calimac: (Haydn)
[personal profile] calimac
I didn't ask to review EPS conducting Mahler's Third. My editor assigned me the job and I didn't object. But I wasn't looking forward to it. The last time I heard the Third, MTT was conducting and I castigated myself afterwards for having subjected myself to an hour and a half of tedious undifferentiated sludge.

But I equipped myself with a score from the library - wasn't going to cover a work like this without one - and braced myself to my duty. As I was sitting there waiting for the start, my colleague Lisa of the Iron Tongue came by and expressed surprise to see me there, knowing my take on Mahler. I explained my duty. What she did not say was that she was reviewing it for the Chronicle, though I was hardly surprised to find it there later. She's been writing for them about once a week for a month now, and the more she steps into Kosman's retired shoes the happier I'll be. (It's an important and necessary job, but not one I'd want to undertake myself.)

Anyway, we basically agreed on EPS's approach; the difference was that I was even happier with it. I've heard occasional successful Mahler performances before, but this one took the cake. I wonder if, as with the saying "There are no bad dogs, only bad owners," that there are no bad composers (at least among the big names), only bad conductors. As with the realization I had about the hideous Anton Webern the time I heard him played to sound tender and attractive, I wonder if the reason I normally loathe Mahler so much is because most people insist on playing him so badly.

At least with his earlier work: I find even sympathetic performances of his later symphonies to be impenetrable. There's room for contemplation here.

Date: 2024-07-03 03:56 pm (UTC)
voidampersand: (Default)
From: [personal profile] voidampersand
Saw it on Saturday. It was truly great.

I always loved Mahler's songs, but his symphonies didn't work for me. Then I saw a SFS performance of Mahler's 9th, conducted by MTT, where everything was clear and made sense. Wow. It was amazing and wonderful. I was not expecting that. Now I approach a Mahler symphony performance with the attitude that anything can happen.

I think Mahler's symphonies are hard to play well because they have so many themes. There is an extraordinary overabundance of parts.

Date: 2024-07-04 04:50 am (UTC)
kate_schaefer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kate_schaefer
Every once in a while, I check to see if I still greatly dislike Mahler. So far, the answer is always, yes, which means that if there is an interpretation of Mahler that I would like -- any Mahler at all -- I am unlikely to listen to it unless I hear it by accident and find my ear caught more sympathetically than I expect. I'd have to enjoy it first and find out it was Mahler second.

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