Mahler: Symphonie No. 6 in A Minor Düsseldorfer Symphoniker & Ádám Fischer

Cover Mahler: Symphonie No. 6 in A Minor

Album info

Album-Release:
2020

HRA-Release:
17.09.2021

Label: CAvi-music

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Orchestral

Artist: Düsseldorfer Symphoniker & Ádám Fischer

Composer: Gustav Mahler (1860-1911)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Gustav Mahler (1860 - 1911): Symphonie No. 6 in A Minor:
  • 1Mahler: Symphonie No. 6 in A Minor: I. Allegro energico, ma non troppo23:03
  • 2Mahler: Symphonie No. 6 in A Minor: II. Andante moderato14:40
  • 3Mahler: Symphonie No. 6 in A Minor: III. Scherzo. Wuchtig12:44
  • 4Mahler: Symphonie No. 6 in A Minor: IV. Finale. Allegro moderato30:04
  • Total Runtime01:20:31

Info for Mahler: Symphonie No. 6 in A Minor



In the Düsseldorf Tonhalle in late February and early March 2020, we gave Mahler’s Sixth Symphony in three live concert performances which we recorded for this CD. This date in the calendar had special significance: the first lockdown period due to the Corona pandemic set in immediately thereafter.

The orchestra was playing in full line-up in front of a full house for the last time for a long while. The mood was ominous: we all felt something was amiss, and the next day everything had to be cancelled. We strongly associate those circumstances with our work on the Sixth, and with the foreboding we felt of a catastrophe that has since ruined the livelihoods of many musician colleagues and deprived us all of a meaningful period in our lives. Mahler’s Sixth is always a major event for the orchestra and for the audience. One leaves the concert hall weary and exhausted; time is required to regain one’s composure. This symphony requires a gigantic orchestra: here, once more, Mahler was attempting to stretch the boundaries of what was possible in his day.

Not to achieve a mere effect, but simply because he needed such a gigantic instrumental apparatus to express his feelings. The sheer amount of emotions we deal with in this symphony is almost unbearable. The controversial third hammer blow provides a good example: Mahler most certainly crossed it out after a rehearsal, overcome by emotion, afraid of dying. In his very bones he thought and felt that this symphony would prompt his demise……..

In my view, some of this symphony’s most beautiful, yet also most difficult moments are found in the Scherzo. Mahler wrote the instruction altväterlich (old-fashioned). I have given much thought to what he might have meant by that. Here we have a great number of slight rubatos that are not easy to carry out in practice. If you are too afraid of losing control and you play these passages too mechanically, the music loses its character. On the other hand, it should not sound unstable, as if you were weak in the knees.

These passages require precise chamber-music-making among the orchestra groups. In the immediate wake of massive tuttis, this becomes a delicate matter. If you succeed in getting it right – if the oboes, the bassoon, and the violins manage to play those rubatos together and breathe together – the result can be fantastic.

Düsseldorfer Symphoniker
Adam Fischer, conductor

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Booklet for Mahler: Symphonie No. 6 in A Minor

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