Quote:Posted by: Tone-Deaf Posted on: Yesterday at 20:41:20
...your post got me to listen to Mahler's 5th Symphony...how important Bernstein was in getting this music heard again, after it had been "blacklisted" in Germany (and occupied Europe during World War II)...
I would say Beethoven and Mahler are my two favorite composers, and Mahler's 5th is one of my favorite of his symphonies. But Mahler didn't need Hitler to keep his music from being heard, there was just very little interest is his work outside of a very few conductors, most of whom worked with Mahler himself (who was much better know as the conductor of the Vienna Opera and later the New York Philharmonic than as a composer). Bruno Walter was Mahler's assistant in the years before his death, and he made a very famous recording of the 9th Symphony in Vienna in 1938, shortly before the Nazis took over the country.

On CD.
In spite of being very famous and historically important/interesting I don't like the recording very much.
I actually heard Lenny and Vienna Phil play Mahler's 5th in LA back in the 80s. One of the highlights of my concertgoing life for sure.

On CD.
There is nothing like hearing Mahler live, but either of Bernstein's recorded cycles is the next best thing. YMMV.