Overture Magazine - 2014-2015 January-February 2015 | Page 33

program notes { symphony and that movements four through six be played without pause. In contrast to the quickness of its composition, the Third Symphony had to wait nearly six years — until June 9, 1902 — to be premiered in its entirety. Finally, Richard Strauss invited Mahler to present the entire symphony under his baton at a festival of new German music in Krefeld near Cologne in 1902. Despite the composer’s gloomy predictions that no one would understand the “comic” aspects of a symphony he considered fundamentally happy (he had earlier given it the title “The Happy Life”), the premiere was the greatest triumph of his career to date. Listening to the Music The musical forces required for this work are immense: a huge orchestra with eight horns, enlarged string sections, two harps and two timpanists as well as other drums and percussion. Added to this are an alto soloist for the fourth and fifth movements, and women’s and children’s choirs for the fifth. And yet during most of the work’s 100 minutes, Mahler uses only a small portion of his forces — instead presenting chamber-like groups of instruments, combined with superb sensitivity for their colors and expressive qualities. As he wrote to Natalie BauerLechner: “The aspect of instrumentation in which I consider myself ahead of past and present composers can be summed up in a single word: clarity. … Each instrument must be employed only in the right place and for its own qualities.” Mahler called the first movement “the wildest thing I ever wrote.” Its long D-minor introduction —“Pan Awakens” — opens unforgettably with the eight horns blaring out in unison a four-square theme Mahler called the “Waking Call.” Sleeping nature begins slowly to stir with the rumble of drums, a mysterious swing of major and minor chords that we’ll hear later in the fourth movement, and a snarling, dissonant motive from muted trumpets. Soon one of Mahler’s signature funeral marches lumbers into action — the deadly weight of Winter. A solo trombone twice presents a fanfare-based melody. Alternating with this music is You enjoy a first class music experience. an ethereal lullaby for high flutes over tremolo violins plus a tender theme for solo violin representing the sleeping Pan. As woodwind birds call, we hear the approach of a much more festive march, and the main part of this stretched-out sonata-form movement begins now in F Major. This is Summer’s march, and it has a strongly popular, even vulgar cast to it that is a characteristic feature of Mahler’s music, with a brassy melody and snare drum borrowed from military bands. After a “Hollywood” climax with harp glissandos, the development section begins with the theme of the trombone solo played by horns. All of this gradually builds into a frenzied, loud, dissonant section Mahler labels “Das Gesindel!”— “The Mob!” An accelerated march in distant keys announces the beginning of a battle between the forces of summer and winter. Eventually, the Summer march dominates, building to a finale that is “wild” indeed. The second movement, “What the flowers of the meadow tell me,” provides complete contrast. Mahler loved the flower-filled meadow outside his composing cottage, and it inspired this lovely minuet in A Major. The middle trio section features faster, slightly more intense music with whirling sixteenth notes and fuller, but still transparent orchestration. “It is the most carefree piece I have ever written,” Mahler wrote to Natalie Bauer-Lechner. “It is carefree as only flowers can be. Everything hovers in the air with grace and lightness, like flowers bending on their stems and being caressed by the wind.” The third-movement scherzo, “What the animals of the forest tell me,” is longer and more emotionally complex. It begins innocently with a perky, birdlike melody in the woodwinds, taken from Mahler’s song “Ablösung in Sommer” (“Relief in Summer”) which mourns the cuckoo who fell to its death from the tree and was replaced by the mellifluous nightingale. The music is a polka with typical polka slides in the brass, inspired by Mahler’s Bohemian childhood. A middle section introduces a solo posthorn that seems to represent man as the hunter; Shoul dn’t you also enjoy a first class moving experience? ContaCt Donna Brown Long & Foster Real Estate realtor/reloCation SpeCialiSt 410-804-3400 email: [email protected] weB: http://donnabrown.lnf.com What? ’ you re not in Overture? you’re missing out, hon. Advertise, and reach over 100,000 patrons of the BSO five times a year in Overture, a program that’s about more than just beautiful music. Design Printing AD sAles to advertise, Con P