The programme includes:
Ferenc Liszt. Concerto for piano and orchestra № 2 in A Major
Soloist: Peter Laul
Gustav Mahler. Symphony No 1 in D Major (Titan)
Symphony Orchestra of the Mariinsky Theatre
Mahler’s First Symphony was written between 1884–88. It is noteworthy that not long before this Mahler had written his vocal cycle Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen. It is autobiographical – Mahler was, as we know, a “travelling” musician in whom people immediately recognised not an apprentice but a master. His First Symphony is equally autobiographical, and in it Mahler broke the themes of the vocal cycle. It would be pointless to think that the name Titan, which Mahler gave it at the first performance, reflects its programme content. The composer used the title of his favourite book by Jean Paul purely to share with the romantic writer his enthusiastic pantheism, his love of nature and, at the same time, his inherent and scathing irony and his torturous search for his own “self”.
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