CLASSICS 2023/24
MAHLER’S THIRD SYMPHONY WITH PETER OUNDJIAN PERFORMED BY YOUR COLORADO SYMPHONY PETER OUNDJIAN, conductor MICHELLE D e YOUNG, mezzo-soprano
WOMEN OF THE COLORADO SYMPHONY CHORUS, DUAIN WOLFE, director
COLORADO CHILDREN’S CHORALE, EMILY CRILE, director
Friday, April 12, 2024 at 7:30pm
Saturday, April 13, 2024 at 7:30pm
Sunday, April 14, 2024 at 1:00pm Boettcher Concert Hall
MAHLER Symphony No. 3 in D minor Part I
I. Kräftig. Entschieden (Strong and decisive) Part II
II. Tempo di Menuetto Sehr mässig (In the tempo of a minuet, very moderate)
III. Comodo, Scherzando Ohne Hast (Comfortable, Scherzo, without haste)
IV. Sehr langsam—Misterioso (Very slowly, mysteriously)
V. Lustig im Tempo und keck im Ausdruck (Cheerful in tempo and cheeky in expression)
VI. Langsam—Ruhevoll—Empfunden (Slowly, tranquil, deeply felt)
CONCERT RUN TIME IS APPROXIMATELY 1 HOUR AND 45 MINUTES. CONCERT DOES NOT INCLUDE AN INTERMISSION.
CLASSICS BIOGRAPHIES
PETER OUNDJIAN, conductor
Recognized as a masterful and dynamic presence in the conducting world, Peter Oundjian has developed a multi-faceted portfolio as a conductor, violinist, professor and artistic advisor. He has been celebrated for his musicality, an eye towards collaboration, innovative programming, leadership and training with students and an engaging personality. Strengthening his ties to Colorado, Oundjian is now Principal Conductor of the Colorado Symphony in addition to Music Director of the Colorado Music Festival, which successfully pivoted to a virtual format during the pandemic summers of 2020 and 2021.
Now carrying the title Conductor Emeritus, Oundjian’s fourteen-year tenure as Music Director of the Toronto Symphony served as a major creative force for the city of Toronto and was marked by a reimagining of the TSO’s programming, international stature, audience development, touring and a number of outstanding recordings, garnering a Grammy nomination in 2018 and a Juno award for Vaughan Williams’ Orchestral Works in 2019. He led the orchestra on several international tours to Europe and the USA, conducting the first performance by a North American orchestra at Reykjavik’s Harpa Hall in 2014.
From 2012-2018, Oundjian served as Music Director of the Royal Scottish National Orchestra during which time he implemented the kind of collaborative programming that has become a staple of his directorship. Oundjian led the RSNO on several international tours, including North America, China, and a European festival tour with performances at the Bregenz Festival, the Dresden Festival as well as in Innsbruck, Bergamo, Ljubljana, and others. His final appearance with the orchestra as their Music Director was at the 2018 BBC Proms where he conducted Britten’s epic War Requiem.
Highlights of past seasons include appearances with the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, Iceland Symphony, the Detroit, Atlanta, Saint Louis, Baltimore, Dallas, Seattle, Indianapolis, Milwaukee and New Zealand Symphony Orchestra. With the onset of world-wide concert cancellations, support for students at Yale and Juilliard became a priority. In the 2022/2023 season, Oundjian conducted the opening weekend of Atlanta Symphony, followed by return engagements with Baltimore, Indianapolis, Dallas, Colorado and Toronto symphonies, as well as a visit to New World Symphony.
Oundjian has been a visiting professor at Yale University’s School of Music since 1981, and in 2013 was awarded the school’s Sanford Medal for Distinguished Service to Music. A dedicated educator, Oundjian regularly conducts the Yale, Juilliard, Curtis and New World symphony orchestras.
An outstanding violinist, Oundjian spent fourteen years as the first violinist for the renowned Tokyo String Quartet before he turned his energy towards conducting.
CLASSICS BIOGRAPHIES
MICHELLE DeYOUNG, mezzo-soprano
Mezzo-Soprano Michelle DeYoung continues to be in demand throughout the world, appearing regularly with the New York Philharmonic, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Vienna Philharmonic, and the Concertgebouworkest. She has also performed at the prestigious festivals of Ravinia, Tanglewood, Saito Kinen, Edinburgh, and Lucerne. In Australia she has appeared multiple times with Sydney Symphony and recently sang Kundry in concert performances of Parsifal at Opera Australia.
Equally at home on the opera stage, Ms. DeYoung has appeared with the Metropolitan Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago, Teatro alla Scala, Bayreuth Festival, Berliner Staatsoper, and the Paris Opera. Her many roles include Fricka, Sieglinde and Waltraute in The Ring Cycle; Kundry in Parsifal, Venus in Tannhäuser, Brangäne in Tristan und Isolde, Eboli in Don Carlos, Amneris in Aida, Santuzza in Cavellaria Rusticana, Ježibaba in Rusalka, Marguerite in Le Damnation de Faust, Dido in Les Troyens, Judith in Bluebeard’s Castle, and Jocaste in Oedipus Rex. She also created the role of the Shaman in Tan Dun’s The First Emperor at the Metropolitan Opera.
A multi-Grammy award winning recording artist, Ms. DeYoung’s impressive discography includes Das Rheingold, Die Walküre, and Götterdämmerung with the Jaap van Zweden and the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra (Naxos), Kindertotenlieder, Mahler’s Symphony No. 3, and Das Klagende Lied with Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony (SFS Media), Les Troyens with Sir Colin Davis and the London Symphony Orchestra (LSO Live!), and Mahler Symphony No 3 with both the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Bernard Haitink (CSO Resound) and the Pittsburgh Symphony and Manfred Honeck (Challenge Records International). Her most recent recording of Mahler’s Das Lied von der Erde with the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra (Deutsche Grammophon) was released in July 2021.
DeYoung recently launched Ensemble Charité, an organization which aims to support various charities while also fostering young, emerging musicians through community performances of chamber concerts with seasoned professional musicians, conducted by Ms. DeYoung.
CLASSICS BIOGRAPHIES
DUAIN WOLFE, founder and director, Colorado Symphony Chorus
Three-time Grammy winner for Best Choral Performance, Best Classical Recording, and Best Opera Performance, Duain Wolfe is Founder and Director of the Colorado Symphony Chorus.
This year marks Wolfe’s 40th season with the Colorado Symphony Chorus. The Chorus has been featured at the Aspen Music Festival for nearly three decades. Wolfe recently retired as Director of the Chicago Symphony Chorus after 28 years. He has collaborated with Daniel Barenboim, Pierre Boulez, Bernard Haitink, Riccardo Muti, and Sir George Solti on numerous recordings including Wagner’s Die Meistersinger, which won the 1998 GRAMMY® for Best Opera Recording. Wolfe’s extensive musical accomplishments have resulted in numerous awards, including the Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts, an Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts from the University of Denver, the Bonfils Stanton Award in the Arts and Humanities, the Mayor’s Award for Excellence in an Artistic Discipline, and the Michael Korn Award for the Development of the Professional Choral Art. Wolfe is Founder of the Colorado Children’s Chorale, from which he retired in 1999 after 25 years. For 20 years, Wolfe also worked with the Central City Opera Festival as chorus director and conductor, founding and directing the company’s young artist residence program, as well as its education and outreach programs. Wolfe’s other accomplishments include directing and preparing choruses for Chicago’s Ravinia Festival, the Bravo! Vail Festival, the Berkshire Choral Festival, the Aspen Music Festival, and the Grand Teton Music Festival. He has worked with Pinchas Zuckerman and Alexander Shelly as Chorus Director for the Canadian National Arts Centre Orchestra for the past 20 years.
COLORADO SYMPHONY CHORUS
The 2023/24 Colorado Symphony concert season marks the 40th season of the Colorado Symphony Chorus. Founded in 1984 by Duain Wolfe at the request of Gaetano Delogu, then the Music Director of the Symphony, the chorus has grown into a nationally respected ensemble. This outstanding chorus of volunteers joins the Colorado Symphony for numerous performances each year, to repeated critical acclaim.
The Chorus has performed at noted music festivals in the Rocky Mountain region, including the Colorado Music Festival, the Grand Teton Music Festival, and the Bravo! Vail Music Festival, where it has performed with the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Dallas Symphony, under conductors Alan Gilbert, Hans Graf, Jaap van Zweden, Yannick Nézet-Séguin and Fabio Luisi. For over twenty five years, the Chorus was featured at the world-renowned Aspen Music Festival, performing many great masterworks under the baton of conductors Lawrence Foster, James Levine, Murry Sidlin, Leonard Slatkin, David Zinman, and Robert Spano.
Among the eight recordings the Colorado Symphony Chorus has made is a NAXOS release of Roy Harris’s Symphony No. 4. The Chorus is also featured on a Hyperion release of the Vaughan Williams Dona Nobis Pacem and Stephen Hough’s Missa Mirabilis. Most recently, the Colorado Symphony and Chorus released a world-premiere recording of William Hill’s The Raven.
CLASSICS BIOGRAPHIES
In 2009, in celebration of the 25th anniversary of the chorus, Duain Wolfe conducted the chorus on a three-country, two-week concert tour of Europe, presenting the Verdi Requiem in Budapest, Vienna, Litomysl and Prague; in 2016 the chorus returned to Europe for concerts in Paris, Strasbourg and Munich featuring the Fauré Requiem. In the summer of 2022, the Chorus toured Austria, performing to great acclaim in Vienna, Graz and Salzburg.
COLORADO SYMPHONY CHORUS
Duain Wolfe, Founding Director and Conductor
Mary Louise Burke, Principal Associate Director and Conductor
Taylor Martin, Associate Director and Conductor
Jared Joseph, Conducting Intern
Hsiao-Ling Lin and ShaoChun Tsai, pianists
Eric Israelson, Chorus Manager
Barbara Porter, Associate Chorus Manager
WOMEN OF THE COLORADO SYMPHONY CHORUS
SOPRANO
Andrews, Lottie
Ascani, Lori
Atchison, René
Black, Kimberly Blum, Jude
Bowen, Alex
Brauchli, Margot
Burns, Jeremy
Burr, Emily
Causey, Denelda
Coberly, Ruth Coberly, Sarah Collins, Elizabeth Collins, Suzanne Collums, Angie
Cote, Kerry
Dakkouri, Claudia Day, April
Dobreff, Mary
Eck, Emily
Emerich, Kate Ewert, Gracie
Gaskill, Andria
Gile, Jenifer
Gill, Lori
Glazier, Taylor
Graber, Susan
Harston, Rachel
Headrick, Alaina
Hittle, Erin
Jones, Kaitlyn
Jorden, Cameron
Kennedy, Lauren
Kermgard, Lindsey
Kinnischtzke, Meghan
Kraft, Lisa
Kushnir, Marina
Lang, Leanne
Look, Cathy
Linder, Dana
Machusko, Rebecca
Mattingly, Isabella
Maupin, Anne
Montigne, Erin
Moraskie, Wendy O’Nan, Jeannette
Peterson, Jodie
Pflug, Kim
Porter, Barbara
Rae, Donneve
Ropa, Lori
Ruff, Mahli
Sladovnik, Roberta
Stegink, Nicole
Tate, Judy
Timme, Sydney
Von Roedern, Sue
Walker, Marcia
Wall, Alison
Wise, Rebecca
Wuertz, Karen
Young, Cara
Zisler, Joan
ALTO
Adams, Priscilla
Arthur, Liz
Berganza, Brenda Chatfield, Cass Clauson, Clair
Conrad, Jayne
Cox, Martha
Darone, Janie
Davies, Debbie
Deck, Barbara Dobson, Kezia
Dutcher, Valerie
Fairchild, Raleigh
Friedman, Anna
Gayley, Sharon
Golden, Daniela
Groom, Gabriella
Guittar, Pat
Haxton, Sheri
Hoopes, Kaia
Hoskins, Hansi
Isaac, Olivia
Jackson, Brandy
Janasko, Ellen
Kaminske, Christine
Kern, Charlotte
Kim, Annette
Kolstad, Annie
LeBaron, Andrea
Levy, Juliet
London, Carole
Long, Tinsley
Maltzahn, Joanna
McWaters, Susan
Nordenholz, Kristen
Nyholm, Christine
Owens, Sheri
Parsons, Jill
Pringle, Jennifer
Rehme, Leanne
Rudolph, Kathi
Scarselli, Elizabeth
Schnell, Wendy
Stevenson, Melanie
Thaler, Deanna
Thayer, Mary
Tiggelaar, Clara
Trubetskoy, Kimberly
Virtue, Pat
Wandel, Benita
Worthington, Evin
York, Beth
CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES
EMILY CRILE, artistic director, Colorado Children’s Chorale
Emily Crile exhibits her passion and enthusiasm for choral music through developing and conducting singers of all ages. She currently directs Tour Choir, a premier treble ensemble. During the past 23 years with the Chorale, she has worked with all choir levels, established Transitions, prepared children for appearances with the Colorado Symphony, Central City Opera, Opera Colorado, and Colorado Ballet, and toured throughout Australia, China, Costa Rica, Europe, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United States. With a commitment to equitable access for high quality music education, she crafted, led, and administered School Partnership and Community Choir programs across the Denver Metro area and earned a certification in Facilitating Effective DEI Discussions from Dena Samuels Consulting.
Emily is the Past President of the Colorado American Choral Directors Association and is an active choral clinician and presenter throughout the United States. Prior to joining the Chorale in 2000, she served as an Assistant Conductor with the Northern Iowa Children’s Choir. She holds a Master of Music degree in Choral Conducting from the University of Colorado Boulder.
COLORADO CHILDREN’S CHORALE
Celebrating their 50th Anniversary Season, the Colorado Children’s Chorale has been performing with the Colorado Symphony for more than 40 seasons. With a diverse repertoire ranging from fully staged opera and musical theater to standard choral compositions in classical, folk, and popular traditions, the Chorale performs with an innovative stage presentation and a unique theatrical spirit. In recognition of its artistic quality, the Chorale was awarded the Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts, the Mayor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts and the prestigious El Pomar Award for Excellence in Arts and Humanities. Under the leadership of Artistic Director Emily Crile and Executive Director Meg Steitz, the Colorado Children’s Chorale annually trains 400 members between the ages of 7 and 14 from all ethnicities and socio-economic backgrounds representing more than 150 schools in the Denver metro area and beyond. Since its founding, the Chorale has sung countless performances with some of the world’s finest performing arts organizations, performed for numerous dignitaries, and appeared in television and radio broadcasts. The Performance Program includes a series of self-produced concerts, numerous performances with other Colorado arts organizations and touring around the world. This season the Chorale presents Merry and Bright and 50 Years of Brilliance at Boettcher Concert Hall, as well as So Many Voices, Performing Small Miracles, and Spring Fling Sing! in venues across the metro area. Chorale children will also appear in Amahl and the Night Visitors and Street Scene with Central City Opera, A Colorado Christmas with the Colorado Symphony, La bohéme with Bravo! Vail, and Hansel and Gretel with the Aspen Music Festival.
CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES
COLORADO CHILDREN’S CHORALE ROSTER
TOUR CHOIR
Tre Appleton
Keaton Bau
Soren Baugher
Alice Britton
Maddi Burm
Reilly Butler
Annon Camero
Cordelia Cheever
Nelle Collier
Anika Dande
Savannah Davenport
Nick Diamond
Finn Donahue
Ellie Eckstine
Brian Erickson
Havi Flores
Camilla Franklin
Leah Gomez
Junah Graf
Olivia Gramlich
Portia Hansen
Silas Helton
Hannah Hoffman
Ethan Horner
Mayura Iyengar
Norma Jackson
Addie Jewell
Vivi Kowalski
Samuel Kraus
Jane Lanoha
Brooks Larson
Jack Lee
Cam Lewis
Evan Lewis
Kade Matsumoto
Carly Mehmen
Christina Mulryan
Abby Musser
Nick Nagle
Grace Neubeiser
Gwendolyn Nicholas
Aiana Ochoa
Parker Olson
Alex Osaka
McKenna Pardieck
Clara Paterson
Kaiden Patterson
Emmy Pouliot
Avie Powers
Riley Powers
Grayson Riek
Elijah Rosen
Rocco Rowekamp
Gabriel Salaz
Macy Sampson
Bella Sandoval
Juliette Schneider
Clara Seigle
Hari Shamos
Cora Shoup
Dale Southworth
Tori Southworth
Joshua Taylor
Gavin Ulmer
Madeline Walker
Davina Wang
Ava Williams
Colton Williams
Conor Winburn
Jonah Winburn
Bailey Winn
Caroline Wolfinger
CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES
GUSTAV MAHLER (1860-1911)
Symphony No. 3 in D minor for Orchestra, Mezzo-Soprano, and Women’s and Children’s Choruses
Gustav Mahler was born on July 7, 1860 in Kalist, Bohemia, and died on May 18, 1911 in Vienna. He composed the Symphony No. 3 in 1895-1896, and conducted its premiere on June 6, 1902 in Krefeld, Germany. The score calls for two piccolos, four flutes, four oboes, English horn, two E-flat clarinets, three B-flat clarinets, bass clarinet, four bassoons, contrabassoon, eight horns, four trumpets, posthorn (playable on flügelhorn), four trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, two harps and strings. A mezzo-soprano soloist and women’s and children’s choruses appear in the fourth and fifth movements. Duration is about 1 hour and 36 minutes. This piece was last performed by the orchestra May 19-21, 2017, with conductor Andrew Litton and mezzo-soprano Michelle DeYoung.
On March 29, 1891, at the age of 37, Gustav Mahler arrived in Hamburg to become chief conductor of that city’s opera, a post he had earned by rising through a series of successively more important appointments in Cassel, Prague, Leipzig and Budapest which showed him to be one of the greatest interpretative musicians of his time. Despite his brilliance on the podium, then matched only by Bülow, Toscanini, Nikisch, Strauss and Weingartner, Mahler’s deepest ambition was to compose, to embody in tone the complexity, profundity and humanity of the world around him. Indeed, composition was for him an almost insatiable need. “I don’t choose what to compose,” he often said. “It chooses me.” The enormous pressure of his conducting and administrative duties (he sometimes led six performances a week!) prevented Mahler from composing during the winter, so that activity was relegated to the summer months, when the opera houses were closed. June, July and August were therefore not a time of relaxation for him but rather one of intense, often exhausting, creative work, a need that he could not meet with just the traditional Kapellmeister genres of song and piano pieces and chamber scores, but one that could only be satisfied by the ambitious public form of the symphony. “If I want to go down into posterity,” he confided to the critic Max Graf, “I have to write large works during my short holiday.”
Mahler’s favored place for his summertime retreats from the madding cities was among the hills and lakes of Austria’s Salzkammergut. In 1893, he found a villa in Steinbach on Lake Atter, thirty miles east of Salzburg, whose main attraction was a tiny, isolated cottage on the shore that provided him with the seclusion he demanded when composing, and he engaged the compound for several seasons. (He insisted on absolute quiet when he composed: the local children were bribed by Mahler’s sister and guests with toys and candy to play in silence; singing fieldhands were constantly admonished, and eventually told that the eccentric musician had lost his presence of mind and might be aroused to terrible acts by even the slightest disturbance; overly noisy chickens and livestock were bought and roasted for supper.) Mahler furnished his composing hut sparsely with a table, wooden chairs, a sofa and a piano shipped from Vienna; the infrequent visitors he allowed into this sanctum complained that they were showered with beetles when the door was thrown open.
When Mahler took up this daily regimen following his arrival at Steinbach on June 5, 1895, he had already formulated a plan for the successor to the “Resurrection” Symphony, whose partial performance just three months earlier in Berlin under his direction marked the first wide public recognition as a composer. The new work was to be a grand, musical evocation of the forces and creations of Nature with, he wrote to his friend Friedrich Löhr, “the emphasis on my
CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES
personal life (in the form of ‘what things tell me.’)” At the beginning of the summer, the piece was called “The Happy Life, a Midsummer Night’s Dream (not after Shakespeare)”; by August it had become “The Joyful Science” [after the title of the book by Nietzsche], A Summer Morning’s Dream.” There were originally to be seven movements divided into two parts. The first part, which Mahler called an “introduction” though it eventually grew to a length of forty minutes, was titled “The Awakening of Pan; Summer marches in (procession of Bacchus).” Comprising the second part of the Symphony were a succession of shorter movements: “What the flowers of the meadow tell me”; “What the animals in the forest tell me”; “What the night tells me”; “What the angels tell me”; “What love tells me”; and “Life in Heaven”. Incorporated into this giant musical panorama were settings of poems by Nietzsche and from Des Knaben Wunderhorn for contralto soloist and choruses of women and children.
Work progressed quickly on the symphony. By the end of June 1895, Mahler had drafted all seven movements except for the first one, and he confided to friends that together they comprised what was “probably the ripest and most individual work I have yet composed.” Composition on the second through seventh movements was largely finished by the time he left Steinbach in August; their orchestration and thoughts about the music that would precede them occupied him during the following winter.
Mahler returned to Steinbach in June 1896, impatient to resume work on the symphony. He had been making notes and sketches for the first movement for several months, but discovered to his horror when he arrived that he had left them in his office in Hamburg. His friend and correspondent Natalie Bauer-Lechner reported that he was like a caged tiger, growling and pacing, until they were delivered a week later. The first movement grew quickly thereafter. Sometime before it was completed, he told Bauer-Lechner, “It has almost ceased to be music; it is hardly anything but sounds of nature. ‘Summer marches in’ will be the prelude.... Naturally enough, it doesn’t come off without a struggle with the opponent, Winter; but Winter is easily defeated, and Summer, with his strength and superior power, soon gains undisputed mastery.” Mahler also decided during the summer of 1896 to remove the final, vocal movement, “Life in Heaven,” from the symphony. That lovely music was not wasted, however, since it became the seed from which grew the Fourth Symphony, where it was used as the finale. The Third Symphony was completed in short score on August 6th.
Mahler finished the orchestration of the Third Symphony during the winter of 18961897, but he was unable to arrange for its full performance, so he reluctantly allowed Felix Weingartner to extract the second, third and sixth movements from the complete work and conduct them in Berlin during March 1897. They were received with little enthusiasm. When Mahler finally performed the work complete, however, on June 6, 1902 at the Tonkünstlerfest of the Allgemeiner Deutscher Musikverein in the city of Krefeld, on the west bank of the Rhine north of Cologne, the composer’s sister, Justine, reported that it “made an enormous sensation, especially among the musicians.”
CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES
Of Mahler’s Third Symphony, Deryck Cooke wrote, “The idea behind the work was a conception of existence in its totality. The vast first movement was to represent the summoning of Nature out of non-existence by the god Pan, symbolized by the emergence of summer out of winter; and after this, the five shorter movements were to represent the ‘stages of being’ (as Mahler expressed it in a letter), from vegetable and animal life, through mankind and the angels, to the love of God.”
Cooke called the opening movement (“Pan awakes; Summer marches in”), which solely occupies Part I of the Symphony, “the most original and flabbergasting thing Mahler ever conceived.” Though there are some vestigial connections with traditional formal types, this movement is better understood philosophically, as the musical evocation of powerful forces, than analytically. A long introduction, blown into being by an awesome opening blast from massed horns, is filled with what Mahler called “nature sounds.” There follows the struggle between dark Winter, with its sinister march theme, and life-giving Summer, first portrayed by a dancing strain cheerfully introduced by the winds. Other themes arise on both sides and are drawn into the conflict, but Summer prevails. This is music, in the mold of Beethoven, that is uplifting and fructifying, another evidence of Mahler’s underlying belief in the resiliency of good and its ultimate triumph over evil. “A pessimist does not think and feel like this,” noted Guido Adler.
After calling up gargantuan cosmic forces in the opening movement, Mahler turned in the Symphony’s second part to evoking Nature’s bounties, or, more accurately, his musico/ emotional responses to them. Mahler called the second movement (“What the flowers of the meadow tell me”) a “minuet,” though it is really more a country dance than a recreation of the Mozartian model. In its deliberate naïveté, it provides a startling contrast to the overwhelming music that precedes it, a quality Mahler employed throughout his works to heighten their drama and intensify their expression. (Mahler requested a pause of a few minutes between the first and second movements.)
The third movement (“What the animals in the woods tell me”) is a reworking of a song with a cheeky text from Das Knaben Wunderhorn, Ablösung im Sommer (“Changing of the Summer Guard”), that Mahler composed around 1890. Woven into the movement are episodes for solo posthorn, the traditional instrument used to announce the arrival of the mail coach and therefore associated with distant places and sentimental longing. The passages here entrusted to the posthorn are some of the most nostalgic and sweetly dreamy found in any of Mahler’s symphonies.
The last three movements are played without pause. The fourth movement (“What the night tells me”) is a setting for mezzo-soprano of the so-called “Drunken Song” from Friedrich Nietzsche’s novel Also sprach Zarathustra. (Richard Strauss’ tone poem on Zarathustra was completed in the same month as the Third Symphony — August 1896.) “The movement is one of the stillest things in all music,” wrote Deryck Cooke, “with its cry of a night-bird (oboe glissando) and its long-held mezzo-soprano notes backed by thirds on trombones echoed by piccolos.”
The chorus sings in the following movement (“What the angels tell me”) of a heavenly vision whose words Mahler borrowed from the Wunderhorn poems. This wondrous music of bells and brightness is briefly clouded in its central section by the thoughts of a repentant sinner, sung by the mezzo-soprano. Phrases from this music were recalled in the Fourth Symphony.
CLASSICS PROGRAM NOTES
Mahler called the last movement both “What love tells me” and “What God tells me,” and chose to end the Symphony not with the traditional, fast closing music, but rather with an instrumental Adagio of deep feeling and stirring optimism. “For Mahler, all quick music ... represented the flux of the world and human life,” assessed Burnett James, “while slow music, by contrast, enshrined the permanent, the eternal, the higher force.” Of this great finale, the esteemed conductor Bruno Walter, a protegé of Mahler, wrote, “In the last movement, words are stilled — for what language can utter heavenly love more powerfully and forcefully than music itself? The Adagio, with its broad, solemn melodic line, is, as a whole — and despite passages of burning pain — eloquent of comfort and grace. It is a single sound of heartfelt and exalted feelings, in which the whole giant structure finds its culmination.”
“What is best in music,” Mahler once said, “is not to be found in the notes.”
O Mensch! Gib Acht!
Was spricht die tiefe Mitternacht?
Ich schlief!
Aus tiefem Traum bin ich erwacht!
Die Welt ist tief!
Und tiefer als der Tag gedacht!
Tief ist ihr Weh!
Lust, tiefer noch als Herzeleid!
Weh spricht: Vergeh!
Doch alle Lust will Ewigkeit!
@Oh Man, take heed!
What does the deep midnight say?
I slept!
From a deep dream I was wakened!
The world is deep!
And deeper than the day imagined!
Deep is its grief!
Joy, deeper still than heartache!
Grief speaks: Away!
But all longing craves eternity, Will tiefe, tiefe Ewigkeit! craves deep, deep eternity. * * *
Es sungen drei Engel einen süssen Gesang; Three angels were singing a sweet song; mit Freuden es selig in dem Himmel klang, with joy it resounded blissfully in heaven; sie jauchzten fröhlich auch dabei, they cried out with joy dass Petrus sei von Sünden frei. that Peter was set free from sin.
Und als der Herr Jesus zu Tische sass, And as the Lord Jesus sat at the table mit seinem zwölf Jüngern das Abendmahl ass: with his twelve disciples and ate the Last Supper, Da sprach der Herr Jesus: the Lord Jesus said:
Was steht du denn hier?
Why then do you stand here?
Wenn ich dich anseh’, so weinest du mir! When I look at you, you weep before me.
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Und sollt’ ich nicht weinen, du gütiger Gott? And should I not weep, thou merciful God?
(Du sollst ja nicht weinen!) (No, you should not weep!)
Ich hab’ übertreten die zehn Gebot. I have broken the Ten Commandments.
Ich gehe und weine ja bitterlich. I go my way and weep bitterly.
(Du sollst ja nicht weinen!)
(No, you should not weep!)
Ach komm und erbarme dich über mich! Ah, come and have mercy on me!
Hast du denn übertreten die zehn Gebot, If you have broken the Ten Commandments, so fall auf die Knie und bete zu Gott! then fall on your knees and pray to God. Liebe nur Gott in alle Zeit! Love only God for all time!
So wirst du erlangen die himmlische Freud’. So will you attain heavenly joy!
Die himmlische Freud’ ist eine selige Stadt, Heavenly joy is a blessed estate, die himmlische Freud’, die kein Ende mehr hat! Heavenly joy, that knows no end!
Die himmlische Freude was Petro bereit’t Heavenly joy was granted to Peter durch Jesum und Allen zur Seligkeit. through Jesus, and for the blessedness of all.