Mahler: Symphony No. 7 in E Minor "Song of the Night"
Show recording detailsBI 2386
Mahler: Symphony No. 7 in E Minor "Song of the Night"
Label Catalogue Number:
BIS-2386
BIS-2386
Running Time: 01:16:37
Release Date: June 2020
Originally recorded in 2019
Originally recorded in 2019
Genre:
Classical
Orchestral & Concertos
Classical
Orchestral & Concertos
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About
In an effort to arrange the first performance of his Seventh Symphony, Gustav Mahler declared it to be his best work, ‘preponderantly cheerful in character’. His younger colleague Schoenberg expressed his admiration for the work, and Webern considered it his favorite Mahler symphony. Nevertheless, it remains the least performed and least written-about symphony of the entire cycle, and has come to be regarded as enigmatic and less successful than its siblings. One reason for this has been the huge – even for Mahler – contrasts that it encompasses: from a first movement which seems to continue the atmosphere of the previous symphony, the ‘Tragic’ Sixth, to a finale that has been accused of excessive triumphalism, and which Mahler himself once described as ‘broad daylight’. Between these two poles, he supplies no less than two movements entitled Nachtmusik (‘night music’) framing a scherzo to which the composer added the character marking schattenhaft (‘shadowy’). Mahler famously said that ‘a symphony must be like the world. It must embrace everything.’ The Seventh is as true to this dictum as any other of the symphonies, offering a wealth of emotions, moods and colours. The composer makes full and imaginative use of the orchestra’s extended wind and percussion sections – including cowbells, whips and glockenspiel – as well as a mandolin and a guitar, adding a troubadour-like aspect to the nightly serenade of the fourth movement. All of this is brought to life by the players of the Minnesota Orchestra under Osmo Vänskä, as they continue a cycle praised for the performances as well as the recorded sound.
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Reviews
"... Despite its long-outmoded reputation for being difficult, the Mahler Seventh has received it share of great recordings... Vänskä's performance deserves to stand with them for its freshness and spontaneity. More than halfway through his cycle, he's achieved something truly amazing."
Huntley Dent - Fanfare - September/October 2020
Choc de Classica
Yannick Millom – Classica magazine (France) – October 2020
Editor's Choice - Orchestral
"... The brilliance and clarity of this performance (and recording - BIS's technical prowess much in evidence), to say nothing of Vänskä's way with rythm and articulation, is in itself the source of much pleasure - and it almost goes without saying that he relishes to the full Mahler's flabbergasting gifts as an orchestral colourist in the inner movements: the two intoxicating Nachtmusiks and Scherzo. The rarely used subtitle Song of the Night seems especially appropriate here despite the intensity of the illumination. But it is the extraordinary first movement that totally drew me in and won me over..."
Edward Seckerson – Gramophone magazine – September 2020
Performance **** Recording *****
“… All the brass so the Minnesota Orchestra proud … the sounds are beguiling to the last, and the essential triumph of engineering in this most testing of symphonies is peerless.”
David Nice - BBC Music magazine - September 2020
“There’s a great deal to admire and enjoy.”
John Quinn – MusicWeb-Interntional.com – 28 July 2020
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