|
|
| WASTE YOUR TIME WITH GUSTO Biomedical Research Using Chimps Curtailed Did You Review Your Whole Facebook Timeline Before Publishing It? Navy Updates Purple Heart Award Policy Movie reviews by Catholic News Service Rolheiser: Prayer as Seeking God's Guidance Antarctica: 100 Years of Exploration The Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah Review: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Flute and Harp Concerto -Sinfonia Concertante for Winds The automobile at 125: from humble birth to global dominance Russia holding back online shutdowns for now, expert says Solving the Mystery of a 35,000-Year-Old Statue 10 Ways B-Movie Master Roger Corman Changed Filmmaking Drones and Nuke Spying: a Match Made in the Heavens Eckart Tolle: Facing Adversity Revolving door at Commodity Futures Trading Commission NASA announces Feb. 7 launch for 1st SpaceX Docking to ISS Pro-Life Group Argues for Mercury Limits Forget Hotels, Rent a Sunny Private Villa The Dynamics of Protest Recruitment through an Online Network The Chronological Encyclopedia of Discoveries in Space
Digital Concert Hall: Gustav Mahler- Das Lied von der Erde Sir Simon Rattle and the Berliner Philharmoniker bring their complete performance of Gustav Mahler's major orchestral works to a close with Das Lied von der Erde - for Arnold Schoenberg, the work by the composer which "points furthest into the future". Mahler himself however characterized the Lied with another superlative: as "probably the most personal work I have written so far". As a listener it is easy to agree with Mahler's assessment. For although Das Lied von der Erde exudes a certain exotic strangeness through the use of 8th century Chinese poetry, the listener always has the feeling of being addressed directly and intimately by the composer. Firstly, because Mahler forgoes the gigantic orchestral forces of his symphonies, and secondly, because the listener always feels that the sadness of these songs is not a pose. Mahler, already terminally ill at the time of composition, eulogises here the departure from life with a sincerity that still moves us today. The final scene from Leos Janacek's operatic fable The Cunning Little Vixen which opens the concert, reveals fascinating parallels to Das Lied von der Erde. Janacek, born like Mahler in what today is an area of the Czech Republic, creates a wonderfully delicate scene in which the Forester ponders life - and in turn bids farewell to youth and beauty.
|
Arts and Entertainment Headlines
| ARCHIVES |