Mark’s Reviews > Gustav Mahler, Vol. 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion, 1904-1907 > Status Update

Mark
Mark is on page 60 of 1000
The New York Musical Courier on the 1904 performance of Mahler's Fourth Symphony "... one hour or more of the most painful musical torture to which he [the critic] has been compelled to submit."
Dec 22, 2012 11:38AM
Gustav Mahler, Vol. 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion, 1904-1907

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Mark
Mark is on page 611 of 1000
Mahler on Schoenberg: "I do not understand his music, but he is young. Perhaps he is right. I am old, and perhaps I no longer have the ability to understand his music." This is quoted from Alma's account of the premiere of Schoenberg's Kammersymphonie.
Jan 20, 2013 02:43PM
Gustav Mahler, Vol. 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion, 1904-1907


Mark
Mark is on page 539 of 1000
The Viennese critic Hedwig von Friedländer, of the Montags-Revue, wrote of Mahler's Sixth Symphony, "Who can pronounce a judgement when he is about to be submerged in a stream of incandescent lava?" Incandescent lava! I love that!
Jan 17, 2013 06:26PM
Gustav Mahler, Vol. 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion, 1904-1907


Mark
Mark is on page 526 of 1000
This is great: "In the Leipziger Zeitung Arthur Smolian described Mahler as one of several modern 'orchestral magicians, sound-hypnotists, and vocal and instrumental mass murderers' ". Seems a little excessive, no?
Jan 15, 2013 07:15PM
Gustav Mahler, Vol. 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion, 1904-1907


Mark
Mark is on page 389 of 1000
Hans Joachim Moser on Mahler the conductor: "...a small ecstatic man, thin, driven by a powerful, tightly sprung will, a sovereign technician of conducting, acutely responsive to the sound being made."
Jan 06, 2013 12:55PM
Gustav Mahler, Vol. 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion, 1904-1907


Mark
Mark is on page 272 of 1000
Mahler conducted performances of his Fifth Symphony in Trieste in December 1905. Local critics found "unpredictable and unusual dissonances, the most contrived counterpoints, and sudden blasts of the brass instruments which threatened to drown out all the other instruments with their tumult!"
Dec 30, 2012 12:19PM
Gustav Mahler, Vol. 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion, 1904-1907


Mark
Mark is on page 251 of 1000
Starting in August of 1905, Mahler struggled to get Strauss' Salome approved for performance by the Viennese censors. No dice: the censor wrote, "I can only repeat the staging of events which belong to the field of sexual pathology is not suited to our Imperial stge." They had standards then, you know.
Dec 29, 2012 02:34PM
Gustav Mahler, Vol. 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion, 1904-1907


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