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    Mahler:Das L ied von der Erde(The Song of the Earth)

    Stephen E. Hefling

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    The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom

    The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK http:/ / www.cup.cam.ac.uk

    40 West 20th Street, New York NY 100114211, USA http:/ / www.cup.org

    10 Stamford Road,Oakleigh,Melbourne 3166, Australia

    Cambridge University Press 2000

    This book is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of

    relevant collective licensing agreements,no reproduction of any part may take place

    without the written permission of Cambridge University Press.

    First published 2000

    Printed in the United Kingdom at the University Press, Cambridge

    Typeset in Ehrhardt (MT) 1012/ 13pt, in QuarkXPress []

    A catalogue record for this book is avai lable from the Briti sh L ibrary

    L ibrary of Congress cataloguing in publication data

    Hefling, Stephen E.

    Mahler, Das Lied von der Erde = (The song of the earth) / Stephen E. Hefling

    p. cm. (Cambridge music handbooks)

    Includes bibliographical references and index.

    ISBN 0 521 47534 1 (hardback) ISBN 0 521 47558 9 (paperback)

    1. Mahler,Gustav, 18601911. Lied von der Erde. I. Title.

    II. Title: Lied von der Erde. III. T itle: Song of the earth.

    IV. Series.

    MT121.M34H44 1999

    782.47dc21 99-23189 CIP

    ISBN 0 521 47534 1 hardback

    ISBN 0 521 47558 9 paperback

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    Contents

    L ist of illustrations page viiiPreface ix

    L ist of abbreviations xiv

    1 Background: M ahler s symphonic worldsbefore 1908 1

    2 Genesis 28

    3 Reception 54

    4 The music 80

    Appendix: translation 120

    Notes 132Select bibliography 149I ndex 154

    vii

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    1

    Background: M ahler s symphonic worldsbefore1908

    Tragedy and the hope of redemption: Schopenhauer,Wagner,Nietzsche, Lipiner

    Fundamental to an understanding of Mahlers work as a whole is theSchopenhauerian worldview, embraced and extended by Wagner andNietzsche,in which Mahler was steeped from his student days in Vienna(187583). And a crucial Wgure in his intellectual development duringthe ensuing quarter-century was the brilliant young poet-philosopherSiegfried Lipiner (18561911),whose early writings are directly derivedfrom the ideas of the three authors just named. Even in later yearsMahler continued to cite SchopenhauersThe World as Will and Repre-

    sentation(1819/ 1844) and Wagners Beethoven essay (1870, com-memorating the composers centenary) as the most profound writings onmusic he knew.1To these we need to add a third volume based on thosetwo, NietzschesThe Bi rth of Tragedy from the Spir it of M usic(1872),plus a related lecture by Lipiner cited below.

    BrieXy summarized,the overall viewpoint these writers espouse is asfollows:The world,which is experienced as representation, is, in itself,will the innermost essence, the kernel of every particular thing, andalso of the whole.2Schopenhauerian will is the blind force ofnature,yet

    also the driving force of human beings (akin in many respects to Freudsnotion of the id).Humanity is deceived by theprincipium individuationis,the principle of individuation which is the form of phenomena; as aresult,we live out an endlessly egoistic cycle in which desires of the willcan be at best only partially fulWlled. Dissatisfaction ensues, and thecycle recurs it is the punishing, perpetually rolling wheel of Ixion (towhich Mahler referred in comments about the Third Symphony).3

    Birth and death belong equally to life, and hold the balance as mutual

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    conditions ofeach other poles of the whole phenomenon of life. Thatis the reason, Schopenhauer says, that Indian mythology gives the god

    Shiva, who represents destruction and death, both a necklace of skullsand thelingam,or phallus the symbol ofprocreation that appears as thecounterpart of death.4For Schopenhauer there were only two sources ofrelief from the wheel of Ixion:the eVect of grace occurring in Christianor Buddhist religion, and the temporary stilling of the will that resultsfrom dispassionate aesthetic contemplation of the arts.5 But music, heasserts, is the highest of the arts because it is the direct and immediateexpression of the will,without intervening conceptualizations;it neverexpresses the phenomenon,but only the inner nature ...We could just as

    well call the world embodied music as embodied will.6On such a view,of course, true music could not be program music in the ordinary sensethat we think of it,because stories are conceptualizations ofphenomena.

    InThe Bi rth of Tragedy from the Spiri t of M usic,Nietzsche transposesthe duality ofwill and representation into passionate Dionysian abandonversus harmonious Apollonian restraint.Dionysian art gives expressionto the will in its omnipotence the eternal life beyond all phenomena,and despite all annihilation: this was the Dionysian wisdom of Greektragedy, which Nietzsche claims to be born from the spirit of music,which is the immediate manifestation of the will.The tragic,titanic herois negated for our pleasure, as Nietzsche puts it, because he is onlyphenomenon,and because the eternal life of the will is not aVected by hisannihilation . . . music is the immediate idea of this life.7 Music givesbirth to tragic myth,and tragedy absorbs the highest ecstasies of music,so that it truly brings music . . . to its perfection.8 For Nietzsche, allthat comes into being must be ready for a sorrowful end;we are forced tolook into the terrors of the individual existence yet we are not to

    become rigid with fear . . . The maddening sting of these painspierces us just at the moment when, in Dionysian ecstasy, we anticipatethe indestructibility and eternity of inWnite primordial joy.9

    Siegfried Lipiner had fully absorbed and expounded upon theNietzschean concept of tragedy duringMahlers years at theViennaConservatory. In his lectureOn theElementsof aRenewal of Reli-giousIdeasin thePresent published in 1878, Lipiner declaresthat intragedy,

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    we suVer to the extreme,then,only bleeding,man wrests himself from histransitory self,and in [tragedy] the joy of all joys rushes through us, for inthis bleeding tearing-oneself-away we feel the omnipotence and magniW-cence of the higher self, our own godliness . . . here the truest son of Pro-metheus,proud and daring,as never before,may praise the divinity, for hehimself is become this divinity. Here and only here are death and timeovercome,here and only here are the sting of pain and victory of hell tornaway ...The giant Pain is here and only here properlyWnished;it over-comes the giant I .10

    Not at all coincidentally, these last lines are closely linked to versesMahler himself penned for the gigantic chorus-and-soloistsWnale of his

    Second Symphony:

    O believe, my heart, O believe:Yours is . . . what you longed for!Yours, what you loved,what you struggled for:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

    O Pain! You all-penetrating one!From you I have broken away!O Death! You all-conquering one!

    Now you are conquered!With wings which I have won for myselfin fervent striving of LoveI will soar . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

    I will die in order to live!

    Moreover,in an essay published just before Mahler wrote hisWrst twosymphonies,Lipiner also presents a view of the relation between creativ-

    ity and personality that, on all available evidence, is congruent withMahlers own:

    For he himself [i.e., the poet] is only an example of his kind;and just as hewill never set forth as poetry an isolated or chance event, the amorphousrock of so-called reality merely as he found it, so will his own personalexperience become for him at best an opportune cause to create a type,which will explain to thousands what theyare feeling.Verily,he will neversee by means of theXickeringWre of personal passion,but rather with the

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    light of a quiet, warm sun that ranges over everything and everyone;andthen he will create what he has seen, in that form which appears to himbest to convey what is unexpressed of life:with the ruling spirit, even ifwith ever so striving heart, always conquered by truth,never tyrannizedby reality.11

    Programmatic metaphors: the tetralogy of theWrstfour symphonies

    In August 1900 Mahler Wnished the drafts of his Fourth Symphony,which concludes with a poem from Des Knaben Wunderhorn Das

    himmlische Leben(Heavenly Life),as Mahler had re-titled it to besung by a solo soprano with bright childlike expression, entirelywithout parody, according to the score.A greater contrast to the escha-tological epic of the Second Symphonys Wnale would be diY cult toimagine. Yet Mahler seriously claimed to his longtime conWdante andchronicler, Natalie Bauer-Lechner, that as regards content and formhisWrst four symphonies are a thoroughly self-contained tetralogy.12

    How this could be so emerges only from close reading of both the musicand Mahlers various metaphorical remarks about it, which frequently

    constitute programmatic outlines of the sort he once characterized as afew milestones and signposts for the journey or,shall we say,a star mapin order to comprehend the night sky with all its luminous worlds.13

    These commentaries indeed reveal that Mahler based his music in nosmall part on the type ofartistic vision and distillation of personal expe-rience advocated by Lipiner.To be sure, in October 1900 Mahler wouldmake a now-famous toast known as the Munich Declaration con-demning descriptive programs, and thereafter he usually (although notinvariably) forbade public distribution of programmatic commentaryabout his music.14But as noted above,since childhood he had associatedmusic with concrete ideas,and privately,among people he trusted,suchas Natalie Bauer-Lechner and Bruno Walter,Mahler continued to speakabout his music in metaphors that, if not overtaxed, can provide usefulinsight into the works that form the background for Das L ied von derErde.15

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    Werther becomes Prometheus: the First Symphony andTodtenfeier

    Indeed, it was Bruno Walter who characterized the First Symphony asMahlers Werther.16The Werther theme of unrequited love andsuicide had already been the subject of MahlersL ieder eines fahrendenGesellen(Songs of a Wayfarer), based on poetry he had written in thewake of an unhappy aVair with the soprano Johanna Richter in 188485.In the case of the First,the object of his illicit aVection was Marion vonWeber (wife of the grandson of Carl Maria von Weber,the famous com-poser), and Mahlers substantial borrowings from song cycle to sym-

    phony underscore both the nature and the intensity ofhis feeling.Such atriadic interaction of love, depression, and artistic response wouldrepeatedly spur Mahlers output from the time ofDas klagende L ied(1880) through the unWnished Tenth Symphony (1910).17

    Mahlers commentaries on the First Symphony assume the perspec-tive of the hero, his artistically projected persona (L ipiners exampleof his kind) engaged in a drama of Promethean conXict. The herosmoods and experiences progress from the shimmering awakening ofnature and Dionysian jubilation of theWrst movement, through thelamenting and bitterly ironic funereal vision based on Frre Jacquesinthe minor mode, to searing heartbreak and fearful struggle with all thesorrow of the world in theWnale DallInferno(Out ofHell) as he atone point entitled it. Later Mahler described the symphonysWnale toNatalie,who recorded the discussion as follows:

    Again and again he [the hero] receives a blow to the head from fate andwith him the victory motive, just when he seems to have raised himselfabove fate and become its master, and only in death since he has con-

    quered himself, and the wonderful concord of his youth suddenlyreemerges with the theme of theWrst movement does he achieve thevictory.(MagniWcent victory chorale!)18

    Yet characteristically for Mahler, before the First was complete, hewas seized in January 1888 by the inspiration for its polar opposite, thetragic Todtenfeier movement (Funeral Rites, or literally Celebra-tion of the Dead) that would eventually open the Second Symphony.Stricken by one of the visions that occasionally overcame him while

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    composing, He saw himself lying dead on a bier under wreaths andXowers (which were in his room from the performance of thePintos),

    until Frau von Weber quickly took allX

    owers away from him.19

    At onelevel, such anxiety is scarcely surprising:theXowers were in celebrationof MahlersWrst major success as a composer-conductor,his completionofCarl Maria von Webers unWnished operaDie drei Pintos made fromsketches inherited by Marions husband and entrusted by him to Mahler.But Mahlers terriWed vision was also intertwined with the harrowingWgure of a Werther sub specie aeternitat is(under the semblance of eter-nity), also named Gustav, who appears in Adam Mickiewiczs dramaticepicDziady,which Siegfried Lipiner had published in German transla-

    tion entitledTodtenfeier the previous year.20In his lengthy introduc-tion, Lipiner asserts that Gustavs suicide represents nothing less thanthe Fall of M anand its punishment21 and in his (and Mahlers) view,such Promethean deWance must lead towards transcendence. At theshattering dissonant climax of the Todtenfeier movement, Mahlerdraws again upon musical rhetoric from hisL ieder eines fahrenden Gesel-len, this time expanding upon gestures of the explicitly suicidal thirdsong,Ich habein glhend Messer (I Have a Burning Knife). But itwould take him another six years to hit upon theWtting conclusion to thisdeWant dramatic opening aWnale based,as we have seen,on the notionof redemption through tragic suVering.Nevertheless,Mahlers charac-teristic creative pattern of dialectic interaction between syzygial oppo-sites in the search for higher meaning was now well established;as BrunoWalter so rightly observes,

    For him there was fundamentally never release from the sorrowful strug-gle over the meaning of human existence . . . For what remained theagonizing question of his soul. From this arose the strongest spiritual

    impulses for his creativity, each of his works was a new attempt at ananswer. And when he had won the answer for himself, the old questionsoon raised its unassuageable call of longing in him anew. He could not such was his nature hold fast to any achieved spiritual position, for hehimself was not constant.22

    Nowhere is this more evident than in the contrast between the monu-mentally triumphant Symphony of a Thousand and the work thatfollows it,Das L ied von der Erde.

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    The Budapest stagnation

    Mahler composed very little between September 1888 and January 1892,the period he dubbed his Budapest stagnation. Yet his world changedin many ways.His driving professional ambition won the twenty-eight-year-old conductor both the prestige and the heavy responsibility ofdirecting the Royal Hungarian Opera in Budapest. He proudly sharednews of his accomplishments there with the family back in his provincialhometown of Iglau,but even then the health of his parents was decliningrapidly.Their marriage,based on convenience rather than love,had beendiY cult, and was marked by the deaths of eight children in infancy or

    childhood. In Mahlers words,his mother and father got along likeWreand ice.He was all stubbornness,she gentleness itself.23Parental quar-rels and dying siblings had overshadowed his childhood, the time inwhich, as he several times acknowledged, the raw materials for compos-ing were stored up.24Father Bernhard Mahler,who indeed domineeredover his delicate wife andXogged the childrenas Alma Mahler puts it,25

    died in February 1889. However ambivalent his feelings toward hisfather,Mahlers residual conXict in the wake of his death must have beendistressing.But his strong emotional attachment to his mother,who fol-lowed her husband to the grave in October 1889,is clearly apparent frommany sources. As the psychoanalyst Stuart Feder observes, Mahler wasdoubly loved by Marie Mahler,both as herWrst surviving child and as thereplacement for herWrstborn son who had died the year prior to Gustavsbirth;it seems clear that Gustavs position of priority among his siblingsgave him,in the words ofFreuds adage,the feeling ofa conqueror,thatconWdence of success that often induces real success.Feder continues:

    Mahlers music is repeatedly informed by this primary and enduringrelationshipinmental life, fromhismusical identiWcationwiththegriev-ingparentof theK indertotenlieder(e.g., thethirdsong,WenndeinMt-terlein . . . [Whenyour dear mother . . .])totheultimateidealizationoftheeternal feminineintheEighthSymphony. Throughthetransforma-tions of her sonsart, modest Marie Hermann was destined to endowrepresentationsof thequotidian-tragic mother aswell asthemost noblesymbol of motherhood: Marie become Mary, the Mater Gloriosa ofFaust.26

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    Yet apparently Mahler missed her funeral, remaining in Budapest torehearse,of all things,The Merry Wives of Windsor.27The irony is thor-

    oughly Mahlerian.According to family lore, it was Mahlers mother who had Wrstencouraged him to compose at age six, rewarding him with twoK reuzerfor a polka with a funeral march as an introduction [!] written not longafter the deaths of two younger siblings.28How diVerent was the recep-tion of his First Symphony, also graced with an unusual funeral march,in Budapest just Wve weeks after Marie Mahler died: both critics andaudience were outraged,and Mahler went about as though diseased,oran outlaw.29The most objectionable portions were precisely the funeral

    march and the storm that breaks out after it the devilishmusic that ismost original and characteristically Mahlerian, like portions of theTodtenfeier movement. And the condemnation of Todtenfeier byHans von Blow in 1891 was another painful blow; the famous conduc-tor declared that by comparison to it,Tristanwas a Haydn symphony.30

    Heavenly Life and Joyous Science: Mahler blossoms

    The Budapest stagnation was indeed a low ebb; we know of at leasttwo factors that brought Mahler out of it. One was the epoch-makinginXuenceof renewed engagement with the writings of Nietzsche late in1891;31the other was reacquaintance with the world ofDes Knaben Wun-derhorn(From the Boy s M agic Horn), the Romantic collection ofGerman folk poetry praised as a genuine manifestation of untutoredwisdom by writers as diverse as Goethe and Nietzsche.Within just over ayear Mahlers WunderhornHumoresken, as he called them, wouldbegin to inWltrate the high culture of the symphony through the extraor-

    dinary transformation of Des Antonius von Padua Fischpredigt (St.Anthonys Sermon to the Fishes) into the scherzo of the Second Sym-phony.But the most inXuential of theHumoreskenwas theWrst piece thatbroke his long creative hiatus:Das himmlische Leben, whose text anddeep-reaching music continued to enchant Mahler during the next eightyears,until at length he found its proper setting as theWnale of his FourthSymphony. What roguishness intertwined with the deepest mysticismis hidden in it! he told Natalie Bauer-Lechner.It is everything turnedon its head, and causality has absolutely no validity. It is as though you

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    suddenly saw the far side of the moon!32 While Mahler undoubtedlyassumed the text was folk poetry, we now know it to be the work of a

    single learned writer who laced it with numerous scriptural allusions inparadoxical contexts.The upshot is an instance ofingnuirony,wherebythe naively innocent protagonist of the poem a child, in Mahlerssetting utters things whose full import he does not understand. Oneillustrative instance must here stand for many: in the second strophe ofthe lied we are told that John the Baptist (i. e., the forerunner of theLamb of God) turns the Lamb over to Herod (the tetrarch of Galileewho had ordered John beheaded at the behest of Salome):how curious toencounter such violence in a song wherein the second line is: Kein

    weltlich Getmmel hrt man nicht in Himmel [One dont hear noworldly tumult in heaven]!33This was indeed a new creative avenue forMahler; to place it in the perspective ofhis epoch-makingreading,thelied is a curious sort of frhliche Wissenschaft (joyous knowledgeorgay science), a light, bewinged manifestation of the child, who, forNietzsche, came to represent innocence and forgetting, a new begin-ning,a game,a self-propelled wheel,aWrst movement,a sacred Yes.34In1901,when the Fourth wasWnished,Mahler would provide a more tradi-tional interpretation of the singer of Heavenly L ife: the child,who,although in a chrysalis state [im Puppenstand], already belongs to thishigher world,clariWes what it all means.35To arrive in heaven im Pup-penstandwas theWnal fate of Goethes ever-striving Faust, and Mahlerassociated the same rubric with the singer of Urlicht (PrimalLight), theWunderhornsong he would shortly adopt as a miniatureprelude to the vast ResurrectionWnale that would conclude the SecondSymphony. Although he dared not set the famous conclusion ofFaustuntil 1906 (in theWnale ofhis Eighth), it would seem that Mahler antici-

    pated a similar fate for his symphonic hero as early as 1892. Dashimmlische Leben,then,provided an answer to the despair and stagna-tion surrounding Todtenfeier; the song could not possibly balancethat massive C minorWrst movement as theWnale of the Second,but itdid act as a beacon,the tapering spire ofthe structure, during the com-position of his Third and Fourth Symphonies, which comprise thesecond half of the self-contained tetralogy.

    It is diY cult to pinpoint Mahlers further responses to Nietzsche,both because they were mixed,and because that writers spiraling mode

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    of thought resists facile conceptualization. Quite possibly Nietzschesstance on traditional religion that God is dead,and therefore humanity

    is to anticipate thebermensch gave Mahler the courage to concludethe Second Symphony with his unorthodox vision of resurrection,which takes place through the rather Romantic agency ofwings which Ihave won for myself in fervent striving of Love, according to Mahlersown poetry,rather than through divine grace.But Mahlers universalism no divine judgment,no blessed and no damned;no good,no evil ones,no judge! is almost certainly derived from Lipiners teacher,Gustav

    Theodor Fechner,who taught that

    there is no heaven and no hell in the usual sense of the Christian, the Jew,the heathen, into which the soul may enter . . .after it has passed throughthe great transition, death, it unfolds itself according to the unalterablelaw of nature upon earth . . . quietly approaching and entering into ahigher existence.36

    As we shall see,Fechners views were also inXuential in Mahlers shapingofDas L ied von der Erde.

    The famous lightning bolt of inspiration for the SecondsWnalethat struck Mahler in March 1894 at the memorial service publiclyannounced as a Todten-Feier for Hans von Blow,who had severelycondemned Mahlers Todtenfeier movement, is among the best-known events in his career. The psychoanalyst Theodor Reik hasinsisted upon the Oedipal aspect of this extraordinary breakthrough inMahlers creative logjam;Reiks view, if overstated,contains a kernel oftruth.37 Between 1888 and 1894 Mahler wrestled inwardly or overtlywith several oppressive patriarchal authorityWgures: the Judeo-Christ-ian God, his earthly father Bernhard, his supervisor Bernhard Pollini,

    director of the Hamburg Opera (the Pollini jail as Mahler called it),Hans von Blow and not least,Beethoven, whose apotheosis of joy inthe Ninth Symphony Mahler both imitated and challenged in his Res-urrection Wnale.Nevertheless, it was the success of the Second amongaudiences (if not, initially, among critics) that Wrst made Mahler a sig-niWcant European composer of the day.

    In the First and Second Symphonies Mahler establishes several broadcharacteristics ofhis symphonic oeuvre as a whole.First is the principleof the frame (as Donald Mitchell has lately dubbed it), derived from

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    Beethoven,whereby theWrst and last movements respectively introduceand resolve (at least temporarily) the main issues of the symphony, and

    the two or more inner movements are rather like interludes. In the FirstMahler had originally grouped theWve movements into larger blocksthat he labeled Abtheilung[en]; a similar arrangement is explicitlyindicated in the Third and Fifth Symphonies,and is fundamental toDasL ied von der Erde(although not marked as such in the score). As Mahleronce told Natalie,Composing is like playing with bricks,whereby a newbuilding always arises from the same stones. The stones, however, havelain there ready and waiting from ones youth, the only time for collect-ing and storing them.38And a prime musical topos found in virtually all

    his symphonies is the march,a predilection doubtless stemming from hischildhood experiences in the barracks town of Iglau.39 Marches arehumanity on the move into the heat of combat, home in the glory ofvictory (or shame of defeat), or solemnly en route to theWnal restingplace; Mahler draws upon all varieties. Another common movementtype is the folksy Austrian Lndler, which Mahler came to know fromSchubert and Bruckner as well as from popular music.And as noted,healso incorporates into the large,public genre of the symphony that mostintimate and private of Romantic musical forms, the lied,drawing uponfolk poetry as well. Also from Mahlers childhood grows his Romanticfascination with the sounds, moods, and atmospheres associated withnature that he molds into music, sometimes speciWcally calling themNaturlaute. Indeed, from the summer of 1893, when he resumed workon the Second, through the end of his career, an isolated summerHuschen(composing hut) in the country,or better yet in the woods,wasessential for the inspiration to compose.

    His sense of aVective association with speciWc tonalities is both tradi-

    tional and idiosyncratic: D major for the magniWcent victory of theFirst and C minor as the tragic key of Todtenfeier are stock in trade,whereas E major is a pastoral, blissful key, as in the contrasting secondsubject of Todtenfeier and the serene close of Das himmlischeLeben. He deploys the full resources of advanced nineteenth-centurytonal practice, including third-relations, expressive tonality (whole-or semitone ascents to suggest brightness and intensiWcation,the oppo-site for depression or darkening aVect),40irregular cadential resolutions,chromaticism and surface dissonance, etc. Yet the overall framework of

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    tonality remains solidly apparent, based on traditional voice-leadingtechniques.IntheearlysymphoniesMahlersdevelopmentalprocedures

    tendtofavor dramaandgesturemorethan compactmotivicworking-out; beginning with theFourth he would achievea more impressivebalance. And Mahlers sensitive and imaginative treatment of theorchestra, fromwhichhedrawssharplycharacterizedcolors, isalreadyfullyapparentinthesetwoworks.

    Finally, we should take note of an archetypal musical motive in theWnale of the Second that would recur in many of Mahlers subsequentworks, includingDas L ied: the Ewigkeit (eternity) motive (Ex.1).Borrowed from WagnersSiegfried,where it is associated with the word

    Ewig (eternal[ly]), it is deployed by Mahler in a variety of contexts,but always with connotations of temporal transcendence,and frequentlysuggesting ascent to a realm of peace and nurturance,such as the sphereof das Ewig-Weibliche (the eternal feminine) in the Eighth Sym-phony,and in numerous other works.41

    A second syzygial pair: the Third and Fourth Symphonies

    M eine frhliche Wissenschaft ( M y Joyous Science) : theThird Symphony

    Mahlers next two symphonies share a common origin: Das himmli-sche Leben, which he at Wrst planned to serve asWnale of the Third.Only when he realized the vast proportions to which that wide-rangingsymphonic world had sprawled did he transfer the childs vision of para-dise to an entirely diVerent work,conceived in concise neoclassical style.Mahlers Third is a vast pantheistic meditation on the evolution of the

    world from primeval nature through man to the realm of divinity. Its sixmovements last ninety minutes or more, and the music is replete withsonic symbols ofnature Pan asleep, T he southern gale, T he birdof the night, etc. speciWcally labeled in the autograph score. Particu-larly in the hugeWrst movement, a Pan-inspired abundance of irre-pressibly billowing Dionysian life force, Mahler takes greater risksthan he ever did again, as Adorno observes: T he literary idea of thegreat god Pan has invaded the sense of form;form itself becomes some-thing both fearful and monstrous,the objectiWcation of chaos . . .42

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    Both background and genesis of the Third have been well surveyed byPeter Franklin in a companion volume of the Cambridge Music Hand-books series.43 For present purposes we should note three points: (1)Mahlers vision of evolution in the Third Symphony embodies not onlythe Schopenhauerian notion of will as blind force of nature, but alsoFechners view of the cosmos as an inwardly alive spiritual hierarchyextending from atoms up to God, who is at once the base and thesummit.44Both viewpoints informDas L iedas well.(2) As suggested byits provisional title, Meine frhliche Wissenschaft, the Third alsomanifests Mahlers ongoing engagement with Nietzsche,but more espe-

    cially with his scriptural parodyThus Spoke Zarathustra, the book of theprophet who announces that God is deadand, in his famous midnightsong, guardedly reveals and elaborates Nietzsches doctrine of eternalrecurrence that everyone must come back eternally to this same,self-same life, in what is greatest as in what is smallest.45 It is preciselyZarathustras midnight song that Mahler sets for alto solo as the fourthmovement of the new symphony, O Man, Take Heed. Then followchildrens and womens voices chimingWunderhornlyrics on Christianthemes, T hree Angels Were Singing. His explanation of this bold

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    Example 1 The Ewigkeit (Eternity) motive (a) Wagner,Siegfried, actIII, scene 3 (Brnnhilde) (b) Mahler,Second Symphony,Wnale (c) Mahler,

    Second Symphony,Wnale; text:I shall die in order to live!

    (b)696

    (a)Brnnhilde

    E wig

    3

    war ich, E wig

    3

    bin ich,

    Ster ben werd ich, um zu le ben!

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    juxtaposition: here humor has got to aim for the heights that can nolonger be expressed otherwise.46But the work concludes with a hymn-

    like orchestral adagio originally entitled What Love Tells Me theliberating resolution in which the Schopenhauerian wheel of Ixion isstilled, according to Mahler.47 I could almost also call the movementWhat God tells me! he wrote to Anna von Mildenburg (the sopranowho was then his lover). And this in precisely the sense that God canonly be comprehended as Love.48 According to Alfred Roller(Mahlers revolutionary set designer at the Vienna Opera, 190307),His faith was that ofa child.God is love and love is God.This idea cameup a thousand times in his conversation.49It is not,however,a common

    notion in late Nietzsche. Finally (3), Mahlers personal identiWcationwith this symphony was yet more intense than with the previous two,andoften terrifying,as though he were confronted by

    theUniverseitself, intowhoseimmeasurablevoid youplunge, inwhoseeternal spaceyouwhirl, suchthat earthandhumanfatefall behindyoulikeatinyspeckandvanish.Thehighestquestionsof humanity, whichIposed in theSecond and tried toanswer: Why do welive, and will wesurvivebeyondthislife? herethesecannolongerconcernme.Forwhatcan that mean in aUniversewhereeverything livesand mustand willlive?50

    In certain passages he feared the work has almost ceased to be music; itis almost just sounds of nature.51And Mahler was equally aware of itsnumerous appropriations of plebeian music: Often one would believehe were in a lowly pub or a stable, he wrote Bruno Walter.52The boy offour who professed he wanted to become a martyr was now the maturemaster conWdent in his powers yet fearful of both the path that musicmust follow in his hands, and the abuse he would consequently suVer.

    Mahler compared his martyrdom to

    Christ on the Mount of Olives, who had to drain the chalice of sorrow tothe dregs and willed it so. He for whom this chalice is destined can andwill not refuse it, but death-agony must at times overcome him when hethinks ofwhat still lies before him.53

    Yet such a messianic self-identiWcation represents more than humbleservitude. It is closely allied both to his intense narcissistic interestinhis post-life, as Feder puts it,54 and to a Nietzschean usurpation of

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    tradition and authority that is also distinctly Oedipal. As he copied outthe full score of the ThirdsWrst movement in 1896,Mahler likened the

    piece to Zeus destroying Kronos as well as to Jacob wrestling withGod for divine blessing:God also wants not to bless me;only in fearfulstruggle over the coming into being of my works do I wrest it fromhim.55

    During the following year Mahler also managed to wrest control ofthe Vienna Court Opera from itsWrst conductor,Hans Richter, and itsaging director,Wilhelm Jahn,again astonishing the musical world by hismeteoric success at a relatively young age (thirty-seven). Vienna hadalways been his goal, and he was determined to show what he could do.

    He had long since become a tyrant in the pit of the theatre;during his lastyear in Hamburg he admitted to Bauer-Lechner that

    I can only make it work in the role of an animal trainer, which I assumethere, one who constantly lays on the lash of the most taxing demandsupon their attentiveness and capacity for work,and who handles them theroughest when the beast of impotence and indolence ventures forth evenfor a moment.56

    He drove himself just as relentlessly,sometimes to the point of ill-health;

    hemorrhoids, migraines, and sore throats were common ailments, andwhat little free time he had during the summer of 1897 was devoted toconvalescence.

    Moodiness was by now aWxed feature of his personality;during theprevious year Natalie had recorded that

    I hadneverseeninanyoneelsesuchchangeof moodinthemostdizzyingsequence. His relationship with the people closest to him was alsosubject to this changeability, which jumped fromthe most passionatefor to the most vehement against, and which could overwhelm aperson just as one-sidedly with his love as it could unjustly with hishatred. . .

    Recently he came to pick me up at a friends,and rushed into the houselike a whirlwind;he was talkative and in a most sparkling mood,and in hisboisterousness and scintillating merriness swept everything along withhim. But within a very short time who knows what went through hishead he suddenly became as silent as the grave, sat there immersed inhimself,and said not another word until we left.

    His changeability and inconstancy was so great that he never remained

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    the same for an hour at a time,and everything around and beyond him,butparticularly those closest to him, always appeared diVerent in his alteredoutlook.57

    Even his physical appearance could change dramatically within days orhours, from youthfulness to the look of a man much older than he was.

    Today some psychologists suspect he suVered from cyclothymic disor-der, a chronic,Xuctuating mood disturbance involving numerousperiods of hypomanic and depressive symptoms (which symptoms are,however, less numerous or severe than those of the bipolar disorders).58

    In any case, Mahler himself recognized that his creativity was closelylinked with irritability [I rr itabil itt], and such rapid shifts of mood,

    from Xowery ElysianWelds to the nocturnal terrors of Tartarus, arealso characteristic of his compositions.59

    What the Child Tells M e: the Fourth Symphony

    The Fourth is just such a radical shift, from the cosmic monumentalityof his previous two works to a quasi-classical four-movement symphonyofabout half their length,scored for more modest forces.An Apollonianrather than a Dionysian work, the Fourth was literally composed intoits preexistentWnale, Das himmlische Leben. And the title that songpreviously bore as part of the Third What the Child Tells Me might well be extended to the entire Fourth, for the gently ironic per-spective of theingnuinfuses the whole.Formally, it is a delicate sendupof symphonic grandeur as in the tradition of Beethovens Ninth (andMahlers Resurrection): not a profound chorus, but rather a simplechild singing aWunderhorntext concludes the proceedings.The point isalso underscored by the preceding slow movement,a double variation set

    culminating in fanfare summonses to a higher realm, just as in theAdagio ofBeethovens Ninth.And as in that icon,Mahlers scherzo withdouble trio is somewhat terrifying:its tuned-up solo violin is intended tosound raw and screeching, as though Death were striking up anallusion to the ancient German folkWgure Freund Hain,the grim reaper,occasionally represented with aWddle.60

    As Adorno has emphasized, The entire Fourth Symphony shuZesnonexistent childrens songs together . . . The means are reduced,without heavy brass . . .No fatherWgures are admitted to its precincts.61

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    Such an impression is owing in large measure to Mahlers almost cyclicaldispersal of Himmlisches Leben motives throughout the work.

    Overall, Adorno argues, the symphony is a solitary attempt at musicalcommunication with the dj vu, in genuine color . . . a spacious fantasyrealm in which everything seems to happen once again.62And further:everything is composed within quotation marks . . .63Such capacity tomake music conjure forth the past is among the most important featuresMahler develops further in his late style,especially inDas L ied.

    But the Fourths childlike dimensions are by no means musicallyregressive.Au contraire, like the text of theWnale, the musics outwardsimplicity barely masks its extraordinary sophistication:as never before,

    Mahler is here the master of development and counterpoint, an advancein technique that would prove essential in the works to come.And in theslow movement,which both he and Richard Strauss regarded as the highpoint of the Fourth, Mahler achieves a new expressive intimacy byappropriating childhood memories ofmaternal love,death,and peacefulisolation.As Natalie reports his private commentary,

    A divinely serene and deeply sad melody runs throughout, at which youwill both smile and weep.

    He also said that it bore the countenance of St. Ursula (who is sungabout in the Heavenly L ifeofthe fourth movement).. . .At one point he also called the Andante the smile ofSt.Ursula,and said

    that in it there had hovered before him the face of his mother from child-hood, with deep sadness, and as though smiling through tears; shesuVered unendingly, yet always lovingly resolved and forgave every-thing.64

    Mahler alsolikened thesmileof themother-saint totheexpressionofWguresfoundonmonumentsinancientchurches:theyhavethescarcely

    noticeable, peaceful smile of the slumbering, departed children ofmankind. . .65Justsuchamoment isthemovementsclose(Wg.13V.),whichleadsdirectlytothechildscelestial song.Thispassageismarkedsehrzart undinnig[verysweetly andintimately], andnotably, at thevery end, gnzlichersterbend[dyingawayentirely]: theEwigkeitmotiveisprominent(cf.Ex.1),asisagestureofquietcollapse(Wg.1313V.). Variantsuponthisextraordinarypassagesoonfoundtheir wayintotwodeeply contemplativepieceswritten thefollowingyear (1901): theRckertliedIchbinderWeltabhandengekommen[I have become lost

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    totheworld] andthefamousAdagiettoof theFifthSymphony, com-posedasadeclarationof lovefor hisfuturewifeAlma(seebelow).Both

    areimportantpredecessorsof DerAbschied,theW

    naleofDasLied.As a child,Mahler would frequently remain motionless in one spot forhours on end,lost to the world in daydreaming,music,and later,liter-ature.Both Natalie and Alma relate the story of young Gustavs taking awalk in the woods with his father; having forgotten something at home,Bernhard told the boy to sit on a log until he returned. Back home, asusual,was noise,commotion,distraction, and Gustav was completelyforgotten until twilight. The child, meanwhile, had remained sittingmotionless just as his father had left him, his eyes peacefully lost in

    thought, without fear or astonishment. And several hours had passedbefore evening fell.66 While such dreaminess was one way of dodgingchildhood traumas, it also generated conXict in reality,and probably infantasy as well.Mahler told Natalie that although he was tormented forhis brooding and felt guilty about it,he later realized it had been essentialto his spiritual development.67Psychoanalysts have suggested that suchconcentrated stillness as a way of avoiding conXict and fear of abandon-ment may provoke fantasies anticipating the stillness of death, and ofreturn to the womb as the ultimate punishment; theXipside,however, isthe craving to overcome fears of abandonment and death through with-drawal and womb-like isolation that approaches claustrophilia, such asMahler found in his summerHuschen.68In his entire oeuvre, the mostextended and extraordinary passage of music lost to the world is ofcourse the close ofDas L ied von der Erde, also marked gnzlich erster-bend at the end. Alma Mahler, who learned this music from herhusband at the keyboard,suggests that

    with wondrous consequence his inner life returns to the visionary child-

    hood scene in the woods. Is not his farewell [Abschied], the Song of theEarth, the ripe fruit of that far-oV melancholy contemplation, whosekernel may have come to life in the waiting boy?69

    1901:a year of transitions fundamental toDas L ied von der Erde

    Except for 1907, theWrst year of the new century brought more funda-

    mental changes to Mahlers life than any other. From Christmas 1900

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    through the following February he drove himself ever more relentlessly,despite recurrent headaches, stomachaches, tonsilitis, and hemorrhoid

    problems. On 24 February he collapsed from a severe hemorrhoidalhemorrhage,having conducted the Vienna Philharmonic at midday andthe Opera in the evening.The composer who had so often wrestled withthe mysteries of death and eternity believed that my last hour hadcome.70 But Mahler survived. While recovering on holiday, herecounted to Natalie two vivid and terrifying dreams he had remem-bered for years as the two of them walked in the moonlight beside amountain lake.TheWrst had occurred when he was only eight years old:the stars engulfed each other in a skyWlled with yellow smoke as though it

    were the end of the world,and the uncannyWgure of the Wandering Jewtried to force Mahler to take his staV (topped with a golden cross), thesymbol of his eternal wandering; the boy woke with a scream. Thesecond,from 1891,went as follows:

    Hefoundhimself in themidstof alargegatheringinabrightlylit room,whenthelastof theguestsenteredalargemanofstiVbearing,faultlesslydressed,andwiththeair of amanof aVairs.Buthe[Mahler]knew:thatisDeath. . .Thestrangerseizedhimbythearmwithanirongripandsaid,

    You must comewith me! [Du mut mit mir !] . . .hecould not tearhimself looseuntil, byexpendingall hisforces, hethrewthenightmareoV.71

    In wake of this illness Mahlers life and work were completely trans-formed. Within less than a year the bachelor of long standing hadbecome engaged to Alma Schindler, nearly twenty years his junior,andthe couple conceived a child prior to their marriage. This rush into therenewal of life was almost certainly in response to his brush with death,as Feder observes. But months before his crucial encounter with Alma,

    Mahler memorialized that moment artistically during the summer of1901, in several musical meditations upon death:the last of theWunder-hornsongs, three of theK indertotenlieder (Songs on the Death of Chil-dren), two of the separate Rckert songs,and the beginnings of the FifthSymphony.72

    Never again would Mahler draw near the naively humorous world ofDas himmlische Leben.All ofhis Rckert settings assume an individ-uated Wrst-person perspective that (with one exception) is intimately

    introspective: therein lies an essential feature of his new musical

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    persona.73 Remarkable how close in feeling Fechner is to Rckert,Mahler later observed;they are two nearly related people and one side

    of my nature is linked with them as a third.74

    Like Fechner,the univer-salist who regards the entire universe as an organic spiritual hierarchyleading up to the deity,Rckert, too, sees all-encompassing unity mani-fest in both the simplest aspects of existence and in the complex systemsof languages and cultures; his projection of feeling into nature is muchakin to both Fechners and Mahlers. And for Rckert, dying in loveleads to the realm of eternal light, a view much akin to Fechners beliefthat death is but the transition to the third stage of being, that of eternalwaking, in which man is merged as one with waves of light and sound.

    Rckert was an orientalist whose immersion in Eastern literaturestrongly inXuenced his own poetry; meditative, mystical withdrawalfromearthlyhubbubwasafamiliar notionforhim. Itwasfor Mahleraswell, both fromchildhood experiencesandviaSchopenhauersnotionof stillingthedrivingwill, thewheel of Ixion. Suchisalsothecentraltheme of Rckertspoem Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen [Ihave become lost totheworld], whichinspiredthemostextraordinarysongMahlerhadyetcomposed:It ismyveryself! hetoldNataliejustafter itwascompleted.75 If lessthansuperlativepoetry, RckertslyricsweretheperfectcatalystforMahler,whobelievedthatthetextof asongactually constitutes only a hint of the deeper content that is to bedrawnoutof it, of thetreasurethat istobehauledup.76Tobringforththis treasure, hedrew heavily upon theanhemitonic (without semi-tones) pentatonicscale, themostcommonmodeof pitchorganizationin Eastern music, just ashewould later inDasL ied von der Erde. Boththemild exoticismof thepentatonic scale and its capacity to diVusegoal-orientedWesterntonal processesareextensivelyexploitedinIch

    binder Welt abhandengekommen. Yetalmostparadoxically, it ispre-ciselythehybridmixtureof tonalityandpentatonicismthatinfusesthispiecewith concentrated organic coherencesuch asMahler had previ-ouslyachievedonlyincertainpassagesof theFourthSymphony. (Andasnoted above, thecloseof theFourthsslowmovement istheproto-typefor theconclusion of Ich bin der Welt.) Followingthesecondperformance of the lied in 1905, Mahler emphasized his organicapproachtocomposition in conversationwith SchoenbergandyoungAntonvonWebern:

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