Klaus Mäkelä conducts Mahler 

Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht and Mahler’s Symphony No. 1 in Vienna and Hamburg 

on tour

The Concertgebouw Orchestra performs Mahler’s Symphony No. 1 on tour in Vienna and Hamburg. Klaus Mäkelä also conducts Verklärte Nacht by Arnold Schönberg, who was born 150 years ago.

Klaus Mäkelä steps into the Concertgebouw Orchestra’s much-vaunted Mahler tradition with respect and self-confidence  

Concert programme

  • Arnold Schönberg

    Verklärte Nacht, op. 4

  • -- interval --

  • Gustav Mahler

    Symphony No. 1 'Titan'

Performers

About this concert

When Gustav Mahler came to Amsterdam to conduct the Dutch premiere of his First Symphony in 1903, a close collaboration started – so began the Concertgebouw Orchestra’s much-vaunted Mahler tradition. Klaus Mäkelä steps into that tradition with respect and self-confidence. He previously gave stunning interpretations of the Sixth and the Third, now it is time for the First Symphony, which will be performed in Vienna and Hamburg.

Speaking of Vienna: Klaus Mäkelä opens the concert with Verklärte Nacht by Mahler's contemporary Arnold Schoenberg, who was born 150 years ago in Vienna. The late-romantic work is based on a poem by Richard Dehmel about a woman who confesses to her loved one that she is carrying someone else’s child. The music closely follows the conversation and draws the listener into an intimate emotional journey leading from fear and guilt to pure happiness.

Dates and tickets

About this concert

When Gustav Mahler came to Amsterdam to conduct the Dutch premiere of his First Symphony in 1903, a close collaboration started – so began the Concertgebouw Orchestra’s much-vaunted Mahler tradition. Klaus Mäkelä steps into that tradition with respect and self-confidence. He previously gave stunning interpretations of the Sixth and the Third, now it is time for the First Symphony, which will be performed in Vienna and Hamburg.

Speaking of Vienna: Klaus Mäkelä opens the concert with Verklärte Nacht by Mahler's contemporary Arnold Schoenberg, who was born 150 years ago in Vienna. The late-romantic work is based on a poem by Richard Dehmel about a woman who confesses to her loved one that she is carrying someone else’s child. The music closely follows the conversation and draws the listener into an intimate emotional journey leading from fear and guilt to pure happiness.

A preview