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Mahler's musical love-letter?
Media Type |
audio
Podknife tags |
Classical
History
Music
Categories Via RSS |
Music
Music History
Publication Date |
Mar 09, 2021
Episode Duration |
00:02:00
On today’s date in 1902, composer Gustav Mahler, age 41, married Alma Schindler, age 22. Mahler was the famous director of the Vienna Court Opera, and by 1902 had written four symphonies. Alma was considered one of the most beautiful women in Vienna, and also an independent, unpredictable, and remarkably free-spirited one. Perhaps that, as much as her beauty, appealed to Mahler, but many of the composer’s long-time friends did not approve and predicted disaster. One of them even suggested that the composer convert to Protestantism, which would make getting a divorce easier in ultra-Catholic Vienna. On today’s date in 1902, a large crowd of curious onlookers gathered in Vienna’s majestic Baroque Karlskirche at 5:30 p.m, the time the wedding was thought to take place, only to discover they had been married hours earlier in the privacy of its sacristy with just the immediate family present. The next symphony that Mahler wrote, his Fifth, contains a lovely Adagietto movement that Mahler’s friend, the Dutch conductor Willem Mengelberg claims was inspired by Alma: “It was his declaration of love. Instead of a letter, he confided it in this manuscript without a word of explanation. She understood. He tells her everything in music.”

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