Overture Magazine - 2014-2015 September-October 2014 | Page 21

“Just when the confusion is at its height and the stampeding of initially disciplined troops has surpassed all limits, a command from the general instantly restores law and order.” The orchestra rapidly unravels into total silence. Then the violins saunter back in with the second half of their opening theme to start the recapitulation, and we are back on the road to Heaven. Movement 2: The C-minor Scherzo presents another risky detour on the journey. Mahler subtitled this movement “Freund Hain spielt auf” or “Friend Hain strikes up [the music].” Freund Hain is a child’s bogeyman in German folklore. Here he takes the shape of a devilish fiddler, impersonated by the concertmaster playing a violin tuned a clashing step above his colleagues’ instruments to resemble a scratchy, out-of-tune country fiddle. Movement 3: Having moved past the temptations of Freund Hain, we reach the great G Major Adagio, the heart of the work and the movement Mahler considered his finest. Two long themes alternate in the variations