Other Links
Editorial Board
- Editor - Bill Kenny
- London Editor-Melanie Eskenazi
- Founder - Len Mullenger
Google Site Search
SEEN
AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL REPORT
Colorado MahlerFest 2008:
Boulder, Colorado 9-13.1.2008 (MF)
It sounds almost contradictory. Colorado MahlerFest. What can one
expect from a festival devoted to Gustav Mahler held far from
music capitals like Vienna, London, or even New York? And what
kind of festival is it anyway? Well, Colorado MahlerFest – the
twenty-first consecutive yearly running of a week-long celebration
of the life and works of Gustav Mahler – was held on the campus of
Colorado University in relatively balmy, snow-free Boulder on
January 9-13 of this year. Far from being an event comprising only
concerts and perhaps a pre-concert talk, Colorado MahlerFest
boasts open rehearsals, chamber music recitals, a full day of
seminars, and yes, orchestral concerts as well. The seminars are
given not just by enthusiasts but by the top rank of Mahler
scholars in the world. Stephen Hefling, perhaps the dean of Mahler
experts based in the United States, has spoken at several Fests,
and previous events have hosted Henry-Louis de La Grange, Donald
Mitchell, the late Stuart Feder and Ted Reilly, and several other
well known Mahler biographers and experts. Colorado MahlerFest,
winner of the Internationale Gustav Mahler Gesellschaft’s (IGMG)
Gold Medal for promoting Mahler’s cause, can make a solid claim to
being the foremost ongoing celebration of Mahler in the world.
This year’s MahlerFest was somewhat controversial, at least for
the organizers. On tap were two relatively under-performed pieces
that were seeing their MahlerFest premieres: Todtenfeier (Tf), the
symphonic movement that, after some fascinating edits by the
composer, became the first movement of the 2nd Symphony; and the
original three-movement version of Mahler’s self-described Opus
No. 1, Das klagende Lied (DkL), the Song of Lamentation, Mahler’s
“little fairy tale” in which, as he told Natalie Bauer-Lechner, he
first came into his own “as Mahler.” It was controversial because
neither piece is very familiar to lay listeners; even few
Mahlerians would claim either of them as their favorite, and it
was rare to find a person who before this weekend had heard both
of them in concert. In fact, it is thought that these were only
the second set of performances of the original DkL in the United
States since the appearance of the work’s critical edition in
1999. In the year before MahlerFest, the attitude had been voiced:
“Oh, I don’t know either of those pieces; maybe I won’t go this
year.” That idea turned out to be a huge mistake.
MahlerFest 2008 proper opened with a recital of all of the
so-called Songs of Youth (a title given by an early publisher, not
the composer). Performed mostly by Colorado University students,
these songs set the stage for DkL. Several themes in these songs
would be incorporated into the “fairy tale,” yet another instance
of Mahler’s overarching idea of synthesizing song and symphony.
The only non-student to perform one of these songs was
mezzo-soprano Julie Simson, voice professor at Colorado
University, who in years past performed MahlerFest’s first
traversal of Das Lied and several Wunderhorn songs. This year Ms.
Simson sang Zu Strassburg auf der Schanz'. While the students’
songs were very satisfying, Julie’s performance was at a
completely different level. And this was only a prelude, because
she then gave a performance of the Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen
that left us breathless. These songs, too, have themes that we
would hear in DkL. And there was a nice bit of closure in these
chamber recitals, as two of the students were "victims" in Thomas
Hampson's master class last year. They apparently took his
sometimes very frank advice on board, as their respective songs
were beautifully sung and convincingly portrayed. In a typical
example of MahlerFest’s outreach to the local arts community, this
program was repeated in Lafayette, a Boulder suburb, two days
later.
Saturday was seminar day, which for me is an event that rivals the
concerts. First, some background on the main work of the week, Das
klagende Lied. Mahler started the piece as an 18-year-old
conservatory student in 1878. He finished the three-movement work
in 1880, and submitted it for the Beethoven Prize. It lost. He
revised it in 1898, deleting the first movement, Waldmärchen
(Forest Legend); this version was published the next year and
remained the authoritative one until 1999 when the IGMG published
a critical edition of the original version.
Salvatore Calomino, associate professor of German at University of
Wisconsin-Madison, spoke on "Sources, Versions, and Composition:
Mahler's Path to Das klagende Lied." Salvatore started with a
story about a queen, two rivals for her hand, a golden rose, and a
singing bone. Sound familiar? It was a folk tale from Liberia.
That was his way of showing that the Grimm tale from which DkL was
taken had analogs in several other cultures. Salvatore praised
Mahler’s adaptation, which showed that even at the tender age of
20 or even 18, Mahler was just as attuned to literary and
theatrical considerations as he was to music, and that his
frequent and sometimes radical restructuring of poems had its
roots long before Das Lied or even the Rückert songs.
Jim Zychowicz, editor of the Chicago Mahlerites' Naturlaut, (and
regular Seen and Heard conributor. Ed) then spoke on "What Das
klagende Lied Tells Us: Perspectives on Mahler's Op. 1." Jim
pointed out that while Mahler did revise the piece, he preserved
the early version; this conflicted with Mahler’s warning against
studying composers' earlier thoughts. Jim noted that the work was
popular in the decade after Mahler's death, being conducted in
Vienna by Schreker, Freed, and Walter. Is DkL only a work for
specialists, or does it have importance for Mahler's later style?
Jim noted several instances of DkL-like music in later Mahlerian
works; in assessing the importance of these and other techniques
for Mahler's later work, the concept of "quotation" is
insufficient; DkL is present in more than just a few stray
quotations.
Conductor Bob Olson then spoke about both works but mostly about
DkL. The cantata "is a concerto for horn-fifths," a technique well
known since the Baroque era. Bob pointed out some difficulties
that plagued the young composer. In several places Mahler
juxtaposes march music with horn-fifths but without a direction to
slow down; the effect sounds like cartoon music. There are many
markings in the parts left by other orchestras that have performed
the work. Why? Because some of the music as written “simply
doesn't work.” The balances are wrong in many places; also, DkL is
severely sectionalized, what with the constant changes in key and
tempo and the soloists jumping up and down to sing only a couple
of bars.
This was one of the most interesting things to come out of the
entire week. At a post-rehearsal party one night, I expressed the
conventional wisdom: DkL is a shocking piece, no wonder Mahler
didn't win the Beethoven Prize. No, said Bob, it is not a shocking
piece. Mahler lost the competition because the piece wasn't
shocking enough. Look at the horn-fifths, a well-known technique
for 200 years. Leitmotivs? Pure Wagner, who wasn't even dead yet.
Off-stage music? That had been done before. No, Mahler lost the
competition not because he shocked the jury, but because he didn't
impress them. I’m still mulling this over a couple of weeks after
the fact.
Jerry Bruck, one of the world’s foremost recording engineers and
the man in charge of most MahlerFest recordings, then spoke on "My
Life With Gustav." Jerry, as many readers know, was in at the
creation for several pieces of Mahlerian history. He was part of
the effort that got Alma Mahler to rescind her ban on performances
of Mahler’s 10th Symphony – which she had no authority to do but
got away with anyway. He played a key role in helping Deryk Cooke
finish one of the editions of the work, even paying Cooke the
equivalent of two weeks' salary to do so. And most importantly for
this MahlerFest, he discovered a manuscript of Waldmärchen while
going through one of Alma's trunks after she died. This one-hour
talk went way too fast; we could have listened to him the entire
afternoon.
Marilyn McCoy, frequent MahlerFest lecturer, then spoke on
"Momentous Moments in Mahler's Das klagende Lied." "Mahler
foreshadowed the entire piece in the first six measures, although
we don’t know that yet": the horn calls, suggesting a forest
landscape; an oscillating motive in the clarinets, suggesting the
rustling of leaves; harp arpeggios, which could be sleep, death,
or something supernatural; and the rising 5th, which will become
the symbol of the younger brother's death. Measures 7-35 are no
less portentous. The horns march into the forest. But the
harmonies between the horns and strings don't match; something is
wrong. More harp arpeggios suggest a dreamlike atmosphere. The
buildup to a dissonant climax portends something awful. This is
followed by the bad brother's searching motive (a minor triad)
followed by a macabre clarinet postlude, also a minor triad.
Marilyn continued with an analysis of many leitmotivs – which she
was careful to say were open to interpretation – that made us
appreciate just how calculating the young Mahler was. None of us,
after this talk, would ever think of DkL as being less "ideated"
than any of Mahler's symphonies. Less sophisticated, maybe, but
certainly not put together with less thought.
Marilyn closed her talk by discussing what many of us think was
the young composer’s greatest mistake: Why exactly did Mahler
delete the first movement, which contains such great music and has
many references to incidents that would occur in the next two? She
speculated that by the time of revision, in 1899, Mahler looked
back at the 18-year-old piece and was embarrassed by the obvious
similarities to Wagner and the possible overuse of leitmotivs. To
remedy this he deleted the first movement, but that left many
scenes in the remaining two movements without reference. So he
revised those. But unlike other composers – and luckily for us –
Mahler did not destroy Waldmärchen, the deleted first movement. So
we now have two versions of DkL, the original and the revised.
Either one is legitimate; what’s to be avoided is the so-called
hybrid version which consists of Waldmärchen tacked on to the
revised, two-movement edition. This idea of possible
embarrassment, coupled with Bob Olson’s argument that DkL is not a
radical work, was the main philosophical issue raised during the
week.
Seminar day was brought to a close by Stephen Hefling, who spoke
on "Perspectives on Todtenfeier." Stephen, who wrote his doctoral
dissertation on Tf, noted that the piece was planned from the very
beginning to be the first movement of a symphony. But what
inspired the piece? It turns out that the Polish poet Adam
Mickiewicz wrote a poem called Todtenfeier that was translated by
none other than Mahler's good friend, Siegfried Lipiner. Stephen
compared various parts of the poem's plot to themes in Tf, and
parts of different editions of Tf to each other. This lecture was
typical Hefling, a very literate, high-level discussion of
interdisciplinary topics delivered with humor and enthusiasm.
But we came for the music. During the rehearsals, members of the
Boulder Chorale, directed by Tim Snyder, were, I think, surprised
at the intensity that Bob Olson displayed and, in true Mahlerian
style, demanded of himself and them. There were some missed cues,
intonation problems, ragged entries. By the end of the dress
rehearsal, we were wondering if another day of rehearsal would
have been a good idea. What would happen at the actual concert the
next day?
We needn't have worried. Tf, which started the program, was
performed with tremendous authority and confidence. Olson took it
at a rather deliberate pace, and I am sure it was slower than most
traversals of the corresponding movement of Mahler’s 2nd Symphony
even after taking account of the extra 29 bars of music. When the
great dissonant downward passage came, Olson stretched it, and us,
to the breaking point. It was a thrilling performance, but the
bigger challenge, DkL, was next. Would the two essentially amateur
groups, the Colorado MahlerFest Orchestra and the Boulder Chorale,
be able to meet the challenge?
Now all you purists out there, sit down and try to take this
calmly: the off-stage band passages were recorded; there was
simply too much to organize, too few players to accommodate
everything. Things worked okay in rehearsals, but this single
point of failure had everybody nervous. What would happen if a cue
were missed, or the percussionist in charge simply missed the Play
button – which did happen in one rehearsal. That would have been a
catastrophe, needless to say. Thankfully, everything went
smoothly. Perfection was not achieved, but who needs that? This
was live, committed music, a DkL that went from strength to
strength, the orchestra sounding great and in excellent balance
especially when heard from the balcony. The choir was decisive,
massively improved from the night before. And the soloists – Kara
Guggenmos, Lucille Beer, Joel Burcham, and Gregory Gerbrandt; and
Knaben soloists Katie Fillius and Kristin Weisbach – were superb,
negotiating the obstacle course of a very cramped stage as well as
the horrific challenges set by the 20-year-old Gustav Mahler.
Everything seemed to go well for both concerts, even the things
that were perhaps not deliberate. There was no boy soprano in
Boulder – or anywhere in the United States, according to an expert
Olson consulted – who was up to the task, so they opted for two
young women (Katie and Kristin, above). Oddly enough, they looked
somewhat alike. They came from the choir, so they were dressed in
plain black. And neither of them wore much makeup, so the stage
lights gave them a pallor. It was positively spooky to hear their
reproachful songs at the end, totally appropriate for a ghostlike
accusation.
And what an ending to this piece! I'm not talking about the last
shock, but the subtle, understated A-minor chord – which would be
repeated almost 25 years later at the end of Mahler’s 6th
Symphony. "Death itself," one attendee said, and is he right. And
then Mahler hits us with the crash, the castle walls come tumbling
down, and all is silence. Except for the roar of the audience.
Where else can you hear the Songs of Youth, Todtenfeier, and Das
klagende Lied in the span of three days, all delivered with
expertise and enthusiasm? Nowhere but Boulder in January. Next
year Colorado MahlerFest is doing Mahler’s 8th Symphony, again
with the Boulder Chorale. They have to build stage extensions to
accommodate all the performers, but as they have proven over the
past 21 years, no sacrifice is too great in the service of the
true star of Colorado MahlerFest, Gustav Mahler. For more on
Colorado Mahlerfest, see www.mahlerfest.org.
Mitch Friedfeld
Back
to Top
Cumulative Index Page
