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RE: mahler
- From: Jewish Music Institute <jewishmusic...>
- Subject: RE: mahler
- Date: Fri 11 Aug 2000 11.43 (GMT)
Leonard Bernstein made a whole television programme in the UK about the
Jewishness of
Mahler's music, sighting particularly the first symphony.
Geraldine
JMI, SOAS
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-jewish-music (at) shamash(dot)org [mailto:owner-jewish-music (at)
shamash(dot)org]On Behalf Of
TomP317 (at) aol(dot)com
Sent: 11 August 2000 01:23
To: World music from a Jewish slant
Subject: Re: mahler
Because Mahler took himself to Freud, who had lots to say about the Oedipal
nature of his marriage, there's been quite a lot of comment on his very early
influences. Certainly it's interesting that in that third movement (in which
a distincly Jewish-sounding band seems to fetch up in a street down which a
funeral is processing to Frere Jacques - or Bruder Martin - played as a
minor-key canon) should be in his first symphony.
But it's possible that this is down to a parodic urge in him - a self-sending
up which makes his music so knowing and vital. An anecdote we were told at
school has him as a boy running out of the house in which his mother and
father had been rowing, and overhearing a hurdy-gurdey playing on the street.
Perhaps he mentioned this to Freud; he was, at any rate, constantly wondering
why he could never let his music reach the heights of the sublime, and why he
would always scupper it. There's that dare I call it 'Death in Venice'
Adagietto in the 5th symphony, which is speeded up in the next movement with
jolly beerfest type clarinets trilling over it; and a kind of reversal of the
process in the 9th symphony, where another clarinet does a turn and then
hiccups up a diminished ninth interval in a Landler, anticipating the strings
making the same move more solemnly in the, let's face it, sublime last
movement.
But if we're looking for early influences on Mahler's doorstep, we have to
think, too, of the military barracks at Iglau, whose bands must have been
audible to him. Hence, perhaps, the offstage trumpet in the 2nd symphony.
Others might have more to say about the persistent influence of military
bands on Jewish music in general - especially what with the clarinet
obsession - but it sounds freshly and raucously through Mahler's early work,
even in his songs.
Tom Payne
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