Mahler: Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

This page lists all recordings of Symphonies 1-9 (complete), by Gustav Mahler (1860-1911) on CD, SACD, DVD & download (MP3 & FLAC). Generally, more recent releases are listed first, but with priority given to those that are in stock.

Recommendations

DVD of the Month
February 2006

All recordings

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Mahler - The Symphonies

Mahler - The Symphonies


Mahler:

Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

Das Lied von der Erde


DVD also available singly. This box set includes exclusive bonus DVD of rehearsal footage available only in this 9-DVD box.

“Between 1971 and 1976 Humphrey Burton directed filmed concerts of Bernstein conducting the nine Mahler symphonies, along with DasLied von der Erde and the Adagio from the unfinished Tenth. Previous VHS and laserdisc incarnations suffered from uneven sound and occasional discrepancies of synchronisation between screen image and audio. Happily, DG's new DVD edition not only corrects these problems but also refurbishes the soundtracks in vibrant 5.1 surround sound.
Little can be added to the many words written about Bernstein's intense affinity for and ardent advocacy of Mahler. Indeed, the musicality and specificity of Bernstein's body language often seems to create parallel universes to each score's emotional peaks and dynamic valleys. One doesn't have to turn up the volume to sense the exultation and drive with which Bernstein inspires the huge forces in the Eighth's first part or the Second's final pages, gauging the protracted climaxes as he clenches his baton with both hands in long, agonising downward strokes. Watch, too, how Bernstein's eagle eyes and decisive hands anticipate tricky entries and tempo changes in the Fifth's second movement and the Seventh's first with unshakeable authority, or how he instantaneously adjusts dynamics and aligns rhythmic vagaries (the Fourth's opening bars, the Third's percussion).
Yet for all of Bernstein's podium choreography, he also knows when to stand back and simply let the musicians play, casually passing the baton back and forth between his hands, as in stretches of the Third's and Ninth's final movements and the Tenth's Adagio. And, like a benign sovereign, he frequently shoots his players and singers encouraging glances, with plenty of smiles to reward the Vienna Philharmonic's first-desk soloists, as well as their counterparts in the LSO (No 2) and the Israel Philharmonic (Das Lied).
Burton's visual style works hand-in-glove with Mahler's orchestration and dynamic game plans, saving close-ups for quiet passages and quick inserts that underline instrumental entrances.
In general, Bernstein's filmed Mahler interpretations represent a centre-point between the raw excitement characterising much of his pioneering 1960s CBS/Sony cycle and his riper, often more expansive late-1980s remakes. On balance, the video Fourth, Fifth and Ninth are Bernstein's finest performances of these works. The Fifth is faster and more incisively shaped than his 1987 traversal and the Vienna players get better as the performance progresses. Edith Mathis looks as radiant as she sings in the Fourth's finale. The Vienna Ninth is notable for the other-worldly stillness and delicacy of the final pages while the central movements bring the sort of abandon he shows in his 1960s Ninth.
A bonus disc provides additional and valuable context. 'Four Ways to Say Farewell' combines rehearsal and performance footage of the Ninth as a backdrop to Bernstein's narration, where he fancifully if plausibly likens the first movement's long-short rhythmic motive to Mahler's irregular heartbeat. Rehearsals of the Fifth reveal an even more balletic, gesticulative conductor than the public usually saw, along with important insights into the music's character (at one point Bernstein cajoles the brass to play 'like in Italian opera', pinpointing the influence of Verdi on Mahler that most critics gloss over).
A Das Lied rehearsal shows Christa Ludwig haggling over the breakneck tempo Bernstein sets in the 'Von der Schönheit' central section.
Then there is Bernstein at the piano, chainsmoking, giving an informal discourse on the work's symbolism and chamber-like orchestration ('You have to prepare an entire orchestra as if it was a string quartet').
In an age when Mahler's symphonies are ubiquitous, it's fascinating to witness the missionary zeal of Bernstein more than three decades ago, claiming how his 'acting out' the music rather than merely beating time helps him to convince his orchestras of the its greatness. With Bernstein at the helm, one doesn't take Mahler's greatness for granted.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

“Arguably this midway view on video is the finest of the three [of Bernstein's Mahler Cycles], and certainly the addition of video to the formula adds another layer of intensity, when here is a conductor who, almost Christ-like, physically seemed to suffer as he conducted, so dedicated was he.” Penguin Guide, 2010 **/*

“Little can be added to the many words written about Bernstein's intense affinity for and ardent advocacy of Mahler. One doesn't have to turn up the volume to sense the exultation and drive with which Bernstein inspired the huge forces in the Eighth's first part or the Second's final pages, gauging the protracted climaxes as he clenches his baton with both hands in long, agonising downward strokes. In general, Bernstein's filmed Mahler interpretations represent a centre-point between the raw excitement characterising much of his pioneering 1960s cycle and his riper, often more expansive late-1980s remakes. On balance, the video Fourth, Fifth, and Ninth are Bernstein's finest performances of these works. A bonus disc provides additional and valuable context. 'Four Ways to Say Farewell' combines rehearsal and performance footage of the Ninth as a backdrop to Bernstein's narration, where he fancifully if plausibly likens the first movement's long-short rhythmic motive to Mahler's irregular heartbeat.” Gramophone Magazine, February 2006

GGramophone Magazine

DVD of the Month - February 2006

Building a Library

DVD Choice - May 2007

DVD Video

Region: 0

Format: NTSC

DG Unitel - 0734088

(DVD Video - 9 discs)

$112.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Mahler: Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

Mahler: Symphonies 1-9 (complete)


Isobel Buchanan (soprano - No. 2), Mira Zakai (mezzo - No. 2), Helga Dernesch (mezzo - No. 3), Kiri Te Kanawa (soprano - No. 4), Arleen Auger, Heather Harper, Lucia Popp (sopranos - No. 8), Yvonne Minton (mezzos - No. 8), Rene Kollo (tenor - No. 8), John Shirley-Quirk (baritone - No. 8), Martti Talvela (bass - No. 8)

Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Sir Georg Solti

“Solti's achievement in Mahler has been consistent and impressive, and this reissue is a formidable bargain that will be hard to beat...Solti draws stunning playing from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, often pressed to virtuosity, which adds to the electricity of the music-making” Penguin Guide, 2010 ***

Decca Collectors Edition - 4308042

(CD - 10 discs)

$78.00

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Mahler: Complete Symphonies

Mahler: Complete Symphonies


Mahler:

Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

Symphony No. 10 in F sharp major - Adagio


Elly Ameling (soprano - Nos. 2 & 4), Aafje Heynis (mezzo - No. 2), Maureen Forrester (contralto - No. 3), Heather Harper, Ileana Cotrubas, Hanneke van Bork (sopranos - No. 8), Birgit Finnilä, Marianne Dieleman (mezzos - No. 8), William Cochran (tenor - No. 8), Hermann Prey (baritone - No. 8), Hans Sotin (bass - No. 8)

Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Bernard Haitink

“If space is at a premium, this set is undeniably attractive, though the multilingual illustrated booklet dispenses with texts and translations, and several symphonies are awkwardly spread between discs. For a generation of record buyers it was these sane, lucid, sometimes insufficiently demonstrative Concertgebouw readings that represented a way into music previously considered unacceptable in polite society. Haitink's phrasing has an appealing natural simplicity, his rhythmic almost-squareness providing welcome reassurance. The preoccupation with conventional symphonic verities of form and structure doesn't preclude striking beauty of sound and the recordings have come up well in the remastering.
There's some residual hiss.
Haitink's early No 1 (1962), his first taping of a Mahler symphony, is usually reckoned the least satisfactory of his career. True, the third movement doesn't quite work: Haitink's attempts at 'Jewishness' are so self-conscious that the results sound rhythmically suspect, not quite together rather than convincingly ethnic.
The real problem is the boxed-in sound, uncharacteristically rough and ready, with none of the cool tonal lustre which characterised subsequent LPs from this source.
The Fourth receives a similarly straightforward account with a wonderfully hushed Pocoadagio and few if any of the aggressive mannerisms which have marred more recent versions.
The restraint can border on inflexibility at times. The first movement lacks a certain element of fantasy with everything so very accurate and together, and, while Elly Ameling makes a lovely sound in the finale, the orchestra's animal caricatures aren't really vulgar enough, the sense of wonder and awe in the face of heaven rather muted at the close. Though inevitably lacking the gut-wrenching theatricality and hallucinatory colour of Bernstein, the Seventh has none of the staidness and rigidity that occasionally prompts doubts about Haitink's Mahlerian credentials.
It emerges here as a high point of the series, second only to the celebrated Ninth. The opening is deceptively cool and brooding; thereafter the interpretation is unexpectedly driven and intense, even if Mahler's fantastical sonorities are left to fend for themselves. Only those who feel the nth degree of nightmarish 'exaggeration' to be vital to the expression of the whole need have any doubts. The finale is effectively held together but should perhaps sound more hollow than this.
If you must have the Mahler symphonies under a single conductor, Haitink could arguably be the man to go for. His objectivity won't spoil you for alternative readings. Nevertheless you wouldn't want to miss out on Bernstein, unrelenting in his desire to communicate the essentials of these scores, taking his cue from Mahler's remark that 'the symphony must be like the world. It must be all-embracing'.
Haitink is more circumspect, the music's vaunting ambition knowingly undersold.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

Philips Collectors Edition - 4420502

(CD - 10 discs)

$78.00

(Sorry, download not available in your country)

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Mahler: Complete Symphonies

Mahler: Complete Symphonies


Mahler:

Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

Symphony No. 10 in F sharp major - Adagio


Building a Library

Runner-Up - July 2003

DG Collectors Edition - 4637382

(CD - 10 discs)

$82.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Mahler: Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

Mahler: Symphonies 1-9 (complete)


Elena Mosuc (soprano - Symphony No. 2) & Zlata Bulycheva (mezzo - Symphony No. 2), Anna Larsson (contralto - Symphony No. 3), Laura Claycomb (soprano - Symphony No. 4), Viktoria Yastrebova, Ailish Tynan, Ludmila Dudinova (sopranos - Symphony No. 8), Lilli Paasikivi, Zlata Bulycheva (mezzo-sopranos - Symphony No. 8), Alexey Markov (baritone - Symphony No. 8), Sergey Semishkur (tenor - Symphony No. 8) & Evgeny Nikitin (bass - Symphony No. 8)

London Symphony Orchestra, Choir of Eltham College, Choral Arts Society of Washington, Tiffin Boys Choir & London Symphony Chorus, Valery Gergiev

Valery Gergiev’s performances and recordings of Mahler’s symphonies with the LSO have garnered international acclaim. They have performed the works in Europe, North America and the Far East and their recordings have received numerous awards. The symphonies were originally released between 2008 and 2011 and will now be made available together for the first time as a beautifully packaged 10 SACD box set.

Each of Mahler’s symphonies could be considered a masterpiece, employing large orchestras, matching his view of the symphony as an all-encompassing form of musical expression. Mahler drew inspiration widely, but certain themes recur frequently – wisdom, love, grief, mortality and death.

Throughout the Autumn Valery Gergiev will conduct the complete Brahms and Szymanowski cycles with the LSO in London, Edinburgh, Paris and Luxembourg. They also tour together to the USA and Germany.

Gergiev’s recent recordings on LSO Live include an acclaimed recording of Rachmaninov’s Symphonic Dances. Forthcoming LSO Live releases include Tchaikovsky’s Symphonies Nos 1-3 in October 2012.

Super Audio CD

Format:

Hybrid Multi-channel

LSO and Mariinsky - up to 25% off

LSO Live Gergiev Mahler Symphonies - LSO0730

(SACD - 10 discs)

Normally: $58.25

Special: $43.68

Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days.

Mahler: Symphonies Nos. 1-9 plus Adagio of the 10th

Mahler: Symphonies Nos. 1-9 plus Adagio of the 10th


Mahler:

Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

Symphony No. 10 in F sharp major - Adagio


Beverley Sills, Florence Koploff & Natania Devrath

Utah Symphony Orchestra, Maurice Abravanel

Musical Concepts - MC182

(CD - 10 discs)

$42.00

Usually despatched in 8 - 10 working days.

Mahler: Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

Mahler: Symphonies 1-9 (complete)


London Phiharmonic Orchestra, Klaus Tennstedt

EMI Budget Box Sets - 5729412

(CD - 11 discs)

$46.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Mahler: Symphonies 1-9 (complete), etc.

Mahler:

Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

Symphony No. 10 in F sharp major - Adagio


Supraphon - SU38802

(CD - 11 discs)

$70.75

Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days.

The Complete Mahler Symphonies

The Complete Mahler Symphonies


Mahler:

Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

Symphony No. 2: Lee Venora (soprano), Jennie Tourel (mezzo); Symphony No. 3: Martha Lipton (mezzo); Symphony No. 4: Reri Grist (soprano); Symphony No. 8: Erna Spoorenberg (Magna Peccatrix), Gwyneth Jones (Una Poenitentium), Gwenyth Annear (Mater Gloriosa), Anna Reynolds (Mulier Samaritana), Norma Procter (Maria Aegyptiana), John Mitchinson (Doctor Marianus), Vladimir Ruzdjak (Pater Ecstaticus), Donald McIntyre (Pater Profundus)

Symphony No. 10 in F sharp major - Adagio

Kindertotenlieder

Janet Baker (mezzo)


Following the success of the previous limited edition box set released several years ago, Sony Classical is now making available the complete Mahler Symphony recordings by Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra at a very attractive price.

The recordings have all been remastered and remixed, and the box set is available at budget price for the first time.

Sony - 88697943332

(CD - 12 discs)

$45.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Mahler: Complete Symphonies

Mahler: Complete Symphonies


Mahler:

Symphonies 1-9 (complete)

Symphony No. 10 in F sharp major

Performing version by Deryck Cooke


Melanie Diener (soprano - No. 2), Barbara Bonney (soprano - No. 4), Petra Lang (mezzo - Nos. 2 & 3), Jane Eaglen, Anne Schwanewilms, Ruth Ziesak (sopranos - No. 8), Sara Fulgoni, Anna Larsson (contraltos - No. 8), Ben Heppner (No. 8), Peter Mattei (baritone - No. 8), Jan-Hendrik Rootering (bass - No. 8)

Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra & Radio Symphonie Orchester, Berlin (Symphony No. 10), Riccardo Chailly

“Chailly's strong, satisfying approach to Mahler, without eccentricity, is supported by the superb playing of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra throughout and the demonstration quality of the Decca sound, never more remarkable than in the dedicated account of the Resurrection Symphony.” Penguin Guide, 2010 ***

Decca Collectors Edition - 4756686

(CD - 12 discs)

$79.25

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

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