GUSTAV MAHLER
ADAGIO FROM SYMPHONY NO. 10
DAS KLAGENDE LIED (SONG OF LAMENT),CANTATA FOR SOLOISTS, MIXED CHORUS,
AND LARGE ORCHESTRA

GUSTAV MAHLER was born in Kalischt (Kalištĕ), near Humpolec,
Bohemia, on July 7, 1860 and died in Vienna on May 18, 1911. Although
some of the ideas for his Symphony No. 10 go back to 1908, Mahler did
most of the work on this unfinished score in the summer of 1910. The
first attempt at preparing a practical full score was undertaken by the
composer Ernst Krenek in 1924. He presented the first and third movements
only, and these sections were performed on October 14, 1924 by Franz Schalk
and the Vienna Philharmonic. These two movements were introduced in the United
States in Krenek’s edition on December 6, 1949 by the Erie (Pennsylvania)
Philharmonic under Fritz Mahler (no relation). In 1959, an English musician
and writer, Deryck Cooke, began work on what he called a “performing version”
of all five movements in connection with the impending Mahler centenary.
On August 13, 1964, Berthold Goldschmidt and the London Symphony Orchestra
gave the first complete performance of Cooke’s score. Josef Krips conducted
the first San Francisco Symphony performances in April 1967. In April and May
1975, Jean Martinon conducted the Adagio only, in the critical Mahler edition
of 1964 (the version used in the present performances), and Michael Tilson
Thomas conducted the most recent performances of this version in September 1996.
One who was not satisfied with the Cooke version of the complete score was Cooke
himself. His “finally revised full-length performing version,” generally known as
Cooke II, was introduced in London on October 15, 1972 by Wyn Morris and the
New Philharmonia Orchestra. In January 1976, Niklaus Wyss conducted the
San Francisco Symphony in the first American performances of all five movements
of Cooke II. This is the edition that has so far enjoyed the widest circulation.
There are also editions by Joe Wheeler, Clinton Carpenter, and Hans Wollschläger.
In 1994, an edition by an American musician, Remo Mazzetti, Jr., began to achieve
circulation, and this version was performed by the Orchestra, under Leonard
Slatkin’s direction, on March 29 and April 1,5, 1995. The score for the Adagio
calls for three flutes (third doubling piccolo), three oboes, three clarinets,
three bassoons, four horns, four trumpets, three trombones, tuba, harp, and
strings.
Having written his own text, which he completed on March 18, 1878, Mahler promptly
began the composition of Das klagende Lied, completing the score at the end of
October 1880. In 1892-93 he revised the score, his most radical amendment being
to cut Waldmärchen (Forest Legend), the first of the three sections and amounting
to a good two-fifths of the work. Some further changes were made in 1898-99. The
abbreviated two-part version was performed in Vienna on February 17, 1901, by which
time Mahler was about to begin work on his Symphony No. 5. He conducted the Vienna
Singakademie and the Vienna Philharmonic, and the soloists were Elise Elizza, Anna
von Mildenburg, Edyth Walker, and Fritz Schrödter. The first performance of the
three-movement version of Das klagende Lied, sung in Czech, was given as a broadcast
over Radio Brno, Czechoslovakia, on November 28, 1934; the conductor was Mahler’s
nephew, Alfred Rosé. The first American (and third ever) performance of the complete
work was given on January 13, 1970 at a concert of the New Haven Symphony, Frank
Brieff conducting, with Veronica Tyler, Janet Baker, Blake Stern, and Richard McKee,
and the New Haven Chorale. The performances that Edo de Waart led with the San
Francisco Symphony in May 1978, with Patricia Wells, Florence Quivar, Kenneth
Riegel, and the SFS Chorus, were of the two-part version; the complete work was
first performed here in May 1996, with Michael Tilson Thomas conducting and with
soloists Marina Shaguch, Michelle DeYoung, Thomas Moser, and Sergei Leiferkus,
and the SFS Chorus. The score calls for a mixed chorus (sometimes elaborately divided);
soprano, alto, tenor, and baritone soloists; and an orchestra consisting of two
flutes and piccolo (doubling third flute), two oboes and English horn
(doubling third oboe), two clarinets and bass clarinet (doubling third clarinet),
three bassoons, four horns, four trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani,
triangle, bass drum, cymbals, two to six harps, and strings.
WHEN BRUNO WALTER CONDUCTED the posthumous premieres of Mahler’s Das Lied von der Erde
in Munich in November 1911 and the Symphony No. 9 in Vienna in June 1912, it
seemed that all of Mahler’s music had been offered to the public. It was assumed
that the Tenth Symphony was in too fragmentary a state ever to be performed, and
word went about that Mahler had asked his wife to destroy whatever drafts remained.

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In 1912, Arnold Schoenberg, that paradoxical confluence of the rational and the
mystic, wrote: “We shall know as little about what [Mahler’s] Tenth …would have
said as we know about Beethoven’s Tenth or Bruckner’s. It seems that the Ninth
is a limit. He who wants to go beyond it must die. It seems as if something might
be imparted to us in the Tenth which we ought not yet to know, for we are not yet
ready. Those who have written a Ninth stood too near the hereafter. Perhaps the
riddles of this world would be solved if one of those who knew them were to write
a Tenth. And that is probably not going to happen.”
Mahler, for that matter, had his own misgivings about going beyond the Ninth.
He had called Das Lied von der Erde a symphony without numbering it, so that
the symphony he called No. 9 was actually his tenth. Thus he had dealt with
“the limit” by circumvention, or so he believed. With ten symphonies completed
(counting Das Lied von der Erde), Mahler moved virtually without pause, fearlessly
and with white-hot energy, from the last pages of the official No. 9 to the first
of No. 10. In 1911, the discovery of penicillin was still seventeen years away.
Had that antibiotic been available to combat his blood infection, there is little
doubt he would have finished his work-in-progress that summer.
Schoenberg in fact did not know how far Mahler had actually progressed on his Tenth.
Only Mahler’s widow had any idea until 1924, when she asked the twenty-three-year-old
composer Ernst Krenek to “complete” the symphony. Krenek felt this to be an “obviously
impossible” assignment, but he prepared a practical full score of two movements, the
Adagio, which was complete, and Purgatorio, which was nearly complete. At the same
time, Alma Mahler Gropius, as she then was, allowed the Viennese publisher Paul Zsolnay
to publish a large part of Mahler’s manuscript in facsimile. Her decision was surprising.

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Gustav Mahler, in 1910, was a man in torment, for he believed himself on the point of
losing his intensely beloved, much younger, bright and lively, beguilingly beautiful
wife. Alma Maria Schindler met Mahler in November 1901, became pregnant, and married
him four months later. Their devotion was mutual and passionate, but they were
fundamentally out of tune. Eight years into their marriage, Alma, flirtatious by
temperament and frustrated by Gustav’s sexual withdrawal from her, was restless.
In May 1910, she met Walter Gropius, four years her junior and about to embark on
one of the most distinguished careers in the history of architecture. Under trying
and even bizarre circumstances—Gropius had by accident (!) addressed the letter in
which he invited Alma to leave Gustav to “Herr Direktor Mahler”—Alma chose to stay
with her husband, who later told her that if she had left him then, “I would simply
have gone out, like a torch deprived of air.” Through the score of the Tenth
Symphony, Mahler scribbled verbal exclamations that reflect this crisis, and it
cannot have been easy for Alma to agree to the publication of such painfully intimate
material. The so-called Krenek edition of the Adagio and Purgatorio, long the only
available performing edition of any music from the Tenth Symphony, lacked too much
both of science and art to be satisfactory; in any event, with the appearance in 1964
of the Adagio in the critical Mahler edition and that of Cooke II in 1976, it has for
all intents and purposes dropped out of circulation.
It was Mahler’s biographer Richard Specht who suggested, after studying the facsimile,
that more could be done about the Tenth Symphony than had been done, and he urged that
“some musician of high standing, devoted to Mahler, and intimate with his style” should
prepare a performable full score of the entire work. Alma Mahler Werfel also showed
Schoenberg the manuscript, but he declined to work on it. In 1942, the Canadian-born
Mahler scholar Jack Diether tried in vain to interest Shostakovich in the task.
Some considerable voices, including those of Bruno Walter, Leonard Bernstein, Rafael
Kubelík, Pierre Boulez, and Erwin Ratz (chief editor for the International Mahler Society),
have spoken out against the “complete” Mahler Tenth. Cooke himself pointed out that
Mahler would undoubtedly have “elaborated, refined and perfected [his score] …
in a thousand details,” that he would also, “no doubt, have expanded, contracted,
redisposed, added, or canceled a passage here and there,” and that he would “finally,
of course, have embodied the result in his own incomparable orchestration.” Deryck
Cooke, who died in 1976, would never have taken the position that Cooke II—or Cooke
anything—was the last word on the Mahler Tenth. What Mahler left is open to many
interpretations and realizations in “performing versions.” All this is background
to a performance of music that Mahler did complete, the Adagio we hear now.

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In the Tenth Symphony, Mahler returned to the symmetrical five-movement design he
had used in his Fifth and Seventh and in the original version of the First. This
idea was not clear to Mahler to begin with, and he changed his mind more than once
about their order within the whole. He called his first movement an “Adagio,” but
he does not enter that tempo—nor, for that matter, the main key, F-sharp major—until
measure 16. He begins, rather, with one of the world’s great upbeats: a pianissimo
Andante for the violas alone, probing, wandering, surprising, shedding a muted light
on many harmonic regions, slowing almost to a halt, finally and unexpectedly opening
the gates to the Adagio proper. This is a melody of wide range and great intensity—piano,
but warm, is Mahler’s instruction to the violins—enriched by counterpoint from the
violas and horn, becoming a duet with the second violins, returning eventually to the
world of the opening music.
These two tempi and characters comprise the material for this movement. A dramatic
dislocation into B major, with sustained brass chords and sweeping broken-chord
figurations in strings and harp, brings about a crisis, the trumpet screaming a
long high A, the orchestra seeking to suffocate it in a terrifying series of massively
dense and dissonant chords. Fragments and reminiscences, finally an immensely spacious,
gloriously scored cadence, bring the music to a close.
THE EARLIEST MUSIC BY MAHLER we are likely to encounter in concert is the
Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen (Songs of a Wayfarer), which were probably
composed in 1883-84. Das klagende Lied takes us back to a span of time that begins
with the seventeen-year-old as a student both at the Vienna Conservatory, from which
he would graduate a few months later, in July 1878, and at the University of Vienna,
and which ends with the young man back in Vienna after a summer of conducting operettas
at Bad Hall in Upper Austria. Bad Hall was hardly a stimulating artistic experience;
nonetheless, it changed Mahler’s life. He loved conducting. In later years, when he
had become, with Toscanini (a bit younger) and Nikisch (slightly older), one of the
greatest conductors of his generation, he sometimes railed against the life that
obliged him to confine his composing to the summer months, but the fact was that the
bug that bit him in the summer of 1880 never released him, and if he did not give up
conducting it was not only for financial reasons.

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Of course Mahler hoped for a performance of Das klagende Lied, but as an unknown
twenty-year-old he had no leverage with which to organize such a huge undertaking.
His next plan was to submit the score in 1881 for the Beethoven Prize, given annually
to a Conservatory student or alumnus. Winning that would have brought welcome publicity,
to say nothing of 600 florins; however, the prize that year was awarded to Robert Fuchs
for his Symphony No. 1. Mahler was embittered for years about that decision.
When at last he was able to get Das klagende Lied performed, twenty years after completing
the score, Mahler was a conductor at the Vienna Court Opera and of the Vienna
Philharmonic, and he was able to enlist some of the outstanding singers of the day,
notably the three women, Elizza, von Mildenburg, and Walker. The thorn in his side
was the Singakademie, a mediocre chorus that was not professional in literal fact or
in attitude and which was a hotbed of anti-Semitism. But Mahler enjoyed a warm public
success, a relatively rare event for him. The reviews were mostly so-so to negative.
The critics who were generally sympathetic to Mahler were disappointed because his four
symphonies and recent songs had set their expectations at a higher level than this
impressive student work—but student work nonetheless—was able to meet, and the writers
in the anti-Mahler camp heard nothing to make them change their minds.
Another muddle concerning Das klagende Lied has been the assertion that Mahler originally
intended the work as an opera. The biographer and critic Ernst Decsey, who wrote his
recollections of Mahler at the time of the composer’s death, seems to have been the first
to put that non-fact into circulation, but aside from his 1911 article in Die Musik,
published in Norman Lebrecht’s 1987 compilation Mahler Remembered and in most respects
exceedingly interesting, there is nothing to back it up.

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The title Das klagende Lied is not easy to translate, and many writers don’t even try;
nor am I am really satisfied with my suggestion of Song of Lament. The primary meaning
of “klagen” is to complain, to lament; however, one of its secondary meanings in the
world of jurisprudence is to go to law, to bring action, to sue. “Klagen” also brings
to mind its derivative, “anklagen,” which means to accuse. These other meanings and
associations are germane to Das klagende Lied, for here is the tale told in the cantata:
Part I, Waldmärchen: A beautiful, proud, and man-hating queen has conceded that she
will give herself as wife to whichever knight finds a certain red flower in the forest,
a flower as lovely as herself. Two brothers set out to find the flower; the younger
one is sweet in manner and handsome, the elder “could only curse.” The younger brother
finds the flower, sticks it in his hat, and lies down in the forest to sleep. Finding
him thus, the older brother kills him, takes the flower, and claims his prize.
Part II, Der Spielmann (The Minstrel): A musician wandering through the same forest
finds a gleaming white bone and fashions a flute from it. The first time he plays his
new instrument, it sings the tale of the murder. The minstrel decides he must seek out
the queen.

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Part III, Hochzeitsstück (Wedding Piece): At court there is a great feast in honor of
the impending wedding of the Queen and the murderer-knight. The minstrel arrives and
plays his flute, which once again tells its dark tale. The new king seizes the flute
and puts it to his own lips, where it accuses him directly: “Ah brother, dear brother
mine, it was you who struck me dead, and now you play upon my whitened bone.” The
Queen falls in a faint, the guests flee in terror, and the walls of the castle
collapse.
When Mahler came to set five of Friedrich Rückert’s Kindertotenlieder
(Songs on the Deaths of Children) in 1901-04, he came to the task as an expert,
so to speak, for of his thirteen siblings, seven died in infancy
(his one older brother, Isidor, had died before Gustav’s birth), and in 1874 his
favorite brother, Ernst, died of hydrocardia at the age of thirteen. One might
also imagine that Mahler was an expert on sibling rivalry, and that the painful
last illness and death of Ernst, one year younger than himself and his closest
childhood companion, brought on a severe case of survivor’s guilt.
Where Mahler got the story has been much argued. Bruno Walter cited “The Singing Bone,”
of the fairy tales collected by the brothers Grimm, as an important source. Walter
overstated the case when he called Das klagende Lied Mahler’s versification of the
Grimm tale, but otherwise the idea is not farfetched. It is true that in “The Singing Bone”
the issue is the killing of a gigantic boar that has become a peril to the kingdom rather
than the finding of a red flower, but the reward is the hand in marriage of a beautiful
princess, the two brothers are contrasted Cain-and-Abel style as rough and gentle with
“Cain” killing “Abel,” and the singing bone-flute corresponds perfectly.

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We know that a verse play by Martin Greif, the pen-name of a Bavarian poet, Friedrich
Hermann Frey, and titled Das klagende Lied was performed by drama students at the Vienna
Conservatory in 1876, so that is a possible source for the title; however, the play itself
does not survive and we know nothing about it, so that is a dead end. But there is another
and more relevant source, a tale collected by the nineteenth-century folklorist Ludwig
Bechstein and titled by him Das klagende Lied. The striking difference between Bechstein’s
version and Mahler’s (and, for that matter, the Grimms’) is that in Bechstein the rival
siblings are brother and sister, the sister being killed. In any event, as we know well
from a whole succession of works from his early songs right up to Das Lied von der Erde,
Mahler was never one to leave a text alone, and Das klagende Lied may well be understood
as a conflation of Bechstein, Grimm, and Mahler’s own excited imagination.
In December 1896, Mahler wrote to Max Marschalk, the critic whom he felt “understands
my work better than anyone,” that Das klagende Lied, “a fairy tale for chorus, soloists,
and orchestra, is the first work in which I found myself as ‘Mahler.’ This work I
designate as my Opus 1.”
Yet inevitably we sense the ghosts of other composers—Wagner most of all, which will
surprise no one. We may even be reminded of a great work yet to be written by a composer
who was a close cousin in spirit to Mahler, the Gurrelieder of Arnold Schoenberg. I do
not know whether Schoenberg knew Das klagende Lied, but he certainly could have known it.
One aspect of Das klagende Lied that brings Gurrelieder to mind is the manner of Romantic
story-telling that informs both works. Another of course is the grand scale of Das
klagende Lied, and immense and fearless ambition is one aspect that makes the
twenty-year-old Mahler so unmistakably recognizable as Mahler. This is truly the
beginning of a chain of works that continues coherently right up to the unfinished
Tenth Symphony. All through his life, Mahler’s works are remarkably linked, quoting
their predecessors or taking them as points of departure. Another feature of Das klagende Lied,
then, is that it constantly anticipates the Songs of a Wayfarer, and
in startling detail.
I will not offer a point-by-point guide to the cantata. I do, however, want to make a
couple of brief general remarks about Mahler’s accomplishment here. One is that his
feeling for the orchestra is absolutely extraordinary and individual, and this is the
more amazing as it comes from someone his age, who had never heard a note of his own
orchestration. The other is that he commands a remarkable sense of atmosphere. From
the first moments of the prelude to Waldmärchen, we believe without hesitation that
this is music by the composer who will go on to write the Last Trump with its picture
of a desolate earth in the finale of his Second Symphony and that most amazing of all
his pictorial achievements, the prelude to the mountain gorge scene in the Faust portion
of his Eighth Symphony (which Michael Tilson Thomas conducts at our concerts of June 6-10).
One cannot help feel that Mahler still had much to learn about pacing, both in actual
swiftness and variety, but again, this is a teenager with no practical experience. He
would become a master of this in excelsis, and one of the many impressive things about
Das klagende Lied is that each of its three parts is strikingly more assured and inventive
than the one before. It is fascinating and moving to get a glimpse of a younger Mahler
than the one we are accustomed to meeting and to hear the rightness of his proud claim
that this is the work where the real Mahler is first discerned.
—Michael Steinberg

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On Disc and in Print
Leonard Bernstein, who never came to terms with the performing version of the Tenth
Symphony, recorded the Adagio twice, with the New York Philharmonic (Sony Classical)
and with the Vienna Philharmonic (Deutsche Grammophon). Sir Simon Rattle has recorded
Cooke II with the Berlin Philharmonic (EMI Classics).
Michael Tilson Thomas, the San Francisco Symphony, and the SFS Chorus have recorded
Das klagende Lied, with soloists Marina Shaguch, Michelle DeYoung, Thomas Moser, and
Sergei Leiferkus (RCA Red Seal).
The sourcebook on Mahler is Henry-Louis de la Grange's massive biography. Two volumes
of the projected four are available in English: Gustav Mahler: Vienna, The Years of
Challenge, 1897-1904 and Gustav Mahler: Vienna, Triumph and Disillusion, 1904-1907
(Oxford). Jonathan Carr’s Mahler: A Biography is a briefer introduction—intelligent
and accessible (Overlook). Michael Kennedy’s book on Mahler in the Master Musicians
series is one of the best short studies (Dent).
—M.S.