We started this series dedicated to the great Bohemian composer with the sublime Das Lied von der Erde, two months on it's with the Lied that we say goodbye to our beloved Gustav, well aware of the fact that in each of his wondrous symphonies lies a heart beating for the song, in its highest dimension.
The early Das klagende Lied is a work full of charm, where Mahler showcases a stunning command of the orchestral and choral forces. The beautifully scored Waldmärchen, which the composer removed from his later revisions, presents a theme intensely redolent of Kundry's aria in Wagner's Parsifal (also heard at the beginning of the Hochzeitsstück), and has been reintroduced in the performing practice some 100 years later.
The magnificent Kindertotenlieder, and the other set on Rückert's poetry are later masterpieces, sorrowful meditations on the love for life and nature, recurring themes in Mahler's artistic core.
Last but not least, Des Knaben Wunderhorn is a truly extraordinary score, taking us - song after song and with childlike enchantment - into the magical world of our ill-fated, unforgotten Genius.
Gustav Mahler
Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen
Rückert-Lieder
Des Knaben Wunderhorn (Excerpts)
Susan Graham, Mezzo-Soprano, Thomas Hampson, Baritone
San Francisco Symphony
Michael Tilson Thomas
HQ Digital Download - SFS (2007)
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5/11/2014
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