Mahler, Gustav (born Kalischt, Bohemia, July 7, 1860; died Vienna, May 18, 1911), Austrian-Jewish composer and conductor. Born in Bohemia, Mahler came to Vienna to study at the Conservatory, 1875-78, with Julius Epstein (piano), Robert Fuchs (composition), and Franz Krenn (theory). After a series of appointments in other cities, he served as Music Director (Kapellmeister) of the Vienna Hofoper for ten turbulent years, 1897-1907, where he raised the standard of the opera house to among the finest in Europe, and established himself particularly as a conductor of Mozart and Wagner, later also of Richard Strauss, Puccini, Pfitzner and others, numbering among his assistant conductors Bruno Walter and Franz Schalk. After his enforced resignation, partly out of anti-semitism, in 1907 he was succeeded by Felix Weingartner. He was also Director of the Vienna Philharmonic Concerts 1898-1901. From 1907, he worked in New York at the Metropolitan Opera House and also as conductor of the New York Philharmonic, returning to Vienna for the last few months of his life. Mahler and Schenker Federhofer comments: "We do not know what kind of relationship [Schenker] had with Mahler ..., for Schenker expressed his views only briefly and very rarely regarding his works and achievements as a conductor. He valued him as a conductor, but he rejected his works" (Nach Tagebüchern, p.62). Schenker described a performance of Smetana's Dalibor in 1897 as "excellent, and under G. Mahler's direction, to whom we take this opportunity to pay tribute also for his truthful performances of the Nibelungen tetralogy, the Marriage of Figaro, Don Giovanni, Czar und Zimmermann, etc." (Federhofer, Essayist, p.358). Schenker's diary comments include the following:
At the height of opposition against Mahler, in the press and in other quarters, Schenker lent him his support, as noted in his diary:
Four days later there was a stir in the press over this, and Schenker, in a heavily reworked entry of which this is the final version, wrote:
Mahler himself wrote thanking Schenker; this is the only item of correspondence that exists between the two men: OJ 12/48, undated note:
Following Mahler's resignation, Schenker wrote the somewhat self-righteous entry (undated, probably October/December 1907), perhaps with Hirschfeld's attack in mind:
Later in his career, Schenker continued to make adverse entries in his diary about Mahler as a composer. Mahler in Schenker's Writings Surprisingly, there is no reference to Mahler in the unpublished Niedergang der Kompositionskunst (c.1905--09)--Schenker's first sustained public attack on Wagner and his legacy in Bruckner, Wolf, and Richard Strauss. In Der Tonwille, Schenker refers to Mahler's "touchings-up" of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony (Heft 8-9, p. 54; Eng. trans., vol. II, p. 122), which had previously been the subject of a brief aside in his 1901 article "Beethoven-'Retouche'" (Federhofer, Essayist, p. 266).There is one reference to him in Das Meisterwerk in der Musik, vol. III, p.18 (Eng. trans., p.6). Sources: |
|
|
|