An Affinity with Gustav Mahler

An Affinity with Gustav Mahler pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载 2026

出版者:Elius Books, Croydon, 1999
作者:Holmes, Stewart Quentin [ed]
出品人:
页数:0
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出版时间:
价格:0
装帧:
isbn号码:9780952871200
丛书系列:
图书标签:
  • Mahler
  • 音乐
  • 传记
  • 古典音乐
  • 作曲家
  • 文化
  • 艺术
  • 历史
  • 音乐史
  • 奥地利
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具体描述

《与马勒的情愫》:一场跨越时空的音乐对话 《与马勒的情愫》并非一本详尽的马勒生平传记,亦非枯燥的音乐理论分析。它是一次深入灵魂的探索,一场横跨世纪的音乐情感交流,一次对伟大灵魂回响的虔诚聆听。本书将带领读者走进 Gustav Mahler 繁复而炽烈的心灵世界,感受他音乐中那汹涌澎湃的情感力量,以及其中蕴含的深刻哲学思考。 我们或许无法完全复刻马勒所处的时代背景,也无法完全体味他经历的个人磨难。然而,通过他那充满生命力的音乐,我们得以窥见一个敏感、深刻、饱受内心挣扎却又无比热爱生命的心灵。《与马勒的情愫》旨在搭建一座桥梁,连接现代读者的感知与马勒音乐的内在逻辑。在这里,马勒不再仅仅是乐谱上的符号,也不再是历史长河中的一个遥远名字。他化身为一个鲜活的、充满激情的个体,用他磅礴的交响曲和艺术歌曲,向我们诉说着关于生命、死亡、爱、信仰、自然以及存在的终极困惑。 本书的核心并非罗列马勒的作曲年代或每一次的指挥生涯。相反,它更侧重于挖掘马勒音乐的情感内核,解析他音乐语言中那些直抵人心的旋律、和声与织体所传递出的情绪张力。我们将一同品味那些时而悲怆如挽歌,时而激昂如战鼓,时而温柔如低语,时而宏伟如史诗的乐章。这些音乐的碎片,构成了马勒独一无二的音乐宇宙,也折射出他对生命种种境遇的深刻洞察。 《与马勒的情愫》将通过多角度的审视,引导读者去感受马勒音乐的“情愫”——那份深沉的、有时甚至是矛盾的情感共鸣。书中,我们或许会探讨马勒音乐中“童年”意象的反复出现,它象征着失落的纯真、对过去的追溯,以及对理想的永恒渴望。我们也将深入马勒作品中对“自然”的描绘,感受那份来自山川、田野、森林的原始生命力,以及它在马勒音乐中扮演的慰藉与启示的角色。 更重要的是,本书将触及马勒音乐中那股强烈的“存在主义”气息。马勒的音乐,常常是对人生意义的不断追问,是对人类在宇宙中的渺小与孤独的反思,是对个体与社会、精神与物质之间冲突的深刻体验。这些宏大而普遍的主题,使得他的音乐超越了时代,至今仍能引发我们的强烈共鸣。我们将试图理解,为何马勒会在音乐中如此直白地表达对死亡的恐惧与思考,为何他对生命中的“苦难”如此敏感,又为何在最深的绝望中,他的音乐又能迸发出最耀眼的光芒。 《与马勒的情愫》也并非仅仅局限于音乐本身。马勒的人生经历,如他的犹太血统、宗教皈依、频繁的职业变动、以及与家庭的复杂关系,都不可避免地融入了他的音乐创作。书中,我们将适当触及这些背景,但绝非为了梳理事实,而是为了更深入地理解这些经历如何在他那“不计一切代价要表现一切”的音乐哲学中得到升华。他的音乐,是他与世界对话的方式,是他梳理内心混沌的途径,更是他对人类共同情感的呐喊。 这是一本写给所有热爱音乐、热爱思考、渴望与伟大灵魂产生连接的读者的书。它不要求你拥有深厚的音乐学背景,只需你有一颗愿意倾听的心。我们鼓励读者在阅读本书的同时,也去聆听马勒的音乐。让音乐成为最好的注解,让文字成为开启音乐世界的钥匙。在《与马勒的情愫》的世界里,你将找到属于自己的那份与马勒的情愫,那份源自内心深处的、跨越时空的共鸣。 本书旨在启发读者对马勒音乐更深层次的理解和情感上的投入,而非提供一套标准化的解读。每一位读者,在马勒音乐面前,都将是独立的体验者,都将通过自己的感知,与这位音乐巨匠进行一次独特而私密的对话。愿《与马勒的情愫》能成为你走进马勒音乐世界的一份美好邀请,一次充满发现与感动的旅程。

作者简介

This begins strangely. 'The main purpose of this book,' publisher D.V. Knox-Richards writes in the Acknowledgements, 'apart from promoting the world of Gustav Mahler, is to try to take out the stuffiness which we have seen in several publications about the composer. Any book about the life and work of composers needs to be approached in a way that readers can understand, and not be blinded by the science of those who come from "upper class" backgrounds whose writings are barely comprehensible.' Which certainly seems to put a few people firmly in their places. Just what a comment like this is meant to achieve I have no idea. And what a pity Mr. Knox-Richards didn't have the courage to name those "upper class" people whose work so clearly offends him. Certainly leading off a book ostensibly designed to widen the appreciation of a great artist does itself no favours by an attack on others who are only trying to do the same. As we will see, anyone reading this book will come to need those very authors if they are to develop an affinity with Gustav Mahler.

No Bibliography in this book therefore, and no index either. Mind you, this is not the kind of book for which an index is appropriate containing as it does a series of fourteen personal essays by people apparently from various walks of life (though presumably not "upper class") mixing enthusiasm and involvement in the music of Mahler with some quite deep analysis. I say "apparently" because there is no clear indication for readers as to who these people are, other than experienced music lovers who clearly know and love their Mahler. Any personal details must be picked up from the pieces themselves. Clive Bates, for example, writes engagingly about the Eighth Symphony from the point of view of a chorister who has sung in twenty performances of that work and I enjoyed his chapter as he clearly knows and loves the work. The revelation that he once saw comedian Frankie Howerd in the audience for one performance was an unexpected gem. Most chapters are centred on one work but there is also a Mahlerian travelogue by Stanley Wilson and a quite well informed piece on Mahler's medical history by Dr. H. Max White. Interspersed with the main pieces are some short thoughts on Mahler - in effect micros of the macro articles - by well-known personalities mainly, though not exclusively, from the world of the arts and music. These have been chosen well from Georg Solti to Baroness Blackstone to Arnold Wesker, among others. I especially agree with the young British conductor Daniel Harding's observation: "I cannot think of many composers whose music is as uncomfortable and unsettling as Mahler's - and the current trend to smooth off the edges is extremely disturbing." Less welcome is the image that has been created on page 93 of Mahler apparently crucified on a Calgary cross, complete with a crown of thorns on his head. I think this will be offensive to many Christians and Jews.

This is not a book to be read through at one sitting, though. The approach of each writer is different each time so inevitably it is a bit of an uneven read. For example, Andrew Fairley rambles rather through too many good ideas in his chapter on the Fifth and could have done with some judicious editing. Some of the writers, like Peter Franklin on the First Symphony, give an engaging amount of personal recollection as to how they came to Mahler's music as well as history and analysis of the work allocated. Others, like Paul Gudgin on the Third, offer only straightforward description of the work with little personal involvement. Ian Mathias-Baker uses the Ninth as a case study for his view on how music in general can convey meaning and anyone looking for a more basic introduction to that work, as they find in Sarah Perrin's splendid chapter on Das Lied Von Der Erde, for example, will be disappointed. Perrin's account of how she, an accountant by profession, came to Mahler's music and that late masterpiece in particular is the best chapter in the book. An example of how enthusiasts can often have something to teach even the professionals. Earlier Kieran Cooper shows an admirable scepticism regarding the testimony of Alma Mahler where others in the book are more trusting of the lady. There is also overlap. You cannot consider one Mahler work in isolation so you will find some details being repeated. But there is also a case or two of writers contradicting each other on factual grounds. Mahler's health is an example. One chapter tells you wrongly that Mahler received a terminal heart diagnosis in 1907. Another tells you, correctly, that he didn't. Perhaps an Editor's footnote in the former case would have been a good idea.

So read the book piecemeal as you come to listen to each work and, preferably, on the occasions of your very first acquaintance with that work. Because I believe it is to the first-time listener that this book would be most suitable. People who have never heard a note of Mahler's music often ask me what it is I find so fascinating about his life and work and I would happily recommend this book to them. The overwhelming impression you receive is of how an affinity with the music of Mahler can indeed change the course of your life and affect your way of looking at the world. It was a feature article in the Sunday Times magazine in the late 1960s that first made me want to seek out Mahler's music before I had heard a note of it. I can see this book fulfilling just that function even though later on those same new listeners would without question need to move on to other books by authors who probably would not find favour with Mr. Knox-Richards.

It's hard to imagine reading this book more than once but it would be a good first step in a Mahler odyssey prior to books by Mitchell, de La Grange, Cooke, Blaukopf and Floros. There is no substitute for enthusiasm and the enthusiasm of these writers certainly sent me back to the works they describe.

Tony Duggan

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