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Symphony No. 5 (Mahler) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Symphony No. 5 (Mahler)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Symphony No. 5 by Gustav Mahler was written in 1901 and 1902 mostly during the summer months at Mahler's cottage at Maiernigg. It is arguably the best known Mahler symphony. Among its most distinctive landmarks are the funereal trumpet solo that opens the work and the frequently performed F major Adagietto.

The musical canvas and emotional scope of the work are huge. Herbert von Karajan said once that when you hear Mahler's Fifth, “you forget that time has passed. A great performance of the Fifth is a transforming experience. The fantastic finale almost forces you to hold your breath.” After its premiere, Mahler is reported to have said, “Nobody understood it. I wish I could conduct the first performance fifty years after my death.”

Contents

[edit] Orchestration

The piece is scored for a large orchestra made up of:

Woodwinds
4 Concert flutes (3rd & 4th doubling piccolos)
3 Oboes (3rd doubling English horn)
3 B♭ Clarinets (2nd doubling E-flat clarinet, 3rd doubling Bass clarinet)
3 Bassoons (3rd doubling contrabassoon)
Brass
6 French horns
4 Trumpets
3 Trombones
Tuba
Percussion
Timpani
Bass drum
Snare drum
Tam-tam
Cymbals
Glockenspiel
Triangle
Whip
Strings
Harp
1st Violins
2nd Violins
Violas
Cellos
Double basses

[edit] Structure

The work is in five movements:

  1. Trauermarsch (Funeral March) (C sharp minor)
  2. Stürmisch bewegt, mit größter Vehemenz (Moving stormily, with the greatest vehemence) (A minor)
  3. Scherzo (D major)
  4. Adagietto (F major)
  5. Rondo-Finale (D major)

The first two movements constitute Part I of the symphony (as designated by Mahler in the score), the long Scherzo constitutes Part II, and the last two movements constitute Part III.

The piece is generally regarded as Mahler's most conventional symphony up to that point, but from such an unconventional composer it still had many peculiarities. It almost has a four movement structure, as the first two can easily be viewed as essentially a whole. The symphony also ends with a Rondo, in the classical style. Some peculiarities are the funeral march that opens the piece, and the Adagietto for harp and strings that interrupts the booming score.

A performance of the work takes around 70 minutes.

[edit] Composition

Mahler wrote his fifth symphony during the summers of 1901 and 1902. This was a time of great change for the composer. On the positive side he moved into his own lakeside villa in the southern Austrian province of Carinthia in June 1901. Mahler himself was delighted with his new-found status as the owner of a grand villa. According to friends, he could hardly believe how far he had come from his humble beginnings. He had one of the best jobs in the musical world as Director of the Vienna Court Opera and was the principal conductor of the Vienna Philharmonic, one of the world’s great orchestras. His own music was also starting to be successful. But he had not yet found the love of his life. This last missing element in his life fell into place later in 1901 when he met Alma Schindler. By the time he was back at his summer villa in summer 1902, they were married and she was expecting their first child.

On the negative side, Mahler had experienced severe health problems in February 1901 when he suffered a sudden major haemorrhage and his doctor later told him that he had come within an hour of bleeding to death. The composer spent quite a while recuperating and doubtless was shaken by the experience.

With so much going on in an artist’s life it is no surprise that the music Mahler started writing in summer 1901 was noticeably different from the music he had previously written. With hindsight we can see that this was the beginning of what was to become Mahler’s middle period. Symphonies five, six and seven all belong to this period and have much in common. They are also quite different from the first four. The first four symphonies Mahler wrote all have strong links to vocal music. Symphonies two, three and four all include singers while the first symphony borrows music from earlier songs Mahler had composed. But none of the middle three symphonies have any vocal music, although the fifth does maintain some links to songs Mahler wrote while composing it. The middle symphonies are pure orchestral works. They are, by Mahler’s standards, taut and lean. As his wife said of the composer at this time, “he was at the height of his powers”.

Nostalgia begins to creep into the music during Mahler’s middle period. The first four symphonies were written during the composer’s twenties and thirties. The middle three were written by a man in his forties while the last works were written in the shadow of some terrible personal tragedies that struck Mahler in 1907. This nostalgia in Mahler’s music is often linked with music associated with the composer’s love of nature. This is particularly true in the sixth and seventh symphonies where Mahler includes distant cowbells in the orchestra. In the fifth symphony this longing is most clearly heard in the middle movement with its solo horn.

Counterpoint also becomes a more important element in Mahler’s music from the fifth symphony onwards. The term counterpoint describes music that features two or more melodies played at the same time as distinct from music that basically has one melody supported by chords. The ability to write good counterpoint was highly cherished by Baroque composers and Johann Sebastian Bach is regarded as the greatest composer of contrapuntal music. So it is no surprise that Bach played an important part in Mahler’s musical life at this time. He was a subscriber to the edition of Bach’s collected works that was being published at the turn of the century. He became a great admirer of Bach and later conducted and arranged works by Bach. Mahler’s renewed interest in counterpoint can best be heard in the third and the final movements of the fifth symphony.

[edit] Premieres

[edit] Trivia

  • The symphony is sometimes reproduced with the key assignment C-sharp minor, but Mahler himself objected against this assignment:
"From the order of the movements (where the usual first movement now comes second) it is difficult to speak of a key for the 'whole Symphony', and to avoid misunderstandings the key should best be omitted." [1]
  • Performing the Fifth is one of the great challenges for even great conductors and orchestras. Most performances fail to deliver the full expression of the work - particularly the all-important, technically demanding finale - with irregular or slow tempos often being the culprit.
  • The Adagietto is sometimes heard alone. It was used liberally in Luchino Visconti's film, Death in Venice, as well as at Robert Kennedy's funeral.
  • The Trauermarsch was used as the theme music for the BBC miniseries A Fall of Eagles, a dramatization of the fall of the European dynasties incident to the Great War of 1914-1918 (World War I).

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Letter to Peters Music Publishers dated July 23, 1904. Cited after: http://www.gustav-mahler.org/english/gesamtausgabe/cr5-f.cfm

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