Mahler’s sixth symphony is one of great contrast. Although written at an incredibly happy period of his life, the work itself is mostly dark. Mahler firmly believed in an artist’s ability to predict or even influence future events, and the Sixth, his most personal work, is also a prophetic one. The three blows of the epic hammer are said to represent the three great blows that came to Mahler after the premiere: the death of his child, the diagnosis of his heart condition, and his forced resignation from the Vienna Opera. “No other work flowed so directly from his heart as this one,” wrote his wife Alma. “We both cried at the time; we felt so deeply what this music meant, what it forebodingly told us.”
The Sixth is a tour-de-force, an intense eighty minutes of music performed by a large scale orchestra where every detail, from the smallest, gentlest moment to the largest crash of the hammer is intensely thought through. Individual event tickets go on sale August 1, 2025. This concert is available as part of a Classic Series or Create Your Own Subscription. This concert will be preceded by Concert Comments, a pre-concert talk, beginning one hour before each performance. This program will not have any intermission. Linda Ronstadt Music Hall has a clear bag policy. Read more about this venue. It’s hammer time! This piece uses the infamous Mahler hammer, intended to signal “the mighty blows of fate.” Although three Mahler symphonies incorporate a chorus, the Sixth does not (but you CAN see the TSO Chorus this season on Messiah, Mozart’s Requiem, Celebrating America at 250, and Up Close: Chorus and Brass).Plan Your Visit
Music Notes