Tune In Today: Mahler’s First Symphony, a Spectacular Beginning

Tune In Today: Mahler’s First Symphony, a Spectacular Beginning
American premiere of Mahler's "Symphony No. 8" with the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Leopold Stokowski, 1916. Public Domain
|Updated:
0:00

Gustav Mahler’s life swung between opposites: composer and conductor, Jew and Catholic, nature-lover and urbanite. One dichotomy characterized his entire composing career: symphony and song.

Song came first. Born to a large, lower-class family in Bohemia (now the Czech Republic) on July 7, 1860, Mahler wasn’t the child prodigy typical of classical music mythology. Neither a virtuoso pianist nor a composing wunderkind, Mahler tried his composing hand at age 16 with a rather perfunctory Piano Quartet that’s rarely played today. Chamber music wasn’t his strength.

Google LogoMark Us Preferred on Google
Kenneth LaFave
Kenneth LaFave
Author
Kenneth LaFave is an author and composer. His website is KennethLaFaveMusic.com.