Mahler’s Third Symphony

Program & Artists

Mahler Symphony No. 3

Leon Botstein conductor
Stephanie Blythe mezzo-soprano
Bard Conservatory Preparatory Division Chorus
Bard College Chamber Singers
Members of Bard Conservatory’s Graduate Vocal Arts Program
James Bagwell choral director

Tickets

Botstein Bundle 35% off the full price
Create Your Own series 25% off the full price

Part of TŌN’s Fisher Center concert series
For the fourth year in a row, TŌN opens the season with a Mahler symphony. The Third is the composer’s longest work, a deeply personal and all-encompassing masterpiece that stands as a towering monument to nature and humankind’s place within it. Mahler described the symphony as having a “steady intensification of feeling, from the indistinct, unyielding, elemental existences (of the forces of nature), to the tender formation of the human heart, which in turn points toward and reaches a region beyond itself (God).” Mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe—a Musical America Vocalist of the Year, Opera News, and Richard Tucker Award-winner—joins the orchestra for two of the symphony’s six movements, singing text by Nietzsche telling of joy transcending death and worldly suffering, and then a German folk poem about heavenly joy rewarding the faithful.
These concerts will also be livestreamed on TŌNtube.
Raise a Glass! Please join us on the portico in front of the Fisher Center on Saturday at 6 pm to toast the start of TŌN’s 11th season! Free for all ticket holders.

Concert Details

The concert will last approximately 1 hour and 50 minutes with no intermission.

>Read the concert program

Brief remarks by TŌN cellist Dariimaa Batsaikhan

Gustav Mahler Symphony No. 3 in D Minor
Stephanie Blythe mezzo-soprano
Bard Conservatory Preparatory Division Chorus
Bard College Chamber Singers
Members of Bard Conservatory’s Graduate Vocal Arts Program
James Bagwell choral director
1 hour and 41 minutes
Listen
>Read concert notes by TŌN cellist Shawn Thoma

All timings are approximate.

Sample the Music

Mahler Symphony No. 3

Photo: Leon Botstein and The Orchestra Now by Matt Dine

No Comments

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.