further his
own intellectual interests. Mahler himself was eventually able to study at the
Conservatory in Vienna and to enrol in other courses at the University.
It was as a conductor that Mahler made his name, with a series
of appointments in resort opera-houses during the summer season. From these he moved to
more important appointments in Prague, Leipzig, Budapest and Hamburg. Finally, in 1897, he
reached the summit of any conductor's ambition, when he was made director of the Vienna
Court Opera. During ten years he revived the opera, particularly with his performances of
Mozart and of Wagner. By 1907, however, he had aroused sufficient hostility to decide to
resign. His high standards in the opera-house made him enemies, and the amount of time he
was obliged to give to performances of his own music and his Jewish origins were enough
reason for his critics to condemn him. 1907 brought not only Mahler's resignation from the
Vienna Court Opera, but the death of one of his two daughters, a bereavement that deeply
depressed him. There was further cause for anxiety when it was found that he was suffering
from a weakness of the heart that made it necessary to avoid any physical exertion. His
final years were spent partly in the United States where he conducted first at the
Metropolitan Opera during a difficult period in its history and undertook to reform the
New York Philharmonic Orchestra. At the same time he fulfilled a series of engagements as
a conductor in Europe. He died in Vienna in May, 1911. Although his music met opposition
from some in his life-time, his subsequent importance has been incalculable, both as one
of the greatest composers of his generation and as an influence on his contemporaries and
successors.
Mahler's compositions include a number of songs and ten
symphonies, the last incomplete, as well as Das Lied
von der Erde (The Song of the Earth), a symphony in fact, if not in name. He
completed his Fifth Symphony in 1902 during the summer following his marriage to Alma
Schindler, a young woman of considerable and varied talents, daughter of the landscape
painter Anton Schindler and later wife of Walter Gropius and subsequently of Franz Werfel.
The symphony is in three parts, the first, which includes the first two movements, allows
the material of the opening Funeral March to undergo further development and expansion in
a turbulent second movement. The March itself recalls the song of the deserter, Der Tamboursg'sell (The Drummer-Boy), from Des Knaben Wunderhorn (The Boy's Magic Horn), von Arnim and Brentano's seminal collection of German
folk-song, and the Kindertotenlieder (Songs
of the Death of Children), posthumously published poems by Rückert, while the contrasts
of the second movement bring moments suggesting a Bruckner chorale or a fragment of
Wagner. The second part is the Scherzo, a substantial centre to the whole symphony, while
the third consists of an Adagietto recalling two of Mahler's settings of Rückert and a
final Rondo that touches again on the world of Des Knaben Wunderhorn.
The Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra of Katowice
(PRNSO) was founded in 1945, soon after the end of the World War II, by the eminent Polish
conductor Witold Rowicki. The PNRSO replaced the Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra which had
existed from 1934 to 1939 in Warsaw, under the direction of another outstanding artist,
Grzegorz Fitelberg. In 1947 Grzegroz Fitelberg returned to Poland and became artistic
director of the PNRSO. He was followed by aseries of distinguished Polish conductors - Jan
Krenz, Bohdan Wodiezko, Kazimierz Kord, Tadeusz Strugala, Jerzy Maksymiuk, Stanislaw
Wislocki and, since 1983, Antoni Wit. The orchestra has appeared with conductors and
soloists of the greatest distinction and has recorded for Polskie Nagrania and many
international record labels. For Naxos, the PNRSO will record the complete symphonies of
Tchaikovsky and symphonies by Mahler.
Antoni Wit
Antoni Wit was born in Cracow in 1944 and studied there, before
becoming assistant to Witold Rowicki with the National Philharmonic Orchestra in Warsaw in
1967. He studied with Nadia Boulanger in Paris and with Penderecki and in 1971 was a
prize-winner in the Herbert von Karajan Competition. Study at Tanglewood with
Skrowaczewski and Seiji Ozawa was followed by appointment as Principal Conductor first of
the Pomeranian Philharmonic and then of the Cracow Radio Symphony Orchestra. In 1983 he
took up the position of Artistic Director and Principal Conductor of the Polish National
Radio Symphony Orchestra in Katowice. Antoni Wit has undertaken many engagements abroad
with major orchestras, ranging from the Berlin Philharmonic and the BBC Welsh and Scottish
Symphony Orchestras to the Kusatsu Festival Orchestra in Japan.