Mahler
in Hamburg - Reconstructed
concert programme conducted by Gustav Mahler in Hamburg on 27 January
1893
Beethoven:
Egmont overture; Marschner: Aria from
Hans Heiling; Adam: Aria from La poupée de Nuremberg;
Mendelssohn: The Hebrides overture; Mahler: Six songs
from Des knaben Wunderhorn and Symphony No.1 in D 'Titan'
Performers Solveig
Kringelborn (soprano); Chrisptopher Maltman (baritone); City of Birmingham
Symphony Orchestra, Sakari Oramo (conductor)
Venue Usher Hall
Address Lothian Road Edinburgh
Reviewer Pat Napier
The City
of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
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When
Gustav Mahler was engaged as Hamburg's Director of Opera, his compositions
were hardly known, even though his first symphony had been composed
in 1888. Not surprising! Its first performance in Budapest in 1889
had proved disastrous, partly because of the misleading allusive titles
he gave to its movements, which confused and puzzled its Philharmonic
Society's subscribers. Near disaster struck Mahler again when he contracted
cholera and almost died in the few months before conducting the symphony's
second performance in Hamburg. He recovered, losing only a remarkable
10 days out of his workload. The ever-pragmatic Mahler's carefully
constructed programme was a calculated effort to sell his own music
to the independent-thinking Hanseatic city-state's concert-goers.
Kowing that his song cycle Des knaben Wunderhorn would need
gifted soloists, this 'Popular concert in Philharmonic style' programme
offered his audience two well-loved overtures enclosing two showpiece
arias from operas with which he'd had earlier conducting successes
elsewhere in 1883 and 1885 respectively. Neither piece has survived
into today's repertoire. Solveig Kringelborn sang the aria from Hans
Heiling with delightful expression but her voice did not cope
well with its demands. Both this and her Wunderhorn songs missed
out several stanzas. By contrast, Christopher Maltman was in very
fine form. His aria from La
poupée de Nuremberg by the Parisian Adolphe Charles Adam
was a brilliant,
jolly piece celebrating the joys and pleasures of youth, full of contrast
and humour.
Having put his audience into a good humour, it was then time for Mahler
to lay bare his whole being in this, the first of his two symphonies,
in which he confessed that "My whole life is contained in them:
I have set down in them my experience and suffering..." But,
first, the way would be prepared by some songs from Des knaben
Wunderhorn, composed four years earlier and which would provide
rich source material for the symphony's instrumentation and orchestration.
They contained military music, varied scoring, Ländler, folk
music all interspesed with chamber style music. Again, Kringelborn
under-performed while Maltman was the embodiment of the rejecting
lad, the sentinel, the hussar. Rheinlegendchen was just as
successful today as it had been then.
However, it was the symphony which was the centrepiece of the programme.
In its original version, which included the short, expressive Blumine
and all the repeats, (the revised vesion was not to be completed for
another three years) it achieved a standing ovation from its large
Hamburg audience. Sakari Oramo, making his Festival debut, took the
CBSO to exciting new heights. His obviously-deep love for music poured
out in his interpretation, his orchestral balance, his tender lyrical
passages contrasting with contradictory bursts of raw passion and
pain. In the symphony, the delicate, dawn clarinet opening and the
off stage trumpets set the scene in their advance towards the brilliant
clash of full sunrise cymbals signalling wonders to come. At last,
in the final movement, the terrifying horrors of the Inferno rolled
out in almost-unbearably tormented, screaming brass, which yielded
to a triumphal march, then climaxing in an unforgettable bank of eight
horns, one trumpet and one trombone standing to emphasise and direct
an exultant full-on orchestral paradise in the opening D major melody.
Oramo richly deserved - and got - the same rapturous acclaim which
Mahler won in the oginal programme.
© Pat Napier. 15 August 2001
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