£58.75

BR KLASSIK Mariss Jansons conducts Gustav Mahler: Symphonies Nos. 1 - 9

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Last 607 days • 607 data points (No recent data available)

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£73.91 £37.85 £45.72 £53.59 £61.45 £69.32 £77.19 10 June 2024 08 November 2024 09 April 2025 07 September 2025 06 February 2026

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Price distribution over 607 days • 5 price ranges

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187 days 121 days 225 days · current 66 days 8 days 0 56 113 169 225 £41-48 £48-54 £54-61 £61-67 £67-74 Days at Price

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Most common range: £54-61 (225 days, 37.1%)

Price range: £41 - £74

Price levels: 5 price ranges over 607 days

Description

In the complete edition compiled by BR-KLASSIK, the Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks under the direction of its long-time principal conductor Mariss Jansons explores Mahler's symphonic uvre. This complete recording of Mahler's impressive symphonies is further enhanced by revealing rehearsal recordings and interesting interviews. In his nine symphonies, Gustav Mahler built up an entire world for himself and his listeners. More than almost any other composer, he tried in his symphonic works to get to the very bottom of the cycle of life, that eternal process of becoming and expiring so what better complete set of symphonies to express the finest qualities of a modern-day conductor and the unique sound of a leading orchestra? Mariss Jansons found simple and clear words to express what it was that so fascinated and moved him about Mahler's music throughout his life. He said that the composers work always related to what was universal and contained absolutely everything that exists in the world. In his symphonies, said Jansons, Mahler captured nature, faith, love, death, pain, tragedy, happiness, humour, utopia, irony, sarcasm - everything that makes up human existence. Jansons regarded his music as posing questions that ultimately every thinking person has to ask, and everyone can find something in it where they recognise themselves as if in a mirror. There are nevertheless no definitive answers in Mahler, "nothing triumphant that is at one with itself." When he first encountered Mahlers music, this experience struck Jansons like a bolt from the blue. He felt that "he was in heaven" and was, as he himself put it, never disappointed. Gradually, he developed into one of the leading Mahler conductors of his era. The fact that he had the Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks as a partner here an orchestra that can look back on a long Mahler tradition - was certainly a very fortunate coincidence (its former principal conductor, Rafael Kubelík, had founded the orchestra's Mahler tradition in the early 1960s). Deeply respectful of the Munich orchestra's vast experience of Mahlers music, Jansons waited three years after taking up his post as its principal conductor before conducting a Mahler symphony for the first time. In 2006, he opened with the extremely complicated Fifth (which he had already guest conducted with the Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks in 1995), and displayed something that would also go on to characterise his later Mahler interpretations: a balance between emotionality and control that was in many ways ideal, combining maximum intensity with a keen sense of just how far to go in terms of expression. Over the years, Jansons performed all of Mahler's symphonies in Munich, conducting only the Fifth and the Seventh a second time, each with a ten-year break in between. In addition to the recordings of Mahler's nine symphonies, this 12-CD box set from BR-KLASSIK also includes 2 bonus CDs with revealing

Key Features

Jansons conducts Mahler: Symphonies No. 19

Product type: ABIS_MUSIC

Brand: Br Klassiks

Product Specifications

Format
Audio CD
Pack Size
12 items
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
04 November 2022
Listed Since
16 September 2022

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