Symphony No. 2 – Resurrection

Select an option below to learn more about its musical themes, orchestration, and place within the complete work.

"Resurrection" (in German "Auferstehungs-symphonie"). The ink was barely dry on the score of his First Symphony in 1888 when Mahler began to toy with the idea of a new large symphonic work in c. The opening movement was soon completed and named Todtenfeier (Funeral Ceremony), but it then languished among ...
“I don’t think there has been a musical object of this importance on sale for almost 35 years, when Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring came on the market in 1982,” says the critic Norman Lebrecht, author ...
Based on the poem Todtenfeier by Adam Mickiewicz. With deeply serious and solemn expression. With this funeral march and the eloquence of its thematic material, the power of its architectural structures, the emotional thrust of its inspiration and its concision of thought, Mahler assumes for the first time the full ...
Very leisurely. Never hurry. Two sections alternate in this idyllic movement, so different in style, atmosphere and scale from the first that Mahler specified their separation by a few minutes' pause. The first section is a graceful ländler in the major, the second a triplet theme in the minor. Mahler ...
Scherzo bases on Gustav Mahlers' Lied 6: Des Antonius von Padua Fischpredigt (Des Knaben Wunderhorn, 1892-1898). See Arnold Bocklin (1827-1901). With a gently flowing movement. The tragic, or at least pessimistic, conception of this symphonic Scherzo seems worlds away from the humour of the Wunderhorn song in which St. Anthony ...
Primeval Light. Very solemn but simple (In the manner of a chorale). After the "tormenting" questions of the opening movement and the grotesque dance of the Scherzo, humankind is freed from uncertainty and doubt. The Wunderhorn-Lied ...
At the same speed as the Scherzo. In a wild outburst. The Scherzo's "cry of despair" is recalled, then answered by a hesitant statement on the horns of the emerging "Resurrection" theme. There follows a "voice calling in the wilderness", again on the horns, but this time offstage, before the ...
Woodwind