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Hardcover Gustav Mahler: Volume 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion (1904-1907) Book

ISBN: 019315160X

ISBN13: 9780193151604

Gustav Mahler: Volume 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion (1904-1907)

(Book #3 in the Gustav Mahler Series)

When the second volume of de La Grange's monumental study of Mahler appeared, it was hailed in The New Yorker, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, and many other publications as an indispensable portrait of the great composer. Here at last is the third volume of this magisterial work.
Ranging from 1904 to 1907, it explores Mahler's final years as administrator, producer, and conductor of the Vienna Opera. It was a time of intense inner...

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Customer Reviews

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A Comprehensive Study

The biography of Gustav Mahler by Henri Louis de La Grange is unlike any other I have read. Mr. de La Grange has searched for every scrap of information about Mahler that he could find. The result of his many years of research is a book that is as comprehensive as one could every want. For many readers, the book has too much information. However, the volumes that make up this biography stand as a resource for any question one might want to ask. I found myself skimming some parts of this volume, particularly the quotes from critics. It is important to know what was reported about Mahler's productions at the Hofoper and the performances of his own music. After getting the general gist of what was being said, especially by negative critics, I did not need to know more. If I were researching the reception of Mahler's new productions for the Hofoper, it would be a different matter: all the information that I would need would be available to be with citations so I could check sources for myself. What I found most interesting were the many descriptions of Mahler left by the people that knew him that Mr. de La Grange included. Perhaps the most memorable is one by Alfred Roller, who had been invited by Mahler to do some sunbathing. Roller provides us with a thorough description of Mahler's physical appearance. Another interesting remembrance was from Bruno Walter where he does not count Mahler as a true friend since friendship with Mahler was always on his terms. The translation from the original French is good, if at time a bit dry. For anyone interesting in Mahler, this volume, covering the critical period 1904 - 1907, is indispensable. Perhaps the most valuable information is clearing up the rumor that Mahler was afflicted with heart disease. His real heart problem, probably caused by a child bout of rheumatic fever, was hardly a death sentence and would not have been cause for him to change his physical activities.

Engrossing

I had read the previous volume 2 of the life of Mahler several years ago and had anxiously awaited the issuance of this, the third in a four part series with high expectations.I have not been disappointed. The extensive detail, expansive footnoting, and thorough research that went into this work is evident from the very first paragraph.Highly recommended for any serious Mahler enthuasist.

A full life of Mahler?

The monumental biography of Mahler by Henri de la Grange has been available in French for some years, and the latest volume to appear in English is part of an ongoing project to make the work available to a wider audience. It is unique in the sheer mass of factual detail it presents, especially as regards contemporary critical reaction to Mahler's works and conducting. There is new material on William Ritter, an early admirer who left some colorful accounts of Herr Mahler in person; a detailed physical description of Mahler by Alfred Roller, a Hofoper associate; and much other information that will be new and interesting even to long-standing Mahlerites who thought they knew it all. However, de la Grange's almost exclusive focus on the externals of Mahler's life works to the detriment of the inner life, and this is the major shortcoming of his biography. There is little probing of the wellsprings of the mighty Mahlerian will that powered a colossal productivity, nor of the fierce vitality coexisting with neuroses. Nor, surprisingly, is much explanation offered as to why a tyrannical ascetic like Mahler would suddenly decide to marry someone half his age, a decision that took even his closest friends completely by surprise. Why didn't he stay single, or marry someone his own age, such as the devoted and musical Natalie Bauer-Lechner?This question is important because it bears on the crucial one: Would Mahler have succeeded in solving the central problem of his last years -- keeping reality at bay in order to maintain the inhuman intensity needed to complete his unique artistic mission -- without the tension generated by this inappropriate (but for him richly symbolic) and largely sexless marriage, for which he, and to some extent also Alma's parents, were guilty? Did he feel this guilt and at a certain level feed on it? de la Grange draws a blank on these questions. Here Alma's book "Gustav Mahler, Memoirs and Letters" is a better source, though one has to read between the lines. de la Grange clearly dislikes Alma and would minimize her role. He also worships Mahler and will not permit him the slightest fault. Two examples: He cannot conceive that the hero may have had a congenital heart defect, it must have been acquired from throat infections. He omits to mention that Mahler's idolized mother Marie was born lame and with a defective heart. According to Alma, who'd have no reason to make this up, all the children were handicapped by the mother's heart disease; there is also anecdotal evidence provided by Bruno Walter and others. Another example: de la Grange will not admit that the finale to the Seventh may be a miscalculation, however interesting. Thus he advances a tortured argument to turn black into white, and puts himself in the position of an "apologist nervous to the point of obduracy" (Adorno's words). In the process, he completely ignores evidence that Mahler himself was un

Towers over them all.

Much as Mahler himself towers over Romantic era composer, so does La Grange tower over all other Mahler biographers. Not that Mitchell et. al. don't do a fine job, they do. But for comprehensive detail and deep probing and understanding of Mahler's life and music, La Grange is simply at the highest peaks. This latest installment of his massive series sustains his high standards of research, realiability and readability and for all you devoted Mahlerians out there is a must read. For those curious about Mahler, this is actually not a great place to start; the cost alone to read these three books, so far, on Mahler is a bad investment if you don't yet worship his music! There are many single books that give a good overview of his life as a companion to his music, if not a real guide. For those of you, try Cooke or Kennedy, for the rest, worship here!
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