Curse of the Ninth

Krummhorn

Administrator
Staff member
ADMINISTRATOR
Great article ... creepy, too ...
I tend to not believe in supersitions either ... but after reading this material ... it does make one think about such things, at least in some historic way.

How many made it past 9 symphonies, though?
 

Andrew Roussak

New member
Yep, then what about Schostakovich who wrote 15 symphonies? Or Haydn who composed 104???

Well , being superstitious may be sometimes worth it - sure it must rain after one has washed his car! That's why I don't wash mine at all!! :rolleyes:
 

Art Rock

Sr. Regulator
Staff member
Sr. Regulator
you can even argue he wrote 11....

When it was time for #9, he composed Das Lied von der Erde, which was intended to be a numbered symphony. Out of superstition, he declined to number it, and then went on to compose the real #9, arguing this was actually his 10th. He started a #10 (or 11), but could not finish it. Only one movement is considered reasonably complete and is sometimes performed on its own. From sketches, others (notably Derek Cooke) have construed a performing version of Mahler's Symphony 10.
 

some guy

New member
Andrzej Panufnik, 10
Eduard Tubin, 10
Robert Simpson, 11
Edmund Rubbra, 11
George Lloyd, 12
Vagn Holmboe, 13
Allan Petterson, 16 (and he was sick from five to sixteen)
Rued Langgaard, 16 or 17 (two very different versions of no. 5)
Nicolai Myaskovsky, 27
Havergal Brian, 32

And one can always do as Bill Schuman did and withdraw the first two, so his eight symphonies are indeed numbered three through ten.

Well, that's it for me. Back to you all.
 

tomato

New member
I once heard someone comment that Sibelius composed "only eight symphonies," but never felt the inspiration to write another one.

That made me wonder: is every composer expected to compose at least nine?
 

Art Rock

Sr. Regulator
Staff member
Sr. Regulator
Of course not, there are numerous grandmasters of the symphony that did not get to nine. Apart from Sibelius (who wrote seven numbered ones and the Kulelervo), the most famous example is undoubtedly Brahms. And Sibelius did not just stop composing symphonies - he stopped composing altogether.
 

Gustav

Banned
Curse of nineth is nonsense, of all the greatest symphonists. Only Beethoven wrote EXACATLY 9 symphonies. Mahler wrote 11 symphonies, Bruckner wrote 11 symphonies, Schubert wrote 9 and a half. Schumann wrote 4 + an early symphonic sketch.
 

Oneiros

New member
We had a performance of Mahler's Tenth (by a new arranger) about a week ago. I can safely say that it was the worst concert I've been to. Not only was Mahler mad as a hatter, but the arranger really made a mess of it. And bad went to worse when it went on for well over an hour. Ack!

Curse of the Ninth is nonsense, yet another side effect of the Beethoven myth.
 

Corno Dolce

Admiral Honkenwheezenpooferspieler
Hi Oneiros,

Oh My!!!!!!!!!!!!! - Mad-Hatter Mahler - Oh Dear!!!!!!!!!!!!! :eek::eek::eek:

Goodness Gracious Great Balls Of Fire!!!!!!!!!!!!! :shake::shake::shake:

I have heard too many butchered arrangements of symphonic masterpieces in my days - GAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Those arrangers who *butcher* - Ooooh, I'd love to strangle them with their own entrails(figuratively speaking).

True, an arrangement will reflect upon the arranger's ideas and proclivities but sometimes you get real duds.


Cheers,

Corno Dolce
 

Oneiros

New member
I don't get it... Are you trying to tell me that Mahler was sane? :confused:

From what I've read, the poor fellow sounds like a Romantic in the wrong era.

And yes, this arrangement was certainly one of those duds. :grin:
 

Rachmaninoff

New member
We had a performance of Mahler's Tenth (by a new arranger) about a week ago. I can safely say that it was the worst concert I've been to. Not only was Mahler mad as a hatter, but the arranger really made a mess of it. And bad went to worse when it went on for well over an hour. Ack!

Curse of the Ninth is nonsense, yet another side effect of the Beethoven myth.

Agreed.
BTW it's a good source for fun speculation.
 

Corno Dolce

Admiral Honkenwheezenpooferspieler
Hello Oneiros,

Mahler was very much so a sane individual - he was brilliant - and yes, he understood that Walter Gropius of Bauhaus fame had an eye on Alma Mahler. Poor Mahler had to suffer the anti-semitism of his day. Uneasy lays the Crown upon the head of genius.

Cheers,

Corn Dolce
 

Gustav

Banned
Oh, Mahler was sane, but what a messed up life though, it's amazing that he didn't go nuts like Hugo Wolf.
 
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