Mahler’s Third Symphony at Sydney Opera House. First Concert of the Year

 

Some of the things on Mahler’s mind  as he  named the scenes

  1. Summer marches in
  2. What the meadow flowers tell us
  3. What the creatures of the forest tell us
  4. What night tells me
  5. What the morning bells say
  6. What love tells us

In 5,  what the bells say, we have the story of St. Peter’s distress and Christ’s forgiveness

 

 

This is Mahler’s longest symphony. Approx 100 mins divvied into six movements.   Simone Young AM was our conductor and it opened the  2025  Sydney Symphony Orchestral year .

 

Gustav Mahler (1860-1911)

Symphony No. 3 in D minor (1896)

 

 \relative c' { \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"french horn" \clef treble \key d \minor \numericTimeSignature \time 4/4 \partial 4*1 a4\ff-> | d2-> c4-> d-> | bes2-> f8 r bes4-> | d-> e8-> f-> e4-> d-> | c2-> a4 }

Pan Awakens

 

the clear alpine air,  and rousing 
springfulness  I feel even before
i arrive at the Opera House, so excited
to experience Mahler’s 3rd symphony.

Lights dim, the buzz stills
and from a quaver rest of silence  
eight French Hornsin fortissimo  
wake us from our slumber.

In the beginning was the sound  
it rouses a universe  into being
vibrates the hall with wonder
It stirs like a giant turtle shimming 

after a long sleep,  heavy with its shell 
slow to move as the music sinks 
into the struggles of journey. 
We are there  present on cello strings.

Mahler wanted his symphony 
to be like the world, for it to embrace 
everything; a star map of music
 to comprehend creation  in all 

its magnificence. Its  constellations, 
celestial spheres, ferns and trees, 
flowers, birds and a distant flugelhorn 
off stage a triumphant sound of human life.

Choirs of angels  light up our faces 
and the soloist sings Nietzsche poem  
from Thus spake Zarathustra 
O Soulful one take heed, take heed 

Every desire yearns for eternity  
and with a tender ecstasy of  human  feeling 
on the breath of oboes and clarinets
a slow movement beatifies  the one 

striving to find oneness with nature 
evolving of humanity to divinity .
 Our guest speaker before the concert  
reminded us: let go of thinking 

comprehending, let your eyes gaze over 
allow the music to  burst beyond
the horizons. just be immersed 
not trying to understand. 

Hildegard of Bingen Named one of the Most Loved Composers

Classic 100: Composers most loved of all time. 

 

Our ABC   classical radio, a few months ago, put out a call for  listeners to vote for their most loved Composer.  Well you know Beethoven, Bach, Mozart, Tchaikovsky, and Handel  will be there as Vivaldi and Elgar and Chopin will be there too.

Of course  I voted for Hildegard as my No. 1 and Mahler as my 2nd most loved composer . We waited a few months for the tally and over last weekend  – a National Holiday Weekend in Australia,  we prepared to hang around house cooking, gardening, reading knitting , to listen to magnificent music as we counted down from 100. 

Many of the great names fell  all day Saturday. Their gorgeous music came lifted us and left.  Composers fell away  . . . Grieg, Ravel, Haydn, Wagner, Bizet  and  it took another sleep .

On Sunday with the count 40 and down . . . Hildegard arrived at 33. There was an eruption of excitement. There was cheering all around our apartment. . . friends were texting me and we popped the champagne ( a bit later) To think the people have taken her ecstatic, heavenly music to their hearts.

You can still hear it all on www.abc.net.au/classic – 100

To think her music was silenced by the hierarchy for nearly a year, the year before she died and now today, 900 years later she is listened to and loved by people all over the world and today in the ABC Classical Countdown of the top 100 most loved Composers of all time  Hildegard rates 33rd  and one of the few woman. 

It is extraordinary that the voice of Hildegard has returned at this time of history with her music, her health and healing , her understanding of the environment and her call for  our need to be stewards and custodians of our Mother Earth for she is our life line.  

For me Hildegard is a woman who sees through hypocrisy  and cannot abide with the patriarchy of church or state .  She acts as if she is doesn’t see it.  She acts on  her intuition and what her inner voice tells her. To do this of course she had to listen  and listen and listen.

Listen  to the heart beat of the earth and the thrum of the tree and the wind and the messages that are with us constantly in nature and in our very being.

My story of her life written in poetic verse is with the publishers Ginninderra Press and will be launched in a few months.  

And hence I am thrilled  to see  Hildegard of Bingen named 

and for all the world ,

well  for all of Australia,

(at least but I know my daughter in England was jumping up and down with joy and some Hildegardeans in America and a few in Germany were filled with joy )

to stop and listen to her exquisite music today.