
Sometimes the music really is like the man - the one the composer Ethel Smyth compared to a bomb cased in razor-edges'. Listening to Mahler's music, and especially to those huge, outrageously ambitious symphonies, can be like being at the centre of a controlled explosion. But Smyth is describing Mahler's 'work face' the face he adopted for coercing, seducing, even terrifying singers and orchestral musicians in pursuit of his vision. There was also Mahler the doting father, Mahler the meditative, exultant Alpine walker and cyclist, the Mahler whose exquisite song from Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen, 'Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen', reveals him ‘lost… in my heaven, in my love, in my song’, who famously described his symphonies as ‘like the world’, a musical world that ‘must embrace everything’.
As we listen to those symphonies, even when the music is pinning us to the backs of our chairs, we can sense that world embrace in the kaleidoscopic symbolic ‘sampling’ of real-world sounds Mahler crams into those immense, teeming scores: rural, urban high- and low-society song and dance, playground chants, military fanfares and funeral marches, birdsong… Yet there’s also a sense that the ‘world’ being embraced is something richer and stranger than what we like to call the ‘real’ world – the world that is ourselves, our own souls. Like his literary hero Dostoevsky, whom Mahler once called ‘my best friend’, he presents us with the fullness of being, in all its richness, joys and horrors, extremes of dark and light – and also, most importantly of all, in its internal contradictions.
This story is from the July 2023 edition of BBC Music Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the July 2023 edition of BBC Music Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In

Look back in anguish
Despite Korngold's denials, there is much to suggest that his Symphony in F sharp is a grim depiction of the dark days of Nazism, argues Jessica Duchen

Come again?
If something is worth hearing once it's worth hearing again, explains Rebecca Franks, who charts a history of the use of echoes in music

THE BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE INTERVIEW
Music by women and composers of colour is not a separate set of pieces from the ones we know

A brilliant melting pot of discoverable works
Erik Levi enjoys Patricia Kopatchinskaja and friends' eloquent performances of lesser-known works by exiled composers

Pierre Boulez
Tom Stewart celebrates a composer, conductor and musical iconoclast for whom breaking from tradition was not an option but a must

Vienna's cacophonous concert ends to the sound of slapping
‘Fighting at a Schoenberg concert.

Molto humoroso
Cartoonist and broadcaster Gerard Hoffnung lampooned the world of classical music with splendid affection and wit, writes Andrew Green

There and back again
With retrospectives on album and in concert this month, Oscar-winning composer Howard Shore reflects on his years in Middle-earth and tells Michael Beek why he has a lot to thank the LPO for...

THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN Pick a theme... and name your seven favourite examples
Composer-conductor Odaline de la Martinez prizes tempo, swing and bounce in her top rhythmic works

Crystal clear with plenty of punch
The great is, they say, the enemy of the good, and that is certainly the case with David Sanger’s interpretation of Vierne’s Organ Symphony No. 1, which stands head and shoulders above a strong field of alternative versions.