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Mahler’s Overwhelming Climaxes: The Symphony as Mass Medium

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 June 2018

Abstract

A number of Mahler’s symphonies contain climactic accumulations and releases of musical-expressive energy that overspill conventional boundaries between the aesthetic and the sensational, the spiritual and the physical, high art and the popular. These might be said to define something of the ‘problem’ that his music represented for many of his contemporaries. They are still infrequently confronted in terms of their elaborately staged excess, as if mocking the metaphorical language of harmonically contrived ‘tension and resolution’ by revealing, in spite of conventional mockery of ‘programmaticism’, what such notionally formal or ‘theoretical’ language always implies. Even Lawrence Dreyfus’s recent exploration of the ‘erotic impulse’ in Wagner’s music was to some degree hedged by symptomatic analysis of Wagner’s supposed ‘decadence’, although it valuably opened up the field and offered insight into key features of post-Wagnerian, late-romantic music. Mahler himself, in a famous letter to Gisela Tolnay-Witt, situated these in the specific, socio-cultural characteristics of symphonic music in an era of mass consumption by ever larger numbers of people in ever larger spaces. The history and changing implications of these climactic moments in Mahler’s symphonies will be sketched here with reference to their often explicitly transgressive implications.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2018 

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References

1 ‘Von hier an … bis zum Schluss ist es empfehlenswerth die Hörner so lange zu verstärken, bis der hymnenartige, alles übertönende Choral die nöthige Klangfülle erreicht hat. Alle Hornisten stehen auf, um die möglichst grösste Schallkraft zu erzielen. Mahler’s direction in the score of the Finale of the First Symphony, seven bars before cue 56. English translation by the author.

2 From Theodor Helm’s review of the Vienna premiere in November 1900 of the First Symphony, upon whose ‘parodistic’ elements he had dwelt satirically. Translation by Painter, Karen and Varwig, Bettina, from Karen Painter, ed., Mahler and His World (Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2002), 293294 Google Scholar [original German text not included].

3 See Taruskin, Richard, The Oxford History of Western Music, IV: Music in the Early Twentieth Century (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010 [originally 2005]), 5–6ff Google Scholar.

4 Rehding, Alexander. Music and Monumentality: Commemoration and Wonderment in Nineteenth-Century Germany (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), 52ff CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Wagner, Richard, Opera and Drama, trans. W. Ashton-Ellis (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1995), I, 195196 Google Scholar.

5 Gisela Tolnay-Witt may have been the nine-year-old subsequent musicologist Gisela Selden-Goth, although Herta Blaukopf questions this assumption on grounds of Selden-Goth’s 1884 birth-date; see Blauopf, Herta, ed., Gustav Mahler Briefe, Neuausgabe (Vienna: Paul Zsolnay, 1982), 434 Google Scholar. Mahler does, however, clearly refer to her as his “little tormenting spirit”; see Selected Letters of Gustav Mahler, ed. Knud Martner (London: Faber and Faber, 1979), 149.

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7 Selected Letters of Gustav Mahler, ed. Martner, 148.

8 Selected Letters of Gustav Mahler, ed. Martner, 148–9.

9 I am thinking here of Wagner’s theorization of the post-Beethovenian orchestra’s ‘faculty of speech’ (‘the faculty of uttering the unspeakable’) as outlined in Wagner, Opera and Drama, III, section V, 316ff.

10 My engagement with this single essay by Kittler is rather deliberately opportunistic; for more extended consideration of Kittler, relevant to the present article, see Gundula Kreuzer, ‘Kittler’s Wagner and Beyond’ in ‘Colloquy. Discrete/Continuous: Music and Media Theory after Kittler’ in Journal of the American Musicological Society 70 (2017), 228–33.

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27 In Mahler’s text for the second of the Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen, the description of an idyllic natural world in which flowers and animals speak to the poet concludes with the lines ‘Will my happiness begin now?/ No, no, I think it can never bloom for me!’

28 Blaukopf, ed., Mahler –Strauss Correspondence, 119 (for the German text see Blaukopf, Herta (ed.), Gustav Mahler – Richard Strauss, Briefwechsel 1888–1911 (Munich: R. Piper & Co., 1980), 156)Google Scholar.

29 The translated text of this programme is reproduced in A. Mahler, Gustav Mahler, 213–14.

30 The programme for the second performance in 1893 of the First Symphony in Hamburg had the Finale titled ‘V. “Dall’ Inferno” (Allegro furioso)/ folgt als der plötzliche Ausbruch der Verzweiflung eines im Tiefsten verwundeten Herzens’ (‘follows, like the sudden despairing outburst of a heart wounded to its depths’). See Henry-Louis de La Grange, Mahler, vol. 1 (London: Victor Gollancz, 1974), 748 (translation amended).

31 A. Mahler, Gustav Mahler, 213.

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44 The present author writes with specific experience of Intolerance, screened with Carl Davis’s new score at the 1989 Leeds Film Festival and Napoleon (restored by Kevin Brownlow and with a new score composed and conducted by Carl Davis with the London Philharmonic Orchestra) as screened at the Royal Festival Hall in December 2004.

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