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Gustav Mahler: The 'Titan' Symphonist
| Article
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10812 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
Date : |
7 / 1986 |
3,183 Words |
| Author
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Tom Pniewski Tom Pniewski is a musicologist at Hunter College in New York. |
Mahler was a titan, a genius who took on a tremendous creative responsibility at a critical time--carrying the symphonic tradition over the century mark from the nineteenth to the twentieth centuries. He brought the symphony from the diversity and confusion of the Romantic and post-Romantic era over to the modern era. It was a great task, undertaken with much soul-searching and incredible quantities of labor. In doing it, Mahler inevitably colored the symphonic form with his own personality--one that was spiritual, emotional, and intellectual, tinged with melancholy and isolation. But he also laid the foundation for the symphony of the twentieth century--for all large-scale composition of our time, in fact--by taking the form to the limit and pushing it even further, into individualist fragmentation that brought the orchestra new transparency and character.
Mahler was born to a Jewish family on July 7, 1860, in the Bohemian town of Kalist. He was the second of fourteen children and the first of six to live to maturity. His father ran a brewery and tavern, and had married a woman of higher social standing in hopes of advancing the lot of both himself and his children. The marriage was not to be a happy one; the father was an angry and often violent man, and some of young Gustav's earliest recollections were to be those of bitter quarrels and fights in the home.
Fortunately, the Moravian town of Iglau in which he was raised offered Gustav more congenial and musical inspiration and furnished him with materials that appear time and time again in his symphonies--folk songs and peasant dances (including the hearty Landler, or early waltzes), military marches and calls from the nearby army barracks, birdcalls and close contact with
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