Late Romantics - Gustav Mahler (1860-1911)

á      Wrote almost exclusively symphonies and songs, merged the two

á      Orchestral accompaniments to Lieder

á      Lied tunes and/or texts in Symphonies

á      Mahler wrote some poems of his own, set as Lieder, e.g. Songs of a Wayfarer

á      example: Gieng heutÕ Morgens  ŸberÕs Feld (Ògoing over the fields this morningÓ), becomes the main theme for 1st movement of First Symphony

á      Des Knaben Wunderhorn (The YouthÕs Magic Horn): anthology of supposed folk poetry, published early 19th century; used by Mahler as texts for songs. 

á      Poems often have sense of alienation, stressing irony, uncertainty and brevity of life.

á      Mahler set texts as songs, then also used tunes in his 2nd-4th Symphonies, the so-called Wunderhorn Symphonies.

á      Key relationships in 2nd and 4th Symphonies: programs of both are introspection and redemption; both end on a key a 3rd higher than beginning (2nd starts in C minor, ends E-flat Major): symbolic of death and resurrection; also homage to WagnerÕs concept of pitch change with programmatic/narrative implication

á      Other Text Sources: emphasize unattainability, e.g. Chinesiches Flšte (Chinese Flute, 1907), collection of loosely-translated Chinese poems (tr. Hans Bethge).  The themes are very romantic: world sorrow, forces of nature, alienation, loneliness, resolution through death

á      Mahler used these poems in Das Lied von der Erde (Song of the Earth 1908-9), an orchestral song cycle

á      Lots of pentatonic scale including minor pentatonic

á      Almost constant juxtaposition of major and minor throughout piece

á      Ending of Finale is important: will be copied by others. Harmony is static: tonic chord with added 2 and 6; singer repeats descending 3-2 pattern which never resolves to tonic; flute plays 3-5-6-7 repeatedly, ending with 3-5-6; this is text painting because text is Òforever (ewig);Ó used as a way to portray eternity (ultimate endless melody).

á      This piece is a mix of romanticism and exoticism, but also shows signs of expressionism (culmination of Romantic movement?): art movement around WW I aimed at free expression of artistÕs emotional reactions, rather than representations of natural appearance of objects.  Concentrates on dark emotions (alienation, irony, and more hysterical emotions than that). Analogy: things look worse at 4AM than by daylight.  Example MunchÕs The Scream