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Mahler in Utah: Maurice Abravanel and the Utah


Symphony's performances and recordings of
Gustav Mahler's symphonies (1951-1979).
Prim, Shih-Ni
https://iro.uiowa.edu/esploro/outputs/9983777015202771/filesAndLinks?institution=01IOWA_INST&index=0

Prim, S.-N. (2016). Mahler in Utah: Maurice Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s performances and
recordings of Gustav Mahler’s symphonies (1951-1979) [University of Iowa].
https://doi.org/10.17077/etd.61utqk1k

https://iro.uiowa.edu
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Copyright 2016 Shih-Ni Prim
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MAHLER IN UTAH:
MAURICE ABRAVANEL AND THE UTAH SYMPHONY’S PERFORMANCES
AND RECORDINGS OF GUSTAV MAHLER’S SYMPHONIES
(1951–1979)

by

Shih-Ni Prim

A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment


of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy
degree in Music in the
Graduate College of
The University of Iowa

May 2016

Thesis Supervisor: Assistant Professor Nathan Platte


Copyright by

SHIH-NI PRIM

2016

All Rights Reserved


Graduate College
The University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa

CERTIFICATE OF APPROVAL

____________________________

PH.D. THESIS

_________________

This is to certify that the Ph.D. thesis of

Shih-Ni Prim

has been approved by the Examining Committee for


the thesis requirement for the Doctor of Philosophy degree
in Music at the May 2016 graduation.

Thesis Committee: ____________________________________________


Nathan Platte, Thesis Supervisor

____________________________________________
Robert Cook

____________________________________________
Christine Getz

____________________________________________
Trevor Harvey

____________________________________________
Waltraud Maierhofer
To Ming-Chieh Sun, Tsai-Hsien Chien, and Fu-Sheng Sun

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“I tried to let the music speak. I did not try to make Mahler more Mahler.
Mahler didn’t try to be different – he was different. But he was also part of the
Austrian musical heritage. So, when I conducted Mahler,
I didn’t try to perform his music as a music of extremes.”

Maurice Abravanel
“Seeing Mahler Mahler’s Way,” The New York Times, 9 June 1991.

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

People say it takes a village to raise a child. It is the same for writing a

dissertation. Many people have helped me along the way. If I have forgotten anyone,

please know that I am grateful nevertheless.

First and foremost, I would like to express my deepest gratitude for my advisor,

Dr. Nathan Platte. Although I am his first advisee, he led me through the process as if he

had done it many times. He consistently provided insightful suggestions, asked thoughtful

questions, and cheered me on. He made the long process more enjoyable.

I would like to thank my committee for their suggestions, advice, and critical

questions. In addition, Dr. Robert Cook turned my attention to the big picture, Dr.

Christine Getz provided guidance on writing, Dr. Trevor Harvey lent insight about

technological history and the Utah community, and Dr. Waltraud Maierhofer offered

feedback with meticulous attention. I cannot ask for a better committee.

Many archivists and librarians have been extremely helpful: Juli Huddleston at the

Special Collections of the University of Utah; Lisa Chaufty at the McKay Music Library

of the University of Utah; Maureen Conroy and Jon Miles, and Renee Huang at the Utah

Symphony; and Anne Rhodes at the Oral History of American History at Yale University.

My home library at the University of Iowa and its interlibrary loan and article delivery

services were indispensable.

I would like to thank the School of Music and the Writing Center at the University

of Iowa for having me as a teaching assistant. The assistantships provided financial help

and, more importantly, invaluable experience in teaching music and tutoring writing.

These positions might not be directly related to my dissertation, but I would not have been

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able to finish the dissertation without these experiences. A scholarship from the Ministry

of Education in Taiwan also provided financial assistance and allowed me to explore

potential dissertation topics early on in my study.

I would like to thank my readers, Michele Aichele, Adrian Elcock, Stevie Otto,

Peter Prim, and Haoyang Yan. They read different parts of the manuscripts at various

points, offered helpful suggestions, and asked insightful questions. Many friends’ moral

support was crucial in the process. I want to thank Hsiu-Wen Chang for her help on

German translations and continuous support and encouragement.

My heartiest thanks go to Ardean Watts, who shared his precious memories of

Abravanel with me and has been nothing but warm and encouraging. I would also like to

thank James Zychowicz and Lewis Smoley for helping with some particularly obscure

questions and having intriguing conversations about Mahler.

Last but not least, I would like to thank my family in Taiwan for believing in me

and Peter and Henry for bringing joy and balance into my daily life.

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ABSTRACT

In the 1960s, Gustav Mahler’s music received renewed interest in America. While

certain champions of Mahler from this period, such as Leonard Bernstein and Bruno

Walter, have attracted scholarly attention, other conductors have been largely overlooked,

including Maurice Abravanel (1903–1993). During Abravanel’s directorship of the Utah

Symphony (1947–1979), he consistently programmed Mahler’s music, making the

orchestra the first American orchestra to record all of Mahler’s symphonies. Although the

concerts contributed meaningfully to Utah’s musical life and some of the recordings were

well-received by critics in and outside America, they remain marginalized in accounts of

Mahler’s music in America. To bridge this gap, the dissertation examines primary sources,

including concert and record reviews, program notes, correspondence, and interview

transcripts to present the history, reception, and influence of Abravanel’s Mahler journey

with the Utah Symphony. By examining the musical past of a Western city and

considering musical and extramusical factors, this dissertation demonstrates that local and

technological histories influenced musical decisions, all of which in turn played a role in

the growth of the Utah Symphony and planted Mahler’s music in the community.

The examination reveals that Abravanel’s Mahler carried different meanings for

different parties. The recordings, with low prices and superior sound, were recommended

by critics and welcomed by audiophiles and music lovers. Abravanel’s interpretations

were commonly criticized as dispassionate, yet were embraced by those who did not

prefer Bernstein’s more involved, dramatic readings. Through the recordings of Mahler’s

music, the Utah Symphony gained national and international acclaim. In Salt Lake City,

Mahler became a familiar name, and his music remains integral to the city’s music

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culture. As of the completion of this dissertation, the Utah Symphony is nearing the end a

two-season (2014–2016) Mahler cycle and has recorded two symphonies by Mahler

under music director Thierry Fischer. The McKay Music Library of the University of

Utah is digitizing Abravanel’s Mahler scores and documenting memories about

Abravanel’s endeavors with the Austrian composer’s music. The concerts, recordings,

and efforts to preserve history again bring the collective memories of Abravanel’s Mahler

back to the community.

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PUBLIC ABSTRACT

The ever-increasing popularity of Austrian composer Gustav Mahler (1860–1911)

has been largely attributed to conductors such as Leonard Bernstein and Bruno Walter,

overshadowing other Mahler champions’ efforts. As the music director of the Utah

Symphony between 1947 and 1979, Maurice Abravanel (1903–1993) consistently

programmed Mahler’s music in subscription concerts and on tour. Under Abravanel’s

direction the Utah Symphony was the first American orchestra to record all of Mahler

symphonies. To understand Abravanel’s endeavors with Mahler’s music, this dissertation

examines primary sources, including concert and record reviews, program notes,

correspondence, and interview transcripts. By examining the musical past of a Western

city and considering musical and extramusical factors, this dissertation demonstrates that

local and technological histories influenced musical decisions, all of which in turn played

a role in the growth of the Utah Symphony and planted Mahler’s music in the community.

These documents show that Abravanel’s Mahler recordings provided cheaper options

with good sound and competitive interpretations to the general public, thereby promoting

Mahler’s music and elevating the Utah Symphony’s standing. All together, the conductor,

the orchestra musicians, the record company (Vanguard Records), and the community’s

musical resources helped turn Mahler into a local favorite, whose music is now integral to

the city’s history.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

LIST OF TABLES ............................................................................................................. xi


LIST OF FIGURES .......................................................................................................... xii
CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................... 1
Purpose ............................................................................................................................ 3
Literature Review ............................................................................................................ 4
Summary of Primary Sources ....................................................................................... 10
Organization .................................................................................................................. 12
CHAPTER 2. SALT LAKE CITY, THE UTAH SYMPHONY, AND MAURICE
ABRAVANEL .................................................................................................................. 14
Salt Lake City’s Choral Tradition ................................................................................. 14
The Utah Symphony...................................................................................................... 19
Maurice Abravanel ........................................................................................................ 23
Expanding Seasons and Programming Newer Works ............................................... 30
CHAPTER 3. RECORDING MARKET, VANGUARD, AND THE UTAH
SYMPHONY’S RECORDING CAREER ....................................................................... 35
Recording Industry ........................................................................................................ 35
Vanguard Records ......................................................................................................... 40
The Utah Symphony’s Recording Career ..................................................................... 42
Early Recordings ....................................................................................................... 45
Partnership with Westminster .................................................................................... 49
Partnership with Vanguard ........................................................................................ 53
The Louisville Orchestra: A Similar Story ................................................................... 65
CHAPTER 4. MAHLER IN UTAH, 1951–1964 ............................................................. 69
Performances of Mahler’s Music in Utah from 1951 to 1961 ...................................... 71
The 1950s .................................................................................................................. 72
The 1960s .................................................................................................................. 75
Eighth Symphony, “Symphony of a Thousand” ........................................................... 78
Premieres ................................................................................................................... 79
Concert in Salt Lake City: December 7, 1963 ........................................................... 81
Recording Sessions and the Making of the Recording .............................................. 85
Record Reviews ......................................................................................................... 88

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Seventh Symphony...................................................................................................... 107
Concert in Salt Lake City ........................................................................................ 109
Recording Sessions .................................................................................................. 111
Record Reviews ....................................................................................................... 111
Abravanel, Bernstein, and Mahler............................................................................... 126
Awards and Letters...................................................................................................... 132
Conclusion................................................................................................................... 136
CHAPTER 5. MAHLER IN UTAH, 1965–1979 ........................................................... 137
1965–1969: Recording Mahler’s Second, Third, Fourth, and Ninth Symphonies ...... 139
Recording Mahler’s Second Symphony (1967) ...................................................... 140
Recording Mahler’s Fourth Symphony (1968) ....................................................... 147
Recording Mahler’s Third and Ninth Symphonies (1969) ...................................... 153
Completing the Mahler Recording Cycle (1974) ........................................................ 161
1975–1979: After the Mahler Cycle............................................................................ 177
Conclusion................................................................................................................... 188
CHAPTER 6. CONCLUSION........................................................................................ 190
Future Directions ......................................................................................................... 197
BIBLIOGRAPHY ........................................................................................................... 199

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LIST OF TABLES

Table 4.1: Performances of Mahler’s Music in Utah, 1951–1961 .................................... 71

Table 4.2: Tempo comparison, mm. 1–47 of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony, first
movement ....................................................................................................... 100

Table 4.3: Tempo comparison, mm. 50–95 of Mahler’s Seventh Symphony, first
movement ....................................................................................................... 120

Table 5.1: Performances and Recording Sessions of Mahler’s Music in Utah,


1966–1969 ...................................................................................................... 139

Table 5.2: Tempo comparison, mm. 194–239 of Mahler’s Second Symphony, fifth
movement ....................................................................................................... 145

Table 5.3: Performances and Recording Sessions of Mahler’s Music in Utah,


1971–1974 ...................................................................................................... 162

Table 5.4: Performances of Mahler’s Music in Utah, 1975–1979 .................................. 177

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LIST OF FIGURES

Figure 2.1: Abravanel and the Utah Symphony in 1964 .................................................. 29

Figure 2.2: Abravanel conducting at the Mormon Tabernacle ......................................... 30

Figure 2.3: Abravanel conducting an education concert .................................................. 31

Figure 2.4: Abravanel with school children ...................................................................... 32

Figure 5.1: Abravanel’s score of Mahler’s First Symphony, first movement,


mm. 56–70, p. 19 .......................................................................................... 170

Figure 5.2: Abravanel’s score of Mahler’s Sixth Symphony, table of contents ............. 174

Figure 5.3: Abravanel’s score of Mahler’s Sixth Symphony, first movement,


mm. 121–127, p. 24 ...................................................................................... 175

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CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION

Maurice Abravanel (1903–1993) was the music director of the Utah Symphony from

1947 to 1979. The performances and recordings of Mahler’s symphonies under his baton

changed the orchestra and the community. When the Utah Symphony’s first Mahler

recording, the Eighth Symphony, was released in 1964, record reviews praised the

conductor’s stylistic interpretation, the musicians’ efforts, and the sound quality. Robert

Marsh’s remarks, for example, extolled the maestro’s reading:

Abravanel’s performance is a sympathetic one, stylistically in keeping with the


work of Mahler’s friends and disciples, and demonstrating firm control over the
unusually ample vocal and instrumental forces. Like Walter, Abravanel has
mastered the trick of giving unity to Mahler’s more discursive pages, and the
performance is impressive in its firm line and steady progression from one climax
to another.1

Its next recording, of Mahler’s Seventh, was released in the following year and again

received enthusiastic praises. The Utah Symphony’s recordings of Mahler symphonies

were initially embraced by critics, giving the orchestra an unprecedented level of

exposure. The early enthusiasm, however, was later tempered by competition from other

conductors and more elite ensembles. Abravanel’s deliberate approach—which strove to

“let the music speak”—was faulted as lacking.2

In recent years, most scholarly publications about Mahler briefly mention or

neglect altogether Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s contributions. Lewis Smoley’s

remarks on these recordings counter the exuberant reception in the 1960s. In his 1986

1Robert Marsh, “Stereo and Hi-Fi: the Mahler 8th,” Chicago Sun-Time, 25 May 1964, Maurice Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 25, Special Collections and Archives, University of Utah, J. Willard Marriott Library,
Salt Lake City, Utah.
2Maurice Abravanel’s words quoted in Gerold Gold’s “Seeing Mahler Mahler’s Way,” The New York
Times, 9 June 1991, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 119.

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review of Abravanel’s recording of the Eighth Symphony, for example, he writes off

Abravanel’s rendition as “uninteresting,” “mediocre,” and “colorless.”3 Edward Reilly’s

1999 article on the reception of Mahler in America reviews the mixed reception of

Mahler’s sojourn in New York and the early reception of Mahler’s music from the

composer’s death in 1911 to the 1960s but gives little attention to Abravanel.4 When

Reilly discusses the variety of factors that fueled the new popularity of Mahler’s music

from the 1960s, he simply lists Abravanel with Leonard Bernstein, Sir Georg Solti,

Bernard Haitink, and Rafael Kubelik, who produced the first Mahler cycles.5 More

recently, Smoley again merely mentions Abravanel’s Mahler cycle with the Utah

Symphony and lists Abravanel with other Mahler conductors before or during the 1980s.6

Although Abravanel is recognized as one of the first Mahler conductors, the details of his

recordings, the contemporary reception of them, and the Utah community’s embrace of

Mahler have been overlooked.

Changing attitudes toward these recordings sparked my interest in the reception of

Abravanel’s performances and recordings during his tenure as music director of the Utah

Symphony. The reception of Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s Mahler recordings,

released between 1964 and 1975, bridges a gap in our understanding of the revival of

3Lewis M. Smoley, The Symphonies of Gustav Mahler: a Critical Discography (New York: Greenwood
Press, 1986), 107.
4Edward R. Reilly, “Mahler in America,” in The Mahler Companion, edited by Donald Mitchell and
Andrew Nicholson, 422–437 (Oxford University Press, 1999).
5 Ibid., 434–435.
6Lewis M. Smoley, “Mahler conducted and recorded: from the concert hall to DVD,” in The Cambridge
Companion to Mahler, edited by Jeremy Barham (Cambridge University Press, 2007), 255, 258.

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Mahler’s music in America.7 Rather than focusing on conductors who arguably leveraged

their own renown to champion Mahler’s music (such as Leonard Bernstein or Bruno

Walter), my dissertation considers how an accomplished but less prestigious conductor

and a regional orchestra used Mahler’s music to cultivate both local and international

interest in their work. This research therefore considers the influence of local community

and technology, and strives to paint a more complete picture of how music reception

could shape and be shaped by these contextual factors. More specifically, this dissertation

explores, on the one hand, the impact of Abravanel’s performances and recordings of

Mahler on the conductor’s career and the Utah Symphony’s growth; and, on the other

hand, how Mahler’s music came to be embraced in Salt Lake City and remains an

important part of the community.

Purpose

This dissertation connects the reception of Abravanel’s Mahler recordings to

institutional history. Indeed, Abravanel’s reliance upon recordings with the Utah

Symphony distinguished and preserved their partnership.8 Through recordings, audiences

7 Abravanel’s Mahler symphonic cycle was the only one by a single American orchestra until Seiji Ozawa
recorded a Mahler cycle with the Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1997.
8 To make recordings, the conductor and musicians found ways around the American Federation of
Musicians’ national pay rate for recordings. Philip Hart’s Orpheus in the New World points out that
Abravanel’s close relationship with the orchestra members influenced their willingness to be paid less for
recording sessions, and, although the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (or the “Mormon Church”)
was not a major donor and the strict rule of tithing at the church made fund-raising for the orchestra more
difficult, the dominant culture of Mormonism in Salt Lake City (such as the belief of accepting a present
sacrifice for a future reward) essentially helped the growth of the orchestra. (Philip Hart, Orpheus in the
New World: the Symphony Orchestra as an American Cultural Institution (New York: W. W. Norton,
1973), 171.) Hart’s explanation is plausible, but Abravanel’s resolution to find revenues for the orchestra
and more income for musicians was strong and his decision to go into recordings was more crucial than the
general culture and the church’s influence.

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throughout the world came to know the orchestra. Among them, their Mahler recordings

on the Vanguard label won critical acclaim and helped prove the Utah Symphony’s

capabilities. Furthermore, Vanguard Records’ diligence in using the newest

technologies—stereo or four-track sound—and applying low prices to remain

competitive in the market helped sell the recordings. Considering these factors, the

dissertation demonstrates how these recordings of Mahler’s symphonies helped expand

the Utah Symphony’s name across the country and world, essentially helping the

orchestra survive.

The dissertation also examines how Abravanel’s recordings with the Utah

Symphony started a Mahler-centered tradition in Salt Lake City, the first Western city to

pride itself on such an achievement. Abravanel programmed all of Mahler’s symphonies,

except for the Sixth Symphony, in subscription concerts and on tour throughout his

directorship. The performances before 1974 helped the orchestra prepare for the

upcoming recordings, and those after offered the audience another round of live Mahler

concerts. Altogether the Utahn audience received two almost complete tours of Mahler’s

symphonic works between 1951 and 1979.

Literature Review

When considering the reception of Mahler’s music, musicologists commonly

choose a place or champion as the vantage point. A series of articles about Mahler’s

music in certain countries are included in The Mahler Companion.9 Among them, Henry-

9Henry-Louis De La Grange, “Mahler and France,” 138–152; Kenji Aoyagi, “Mahler and Japan,” 531–538;
and Donald Mitchell, “The Mahler Renaissance in England: Its Origins and Chronology,” 547–565. All of

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Louis de La Grange discusses the reception of Mahler’s works in France in the

composer’s life time and performances of Mahler’s music after his death.10 David Paul’s

dissertation “Converging Paths to the Canon” shows how American intellectual history

shaped the discourse on the music of Charles Ives and Gustav Mahler between 1911 and

1965. For instance, during the Cold War period, the modernistic aspect of Mahler’s music

was especially welcomed, because “conflicts and tension were to be expected in free

society, and were not only signs of its health, but its definitive characteristics.”11 These

studies reflect the interaction between place and music while contemplating place

through music. They inspired me to look for how the Utah Symphony’s Mahler project

was shaped by the local populace, its musical resources, and the religious background of

the community.

Other studies focus on champions of Mahler’s music. Christopher Page’s

dissertation, for example, centers around Bernstein’s promotion of Mahler’s music and its

impact on the so-called Mahler revival of the 1960s. Bernstein’s celebrity status and

passionate conducting style helped boost Mahler’s fame but overshadowed the

contributions of other conductors, including Abravanel. Page’s dissertation traces the

reception history of Mahler through Bernstein, attributing Mahler’s rising status to

Bernstein’s glamorous career.12 According to Page, Bernstein’s feelings of personal

them are in The Mahler Companion, edited by Donald Mitchell and Andrew Nicholson (Oxford University
Press, 1999).
10Henry-Louis De La Grange, “Mahler and France,” in The Mahler Companion, edited by Donald Mitchell
and Andrew Nicholson, 138–152 (Oxford University Press, 1999).
11David Christopher Paul, “Converging Paths to the Canon: Charles Ives, Gustav Mahler, and American
Culture” (Ph.D. diss., University of California, Berkeley, 2006), xiv.
12Christopher Jarrett Page, “Leonard Bernstein and the Resurrection of Gustav Mahler” (Ph.D. diss.,
University of California at Los Angeles, 2000).

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connection with Mahler motivated the conductor to interpret it with more exaggerated

manners. In addition to Page’s work on Bernstein, Matthew Mugmon’s dissertation

considers Mahler’s ascension through Nadia Boulanger, Aaron Copland, Koussevitzky,

and Leonard Bernstein and, more importantly, how they made Mahler a predecessor of

their aesthetic priorities in different ways.13 While Page’s and Mugmon’s research is

situated in America, Forest Randolph Kinnett’s dissertation examines music director

David Josef Bach’s influence on the reception of Mahler in Worker's Symphony Concerts

in Vienna from 1917 to 1931. Kinnett argues that Mahler’s time had already come in the

late imperial and First Republic Vienna.14 Considering the influence of individuals and

places, these three dissertations provide models for examining the reception of Mahler’s

music as promulgated by specific conductors, composers, and pedagogues.

Occasionally the orchestra itself is included in the study. Helge Grünewald

chronicles important performances of Mahler’s music by the Berlin Philharmonic from

1892 to 1994, conducted by major conductors such as Arthur Nikisch, Oskar Fried,

Bruno Walter, Otto Klemperer, and Claudio Abbado.15 The article is too short to examine

the influence of the community, but it is a rare instance that considers the orchestra’s role

in Mahler reception. My dissertation combines the aforementioned perspectives—place,

conductor, and orchestra—to investigate how the contextual factors influenced the

reception of performances and recordings of Mahler’s symphonies in Utah.

13Matthew Steven Mugmon, “The American Mahler: Musical Modernism and Transatlantic Networks,
1920–1960” (Ph.D. diss., Harvard University, 2013), 4.
14Forest Randolph Kinnett, “‘Now His Time Really Seems to Have Come’: Ideas about Mahler’s Music in
Late Imperial and First Republic Vienna” (Ph.D. diss., University of North Texas, 2009).
15Helge Grünewald, “The Mahler Tradition of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra,” in Collected Work:
Gustav Mahler: The World Listens, II: 147–149 (Haarlem, Netherlands: TEMA Uitgevers, 1995).

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To better understand the role of the Utah Symphony in Abravanel’s promotion of

Mahler’s music, I consulted several orchestral studies. In The Perilous Life of Symphony

Orchestras, Robert Flanagan discusses the various factors that influence orchestra

finances. These include artistic and non-artistic costs and a variety of financial sources—

government support, private support, endowments, etc.16 Philip Hart’s Orpheus in the

New World examines the history of several American orchestras. Taking the Utah

Symphony as an example, Hart shows how the union’s approval to pay orchestra

members less than the required rates allowed the orchestra to make recordings, crucial to

the orchestra’s growth.17 Jeanne Belfy’s research on the Louisville Orchestra tells a

similar story in which commissioning and recording new works carried the orchestra

through hardships.18 These sources demonstrate a wide range of factors—from finances,

musicians’ cooperation, to commissioning new works—that could affect an orchestra’s

operation and motivate me to connect Abravanel’s musical decisions with the Utah

Symphony’s operation. For instance, the Utah Symphony’s financial instability might

have motivated the conductor to start recording under-performed works in the 1950s,

which later led to his recording of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony.

Several studies provide important context about Abravanel, the Utah Symphony,

and the Utah community. To date, two books provide the most complete account of the

orchestra and the conductor. Lowell Durham’s Abravanel! is the only book-length

biography of the conductor and emphasizes Abravanel’s years as director of the Utah

16Robert J. Flanagan, The Perilous life of Symphony Orchestras: Artistic Triumphs and Economic
Challenges (New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 2012).
17 Hart, Orpheus in the New World.
18Jeanne Marie Belfy, “The Commissioning Project of the Louisville Orchestra, 1948–1958: A Study of
the History and Music” (Ph.D. diss., University of Kentucky and University of Louisville, 1986).

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Symphony.19 Conrad Harrison’s Five Thousand Concerts gathers the history of the

orchestra through interviews.20 Durham and Harrison were also local music critics, who

regularly reviewed the Utah Symphony’s concerts and were supporters of the maestro

and the orchestra. Their books explore the conductor’s contributions to the musical world

and local community but lack footnotes. In addition, they cover a longer time span and

tend to be more chronological than critical. Relying on the facts, dates, and history

provided in these sources, my research provides archival documentation and critical

evaluation.

Also concerning the Utah community, Michael Hick’s Mormonism and Music and

Mormon Tabernacle Choir: A Biography detail Utah’s long choral music tradition, a

consequence of the state’s Mormon communities.21 Hicks further notes that other musical

traditions were in place since the pioneers arrived in 1847. The Utah Symphony, for

example, has historical connections with the many military bands and theater orchestras

of the nineteenth century. Several theses from Brigham Young University examine such

musical ensembles and their conductors and include rich primary sources.22 These

19 Lowell M. Durham, Abravanel! (Salt Lake City: University of Utah, 1989).


20Conrad B. Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts: A Commemorative History of the Utah Symphony (Salt
Lake City, Utah: Utah Symphony Society, 1986).
21 Michael Hicks, Mormonism and Music: A History, Music in American Life (Urbana, IL: University of
Illinois Press, 1989); Michael Hicks, The Mormon Tabernacle Choir: A Biography (Urbana, IL: University
of Illinois Press, 2015).
22Deane Wakley Brown, “Growth and Development of Utah Professional Symphonic Orchestras prior to
1940” (Master’s thesis, Brigham Young University, 1959); Howard Hoggan Putnam, “George Edward
Percy Careless: His Contributions to the Musical Culture of Utah and the Significance of His Life and
Works” (Master’s thesis, Brigham Young University, 1957); Alex D Smith, “The Symphony in America:
Maurice Abravanel, and the Utah Symphony Orchestra: The Battle for Classical Music” (Master’s thesis,
Brigham Young University, 2002); Lyneer Charles Smith, “Brigham Cecil Gates: Composer, Director,
Teacher of Music” (Master’s thesis, Brigham Young University, 1952); Merlin Ray Sorensen, “The Ogden
Tabernacle Choir: Its History and Contributions to the Cultural History of Utah” (Master’s thesis, Brigham
Young University, 1961).

8
sources contextualize how Utah’s musical environment prepared its residents for

Mahler’s works, many of which include choruses.

This dissertation is also informed by research on recordings of Mahler’s music

and recording culture more generally. Two seminal Mahler discographies by Lewis

Smoley and Péter Fülöp provide encyclopedic information about Mahler recordings and

demonstrate the sharp increase in Mahler recordings beginning in the 1960s.23 They show

that Abravanel and the Utah Symphony were among the first to record Mahler’s

symphonies. Nevertheless, the quickly rising status of Mahler’s music, reflected in the

increase in performances and recordings, meant growing competition for the Utah

musicians from the time of their first recording to their last.

Some studies help construct the framework to view Abravanel’s recordings of

Mahler symphonies. Mark Katz’s Capturing Sound investigates the omnipresent

influence of recording technology on the way we listen to music through six important

characteristics of recordings—tangibility, portability, (in)visibility, repeatability,

temporality, receptivity, and manipulability.24 In contrast to Katz’s focus on more

concrete aspects such as the observable aspects of change, Arved Ashby’s Absolute

Music examines the vernacular practice of instrumental music and draws on philosophy

and literary theory to consider how recordings and art music have transformed in

response to new recording technologies. Among other arguments, Ashby addresses how

23Lewis M. Smoley, The Symphonies of Gustav Mahler: A Critical Discography (New York: Greenwood
Press, 1986); Lewis M. Smoley, Gustav Mahler’s Symphonies Critical Commentary on Recordings since
1986 (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1996); Péter Fülöp, Mahler Discography (New York: Kaplan
Foundation , 1995).
24Mark Katz, Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 2004), 8–47.

9
the access to recordings changed our memory of music.25 Before the age of recordings,

music scores represented the primary authority and performers had more room to make

musical and aesthetic decisions. In the age of recordings, the “carved-in-stone

performance of the one works to deny the elusiveness of the other, the diachronous

performance threatening the synchronous nature of the masterwork.”26 Indeed, as

recordings become more accessible, our memories of Mahler’s symphonies, for instance,

have been shaped more by recordings than by printed music or live performances. Katz

and Ashby view recordings as active agents and consider their effect in history. Although

my dissertation focuses on recording’s more immediate effect on the orchestra and the

community instead of its long-term effect on the society, these studies shaped the current

dissertation’s premise that Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s recordings of Mahler’s

symphonies should be considered as artifacts that effected changes.

Summary of Primary Sources

Three collections of primary documents are the foundation of this dissertation.

Maurice Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, at the Special Collections and Archives at the J.

Willard Marriott Library of the University of Utah is the most important of the three. The

documents are organized into 129 boxes, including the maestro’s personal papers,

notebooks, files from the orchestra, personal and professional correspondence, program

notes, news clippings collected by the orchestra, the orchestra’s files during Abravanel’s

25Arved Mark Ashby, Absolute Music, Mechanical Reproduction (Berkeley: University of California Press,
2010), 60–90.
26 Ibid., 60–61.

10
directorship, transcripts of interviews with the maestro, etc. The reviews of concerts and

records, among the materials, shed particular light on the orchestra’s musical activities

and their reception. Bound program notes provide information on the orchestra’s

development and reveal the audience’s familiarity with the composer. Abravanel’s

personal books and music scores are housed at the Abravanel Studio at the McKay

Library of the University of Utah. Because the Utah Symphony performed Mahler’s

symphonic cycle in two seasons from 2014 to 2016, the McKay Library has been

digitizing Abravanel’s Mahler scores, and these offer invaluable resources for my

research. The conductor’s markings and notes in the scores help explain Abravanel’s

decisions. Lastly, the Utah Symphony archive contains photographs, clippings, and other

materials documenting the orchestra’s history.

More news articles and record reviews were obtained from Newspaper Archive,

American Radio History, and ProQuest databases to fill in the gaps left by the physical

archives.27 For instance, the relationship between the reception of Abravanel’s Mahler

recordings and technological history is revealed through record reviews in newspapers,

music journals, and magazines. Such reviews often address the quality of the recordings

and embrace advances in recording technology. In addition, a phone interview with

Ardean Watts, conducted by myself, and the transcript of a long interview with Maurice

Abravanel, conducted by Deborah Bookspan Margol and Martin Bookspan between

27 The first two databases’ links are http://newspaperarchive.com/ and


http://www.americanradiohistory.com/.

11
December 1985 and January 1985, provide insight into the maestro’s thoughts on

music.28

Organization

This introduction is followed by two chapters on contextual issues and two

chapters that chronologically present the Utah Symphony’s recordings and performances

of Mahler’s music. Chapter 2 discusses Utah’s choral tradition, the Utah Symphony’s

history, and Abravanel’s background. Chapter 3 addresses the recording industry,

Vanguard Records, the Utah Symphony’s recording output, and how the Louisville

Orchestra also gained recognition through recordings. These histories help explain why

Abravanel recorded Mahler’s choral works first and how a small company like Vanguard

agreed to record Mahler’s Eighth—a challenging and risky project—with a regional

orchestra. Chapter 4 narrates Abravanel’s Mahler performances from 1951 to the mid-

1960s and first two Mahler recordings—the Eighth (1963) and the Seventh (1964). These

recordings were well received and brought the Utah Symphony outside recognitions. The

reviews also revealed the increasingly popular status of Mahler and the encroachment of

Bernstein’s interpretations within the recording market. Chapter 5 examines the rest of

Abravanel’s Mahler journey from 1965 to 1979, during which he recorded the Second

(1967), Fourth (1968), Third and Ninth (1969), and First, Fifth, Sixth Symphonies and

Adagio of the Tenth Symphony (1974). Although the Utah Symphony made history by

28Phone interview with author, 18 January 2016; Major Figures in American Music: Maurice Abravanel,
Oral History of American Music, Yale University, Interviewer: Deborah Bookspan Margol, 219 a–z, ff–oo.

The plan of interviewing Utah musicians was submitted to the Institutional Review Board (IRB) at
the University of Iowa in 2013. On December 13, 2013, Dr. Janet Karen Williams from the Human Subject
Office determined that the interviews did not need to be reviewed by the IRB.

12
becoming the first American orchestra to record all of Mahler’s symphonies, the

completion of the cycle in the mid-1970s aroused limited interest outside Utah. After the

recording project was finished, Abravanel continued to program Mahler’s music.

Together, the recording cycle and live concerts turned Mahler into a local favorite.

Chapter 6 discusses the conductor’s impact in Utah and the reissues of his Mahler

recordings. This final chapter also considers future directions for research, including the

value of examining regional orchestras and their conductors.

13
CHAPTER 2. SALT LAKE CITY, THE UTAH SYMPHONY, AND MAURICE

ABRAVANEL

In the summer of 1947, to celebrate the centennial of Salt Lake City, the University of

Utah held a Pioneer Centennial Celebration. The Utah Symphony and the University of

Utah Chorus performed local composer Crawford Gates’s Promised Valley. The

celebration became the first of the University of Utah’s summer festivals, a tradition that

has been maintained ever since. The successful celebration marked a turning point for the

Utah Symphony. Many previous attempts to build a permanent orchestra in Utah had

failed. The Utah Symphony’s most recent music director, Werner Janssen, arrived in

1946, imported outside musicians, and left after one season. Salt Lake City was ready for

a conductor who would stick with the orchestra through good times and bad. In October

1947, Maurice Abravanel arrived. He stayed for 32 years. Under his leadership the Utah

Symphony achieved stability and renown, accomplishments that were enabled in part

through Abravanel’s appreciation of Utah’s choral tradition and the established name of

the Tabernacle Choir. This chapter demonstrates how Salt Lake City’s choral tradition,

the Utah Symphony’s history, and Abravanel’s musical preferences led to their first

recording of a Mahler symphony in 1963.

Salt Lake City’s Choral Tradition

Salt Lake City’s musical life started when Mormon settlers arrived at the Salt

Lake Valley, a century before Abravanel assumed the directorship of the Utah Symphony.

With the intent of escaping the growing hostility towards their religion, the Latter-day

Saints started a migration led by Brigham Young from Illinois in 1846. Sixteen months

14
later, a group of 148 pioneers, including 143 men, three women, and two children,

arrived in the Salt Lake Valley on July 22, 1847. In this foreign land, which belonged to

Mexico and would become United States’ territory in four years, the Mormon pioneers

started a new life. Twenty-nine days after the pioneers’ arrival, the Mormon Tabernacle

Choir performed for the first time on August 22, 1847.1 The Tabernacle Choir established

the choral tradition in Utah’s sacred and secular settings.2 It provided music for religious

meetings and was the main vocal ensemble at the General Conferences (worldwide

gatherings for the church held every April and October). The Choir also gave concerts

outside the church and competed in singing competitions, starting with the World’s

Columbian Exposition of 1893 in Chicago.3 The group’s repertoire reflected the

preference of the music directors; some, like Evan Stephens (director from 1890 to 1916),

preferred original compositions, while others, like Tony Lund (1916–1935), leaned

towards art music.4 Mormon hymns, anthems, local composers’ works, music directors’

arrangement, secular songs, and choruses from operas and oratorios such as Handel’s

Hallelujah formed its repertoire.5 In the twentieth century, the Choir’s active

participation in radio, television, and recordings brought the names of Salt Lake and

1“History of the Choir,” Mormon Tabernacle Choir,


http://www.mormontabernaclechoir.org/about/choir/history?lang=eng, accessed 12 April 2015.
2 The choir was named after its building and meeting place, the Tabernacle.
3Michael Hicks, The Mormon Tabernacle Choir: A Biography (Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press,
2015), 39–45, 57–58.
4Michael Hicks, Mormonism and Music: A History, Music in American Life (Urbana: Urbana, IL:
University of Illinois Press, 1989), 157–158.
5 Ibid., 156–163.

15
Mormonism across the nation and the world.6 The choral tradition in Utah was enriched

by other tabernacle choirs formed in the 1860s in neighboring cities, including Spanish

Fork, Springville, Provo, and Ogden.7 They provided music for religious and secular

communities. The Ogden Tabernacle Choir, for example, was founded in the late 1850s

and remained in operation till 1949; like the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in Salt Lake, the

Ogden Choir sang at religious conferences, made radio broadcasts, and went on tours.8

Although the Utah Symphony did not perform with the Tabernacle Choir until 1978, the

simple fact that their recordings were made in the Mormon Tabernacle lent their

recordings prestige by association, especially if the album contained choral music.

The choral tradition was also reflected in memorable performances. On June 3,

1875, a full performance of Handel’s Messiah was organized by George Careless, a

British immigrant and orchestra conductor active during the 1870s. The performance was

such a resounding success that John Tullidge, a British convert and the first significant

music critic in Utah, saw it as the starting point of musical culture in Utah.9 In 1883

Theodore Thomas led the New York Philharmonic in an all-classic concert in Salt Lake

City with a 250-voice choir, directed by a local conductor and composer Charles John

Thomas.10 In 1945, the Utah Symphony, conducted by Hans Heniot, and the Mormon

6For more details about the Tabernacle Choir’s radio and television broadcast, tours, and recordings, see
Hicks’s The Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
7 Ibid., 23–24. Although all these choirs could be called tabernacle choirs, the name “The Tabernacle Choir”
refers to the choir for the Tabernacle on Temple Square in Salt Lake, of which the main part was finished in
1867, as this choir remains the most prominent choir.
8Merlin Ray Sorensen, “The Ogden Tabernacle Choir, Its History and Contributions to the Cultural
History of Utah” (Master’s Thesis, Brigham Young University, 1961).
9 Hicks, The Mormon Tabernacle Choir, 27.
10 Hicks, Mormonism and Music, 100–101.

16
Tabernacle Choir, directed by J. Spencer Cornwall, performed Haydn’s oratorio The

Creation, again showing the strong choral-orchestral tradition.

Many Utahn composers contributed to the tradition by writing oratorios and

cantatas. Brigham Cecil Gates studied at the New England Conservatory and the

Scharwenka Conservatory in Berlin between 1905 and 1913.11 He composed a

symphonic work Festival Overture in 1915, an oratorio The Restoration in 1916, a

symphony in 1917, and his own setting of The Lord’s Prayer in 1917.12 These works

were all performed in Utah, bringing a variety of symphonic and choral works to the

audience. Evan Stephens, the music director of the Mormon Tabernacle between 1890

and 1916, wrote two cantatas, The Vision and The Martyrs, in 1920–1921.13 Their titles

fittingly reflect the connection between religion and Salt Lake City’s choral tradition, as

both titles carry symbolic meanings for Mormon believers.14 The vision, for example,

refers to the fourteen-year-old Joseph Smith’s vision in which God and Jesus Christ

appeared before him.15 Leroy Robertson, who studied with George Chadwick in Boston

and started teaching at the Brigham Young University in 1925,16 supplied more works of

the Western classical style to the Utahn audience. Robertson entered a competition for all

composers in the Western hemisphere with his Trilogy for Orchestra and won the

Reichhold Award in 1947, which came with a $25,000 prize and that garnered him

11Lyneer Charles Smith, “Brigham Cecil Gates: Composer, Director, Teacher of Music” (Master’s thesis,
Brigham Young University, 1952), 6, 8.
12 Ibid., 10, 12–15, 17–18.
13 Hicks, Mormonism and Music, 175.
14 I would like to thank Dr. Trevor Harvey for pointing out the connection.
15 “First Vision Accounts,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,
https://www.lds.org/topics/first-vision-accounts?lang=eng, accessed 17 April 2016.
16 Ibid., 176–177.

17
immediate fame.17 Robertson’s subsequent works, such as Punch and Judy Overture

(1945), Oratorio from the Book of Mormon (1953), and Violin Concerto (1966), would

later be programmed and recorded by Abravanel and the Utah Symphony.

Utah’s strong choral tradition provided resources for Abravanel’s programming.

Beginning in 1948, Abravanel and Leroy Robertson, the Music Department Chairman

President at the University of Utah, used the choirs of the University of Utah School of

Music for the orchestra’s performances.18 In a 1948 performance of Beethoven’s Missa

Solemnis, the A Cappella Choir directed by Richard P. Condie, the Girls’ Glee Club

directed by William Peterson, and the Boys’ Glee Club directed by John Marlowe

Nielson joined forces.19 Several other choral directors, including John Marlowe Nielson

(1948–1962), Newell B. Weight (1962–1982), and Ardean Watts, assisted with many

performances and recordings. Weight, a native of Utah, founded the Brigham Young

University’s A Capella Choir when he worked there from 1949 to 1962. From 1962 to

1984, he served as the chairman of the Music Department at the University of Utah.20

Weight founded the University of Utah Chorale in the mid-1960s, which started as “an

evening chorus of mature citizens who were not full-time students at the university, but

who had the voices, received the training and the discipline from him.”21 The name was

17 Lowell M. Durham, Abravanel! (Salt Lake City: University of Utah, 1989), 39–40.
18“Utah Symphony Chorus History,” Utah Symphony, http://www.utahsymphony.org/the-
orchestra/content/14-chorus, accessed 3 June 2015.
19 Durham, Abravanel!, 46–47.
20 “Newell Bryan Weight,” Deseret News, 15 July 2009,
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/deseretnews/obituary.aspx?n=newell-bryan-weight&pid=129745372,
accessed 14 September 2015.
21Lowell Durham, “Lowell Durham, Salt Lake City, Utah: an interview by Winnifred Margetts,” Everett L.
Cooley Oral History Project, Tape Nos. U-441 and U-442, 27 March 1986, 50.

18
then changed to Utah Chorale and later Utah Symphony Chorus Singers. Ardean Watts

was originally a jazz pianist. He moved to Salt Lake City in 1953 and met Abravanel in

1956. In 1957 the conductor asked him to fill in at a rehearsal of Richard Strauss’s opera

Salome. The following year Watts was engaged as the orchestra pianist and ten years

later as the associate conductor. He also coached choirs and vocal soloists.22 With these

choral directors and choral tradition at his disposal in Salt Lake City, Abravanel

performed and recorded choral works throughout his directorship.

The Utah Symphony

Whereas church choirs were the center of many Salt Lake City residents’ lives,

instrumental ensembles were functional and affiliated with other organizations. In the

1850s and 1860s, several military bands were reorganized after the pioneers settled in

Salt Lake City to play for religious gatherings, provide entertainment, and escort

newcomers or visitors into the valley.23 The bands played sacred and secular music;

hymns were set to popular tunes, including glees, ballads, and negro melodies for

religious services, and many of the original compositions were about church leaders,

religion, and morale.24 These bands formed the core ensembles for concerts, religious

ceremonies, parades, social functions, and dramatic performances.25 The symphonic

tradition, on the other hand, developed around house orchestras for theaters. In 1851, the

22 Durham, Abravanel!, 153–161; phone interview with author, 18 January 2016.


23Hicks, Mormonism and Music, 56–57, 61–63; Martha Tingey Cook, “Pioneer Bands and Orchestras of
Salt Lake City” (Master’s Thesis, Brigham Young University, 1960), 5–9, 17–18, 31.
24 Hicks, Mormonism and Music, 65–68.
25 Cook, “Pioneer Bands and Orchestras of Salt Lake City,” 31–32, 77.

19
Deseret Dramatic Association was formed to provide entertainment in the Social Hall.26

Its orchestra became the church’s official band and, besides performing in the Social Hall,

played for meetings in and outside the church.27 In 1861, Salt Lake Theatre was founded

with Brigham Young’s support and soon had its own orchestra in 1862.28 The repertoire

tended to be light and included works by local conductors and composers such as Charles

John Thomas and George Careless. An 1862 program exemplified the music often

provided and included patriotic pieces like Star-Spangled Banner, dances like the polka

and the waltz, and popular songs.29 The theatre provided entertainment such as Gilbert

and Sullivan’s H.M.S. Pinafore and The Sorcerer, performed in the late 1870s.30 The

Theatre Orchestra continued to supply the valley with musical entertainment until the

theatre closed in 1928.31

The first stand-alone orchestra, Salt Lake Symphony Orchestra, met on March 5,

1888 for the first time and debuted on May 17, 1892, performing Schubert’s Unfinished

Symphony and Andante and Allegro from Beethoven’s First Symphony as well as shorter

pieces featuring different solo instruments.32 This orchestra was the first of many

26 Ibid., 25–27.
27 Hicks, Mormonism and Music, 63.
28Hicks, Mormonism and Music, 63–64, 69–70, 92; Deane Wakley Brown, “Growth and Development of
Utah Professional Symphonic Orchestras prior to 1940” (Master’s thesis, Brigham Young University,
1959), 3.
29 Hicks, Mormonism and Music, 97–98.
30 Ibid., 100.
31 Cook, “Pioneer Bands and Orchestras of Salt Lake City,” 52.
32The shorter pieces included Keler-Bela’s Franzoesiches Lustspiel; Savar’s Saxophone Solo, theme from
“Der Freischuetz”; Rockel’s Baritone Solo, “The Storm Fiend”; Mililotti’s Duet, “The Night”; Leonard’s
Violin Solo, “Souvenir de Haydn”; Bucalossi’s Tenor Solo, “The Heart Sighs Ever to be Free”; Pohle’s
Clarinette Solo, “Concert Scene”; Gounod’s “Estrano poeter il viso” from “Faust”; and Moses’s

20
orchestras that provided the main secular musical entertainment for Salt Lake City.

Between 1892 and 1935, several orchestras existed. Financial difficulties would force the

orchestra for the time to fold, but soon enough another attempt would revive the

orchestra.33 These orchestras shared musicians, staff, and music libraries.34 Directors

included Anton Pedersen in 1892; Arthur Shepherd in 1902–1908; J. J. McClellan in

1908–1911; Anton Pedersen again in 1913; Arthur Freber in 1913–1917; Charles

Shepherd in 1920, 1922–1923, and 1924–1925; and Albert Shepherd in 1927. The

orchestras’ names changed several times: Salt Lake Symphony between 1892 and 1911,

Salt Lake Philharmonic between 1913 and 1923, Salt Lake Symphony between 1924 and

1925, and Salt Lake Orchestral Society in 1927. These orchestras operated for a total

duration of 22 years between 1892 and 1935 and gave 44 concerts.35

As the Great Depression swept across the United States in the 1930s, Utah was

also in the midst of financial hardships. The Works Progress Administration (WPA), part

of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal, provided substantial assistance by hiring musicians.

The WPA orchestra, also called the Utah State Sinfonietta, was formed in December

1935 under Reginald Beales’s direction. Its first concert took place in January 1936. The

WPA period opened a new era of music for Salt Lake City; the orchestra gave 139

concerts between January 1936 and February 1937 and started giving school concerts.36

Selections from “Nanon.” Brown, “Growth and Development of Utah Professional Symphonic Orchestras
prior to 1940,” 11, 59–60.
33See Brown’s thesis for a more detailed history of the professional orchestras in Salt Lake City before
1940.
34Brown’s thesis examines the instruments, personnel, and orchestra library holdings to show that they
were indeed the same organization despite the constant interruptions.
35 Brown, “Growth and Development of Utah Professional Symphonic Orchestras prior to 1940,” 22–23.
36 Ibid., 22–23, 52.

21
The repertoire performed by it across these thirteen months, featuring shorter works and

excerpts from larger works, was “of a lighter nature” than the music played by the

previous orchestras, and the expanded work schedule of the WPA orchestra offered a

readily available concert life for Salt Lake residents.37

When the WPA funding greatly decreased in 1940, the orchestra again faced

financial challenges.38 It remained in operation with financial assistance from the Utah

State Institute of Fine Arts, the Federal Music Project, and its own fund-raising

campaign.39 Between 1940 and 1945, Hans Heniot led the orchestra, now named the Utah

State Symphony Orchestra. The number of concerts in each season was reduced to fewer

than ten. Heniot’s first concert on May 8, 1940 marked the beginning of the modern-day

Utah Symphony. The concert featured Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony, Handel’s Water

Music, Smetana’s The Moldau, Strauss’s Emperor Waltz, and Sibelius’s Finlandia.40 This

program exemplified a trend starting in the late 1910s and early 1920s in which one or

two large works was featured alongside several shorter pieces or excerpts, all of which

came from the standard repertoire in the Western tradition. The successful first concert

led to a five-concert season in 1940–1941.41 Through World War II, the orchestra

continued to perform. Despite being drafted as a technical sergeant and band conductor,

Heniot remained as the music director until 1945. Although each season and summer

37 Ibid., 72.
38The WPA funding ended on January 1, 1943. Conrad B Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts: A
Commemorative History of the Utah Symphony (Salt Lake City, Utah: Utah Symphony Society, 1986), 112.
39 Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts, 91, 101–102, 108, 113.
40Brown, “Growth and Development of Utah Professional Symphonic Orchestras prior to 1940,” 72;
Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts, 96.
41 Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts, 99–102.

22
series contained only a few concerts, soloists and guest conductors were engaged to

attract the audience. After the war, James Sample conducted a six-concert season in

1945–1946.42

In the 1946–1947 season, the orchestra made great strides towards becoming a

professional orchestra, including hiring a full-time music director, proposing a twenty-six

week season, and changing the name from Utah State Symphony Orchestra to Utah

Symphony.43 Furthermore, an agreement was reached for the orchestra to use the

Mormon Tabernacle on Temple Square for dress rehearsals and performances.44

Nonetheless, the conductor Werner Janssen did not see the post as a permanent one; he

stayed at hotels when in Salt Lake and insisted on importing out-of-state musicians. In

1946, Janssen broke his three-year contract and left for a job in Portland. The orchestra

started searching for a more committed conductor who would build the orchestra.

Maurice Abravanel

Before assuming directorship of the Utah Symphony, Abravanel was

predominantly an opera conductor. He did not study music in any school setting,

although he took piano lessons at the age of nine and later studied with Kurt Weill in

Berlin in 1922. He conducted at various opera houses before 1934, including those in

Berlin (1922–1923), Neustrelitz (1923–1925), Zwickau (1925–1927), and Altenburg

(1927–1929), Cassel (1929–1933), and Berlin State Opera. It was in Berlin where

42For more details about the years 1940-1946, see “A State Orchestra” in Harrison, Five Thousand
Concerts, 91–121.
43 Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts, 134.
44 Ibid., 123–124.

23
Abravanel’s personal interest in Mahler started; he heard the Eighth Symphony and was

“deeply impressed.”45 Subsequently, he attended rehearsals of Mahler performances by

Bruno Walter. Abravanel became deeply interested in Mahler and went without lunch for

three months in order to raise the money to buy Mahler scores.46

The exciting career development in Germany was however interrupted as Hitler

came to power, which drove him from Germany to Paris in 1933.47 In Paris he worked

with Bruno Walter at the Paris Opera and guest-conducted the Paris Symphony

Orchestra.48 Abravanel’s ways of interpreting Mahler was indeed influenced by Walter.

In his Mahler scores, Abravanel notated the timings of Walter’s recordings. For the 1953

performance of Das Lied von der Erde, he conferred with Alma Mahler and Bruno

Walter in Los Angeles.49 In 1963, Abravanel used Walter’s score when he conducted

Mahler’s Eighth.50

45 It is unclear who conducted the performance. In another source, Abravanel indicated that he attended the
Eighth Symphony’s Berlin premiere when he was nineteenth years old, which would have been 1922.
(Maurice Abravanel, speech transcript, “Convocation for Maestro Maurice Abravanel Mahler Award,”
Maurice Abravanel papers, Ms 517, Box 3, Special Collections and Archives, University of Utah, J.
Willard Marriott Library, Salt Lake City, Utah.) However, the Eighth was premiered in Berlin on May 17,
1912 by Willem Mengelberg. The Eighth was performed four times in the season 1923–1924 by Heinz
Unger and Paul Pella. It was possible that Abravanel misremembered the exact date. Sybille Werner, “The
Performance History of Mahler’s Orchestral Works between his Death in 1911 and the Anniversary Years
of 1960/61,” in After Mahler’s Death, edited by Gerold W Gruber, Morten Solvik Olsen, and Jan Vičar,
117–131 (Olomouc, Czech Republic: Univerzita Palackého, 2013), 121.
46 Abravanel, “Convocation for Maestro Maurice Abravanel Mahler Award.”
47 Durham, Abravanel!, 11.
48 Durham, Abravanel!, 10–13.
49Lowell Durham, “Music: Mahler’s ‘Song of Earth’ Will Feature Tangeman and Manton as Soloists,” The
Salt Lake Tribune, n.d., Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 80.
50Jim Fitzpatrick, “‘Firsts’ Spark the Selections: Massive and Powerful Is Orchestra Season,” The Salt
Lake Tribune, 15 September 1963, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.

24
Abravanel then spent two years from 1934 to 1936 in Australia, where he

conducted the Melbourne Apollo Theater and started the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra

in summer 1935, the first Australian orchestra.51 Building the Melbourne Symphony

Orchestra would provide valuable experience for his work in Utah. He came to the

United States to conduct the Metropolitan Opera in 1936, but political infighting

prompted Abravanel to resign after two seasons. One night in 1938, Weill invited him to

a meeting about the production of Knickerbocker Holiday, a meeting that Maxwell

Anderson, Robert Sherwood, Sidney Howard, and Elmer Rice also attended. Abravanel

felt energized by the creativity and novelty, a stark contrast to what he had experienced at

the Met.52 As he himself described it, “I couldn’t help . . . put in my two pennies’

worth . . . in a constructive way. And [I] was exhilarated, you know, that after five years,

I, for the first time [really took] part in something creative.”53 In the same evening,

Abravanel expressed his interest in Broadway and, in particular, conducting

Knickerbocker Holiday.54 In response, Weill said “You are crazy. You can’t leave the

Metropolitan Opera.”55 Nonetheless, Abravanel left the Met and turned to Broadway.

Between 1938 and 1947 he served as the music director for many of Weill’s works,

51 Durham, Abravanel!, 17–18.


52Major Figures in American Music: Maurice Abravanel, Oral History of American Music, Yale
University, Interviewer: Deborah Bookspan Margol, 219 a–z, pp. 195–197, 270–272.
53 Margol, Major Figures in American Music: Maurice Abravanel, p. 271.
54 Durham, Abravanel!, 23.
55 Margol, Major Figures in American Music: Maurice Abravanel, p. 197.

25
including Lady in the Dark, One Touch of Venus, and The Firebird of Florence. He also

guest-conducted in the United States, Mexico, and Australia.56

In 1947 Abravanel read about Werner Janssen’s resignation from the Utah

Symphony in the New York Times and saw an opportunity to build another orchestra.

Abravanel and a second candidate, Jaques Rachmilovich, were interviewed by several

important board committee members in New York in early May, 1947.57 Bruno Walter

wrote a recommendation letter to the board for Abravanel on May 14, 1947.58 The

Symphony Board met and decided to offer Abravanel a one-year contract on June 16,

1947.59 Abravanel accepted the offer and moved to Utah in mid-October.60

When Abravanel arrived, Salt Lake City boasted a variety of symphonic, choral,

and theatrical institutions organized in the previous century. His previous conducting

experiences and his interest in building an orchestra were mentioned in newspapers to

assure the local audience that this new conductor was well-qualified and had “no other

thought than to become a part of the community.”61 He did not disappoint the

community’s expectations. Early concert reviews hailed the accomplishments of the new

conductor. After the first season, the local press was relieved to know that Abravanel

56Scott Cantrell, “America’s Musical Conscience Speaks Out,” Symphony Magazine (December 1982), 24,
The Utah Symphony Archive.
57 Durham, Abravanel!, 34.
58 Bruno Walter to Fred E. Smith, 14 May 1947, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 12.
59 Durham, Abravanel!, 34.
60 Ibid., 36.
61Grace Grether, “Abravanel Likes Conducting, Building New Orchestras,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 2
September 1947; Conrad B. Harrison, “Abravanel to ‘Stick’: New Conductor of Utah Symphony Will
Devote His Time to Developing Ensemble,” Deseret News, 21 June 1947; both from Abravanel papers, Ms
517, Box 72.

26
would stay longer, and it was obvious that Abravanel’s presence was much appreciated.62

He swiftly became an important figure in the local musical community.

Financial hardship for the Utah Symphony, however, continued. The orchestra’s

finances worsened in Abravanel’s second season, 1948–1949, nearly forcing the

orchestra to fold. Although Abravanel had other offers, including those from the Radio

City Music Hall and the Houston Symphony in 1947 and later from Seattle and

Vancouver, he stayed with the Utah Symphony. He declined the Radio City Music Hall’s

offer that would triple his salary, because he preferred performing Beethoven and Mozart

to Broadway musicals.63 The Houston Symphony, offering to double Abravanel’s salary,

could not entice him, because he received “a very stupid review” in a Houston

newspaper.64 Abravanel preferred the supportive critics in Utah like Lowell Durham and

Conrad Harrison. When Seattle, Portland, and Vancouver wanted Abravanel, he used the

offers to negotiate with the board not for his own salary but for the orchestra members’

pay.65

The board intended to dissolve the symphony at the end of the 1948–1949 season,

but Abravanel persuaded the board either to file for bankruptcy or to honor the contracts

with musicians.66 Abravanel conducted without salary for six weeks and asked the

musicians to join him. Doing so risked angering the union, but Abravanel believed that, if

62 Lowell M. Durham, “Music Triumphs: Critic Calls 1947 the Greatest Season of Music in All the History
of Salt Lake,” Deseret News, 28 December 1947, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 72.
63Maurice Abravanel, interview by Jay M. Haymond, 24 September 1981, 11–15, Utah State Historical
Society Oral History Program, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 4.
64 Ibid., 15–16.
65 Ibid., 35–37.
66 Ibid., 32–33.

27
the orchestra could not earn enough from ticket sales and fund-raising when it was

playing, it would be impossible to make money when it stopped. To help Utah have its

own orchestra, the musicians’ union allowed the musicians to play without pay. With

Abravanel’s determination to build an orchestra and the cooperation of the orchestra

members and the union, the Utah Symphony survived the crisis. Fighting alongside the

orchestra members for the orchestra’s survival, Abravanel established a firm foundation

from which he would lead the orchestra to explore new initiatives, including making

recordings, bringing underrepresented composers or, in Durham’s words, “unknown

composers” such as Mahler to Utah,67 and introducing the Utah Symphony to audiences

all over the world through recordings and tours.

In fact, Abravanel stayed for 32 seasons, took the orchestra on four international

and countless regional tours, made more than 100 recordings, and transformed it into a

professional orchestra. He fought for the orchestra’s survival, its concert hall, recording

opportunities, and funding. In the process of building an orchestra, Abravanel explored

new repertoire and realized his ambition of conducting Mahler’s works. Utah Symphony,

in return, became a defining chapter in Abravanel’s career. Interested in educating the

public, he introduced contemporary music as well as standard repertoire to local, national,

and international audiences. Abravanel was fervently committed to America’s concert

music culture; he brought music to school children and directed the Music Academy of

the West in Santa Barbara. After he retired from the symphony in 1979, he never

conducted again but turned to public services at the National Council of Arts and the

National Endowment for the Arts. He received a National Medal of Arts in 1988.

67Lowell M. Durham, “Change of Tune: Chance for Unknown Composers,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 4
January 1948, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 72.

28
Figure 2.1: Abravanel and the Utah Symphony in 1964 (Courtesy of the Deseret News)

29
Figure 2.2: Abravanel conducting at the Mormon Tabernacle (Courtesy of the Utah
Symphony)

Expanding Seasons and Programming Newer Works

Abravanel continued and expanded many traditions—subscription concerts,

school concerts, and tours. He greatly increased the number of school concerts, took the

orchestra on tour to different continents in the next three decades, and extended the

season from ten concerts in twenty weeks to more than 200 concerts in fifty-two weeks

by the 1976–1977 season.68 Indeed, the expansion of the season may have reflected the

booming economy and growing population in Utah, which went from 0.636 million in

68 “Utah Symphony Fact Sheet 1977,” June 1977, the Utah Symphony Archive.

30
1947 to 1.275 million in 1976.69 The quality of the orchestra improved. Martin Mayer,

music critic from 1952 to 1975 for Esquire, recognized in a 1960 article the Utah

Symphony’s achievement: “Out of this spirit and affection, the Utah Symphony has made

itself a major orchestra, far superior to the orchestras of cities four and five times the size

and wealth of Salt Lake.”70 Thirteen years later, Mayer called the Utah Symphony “one

of the ten best, though based in a city that does not rank among the top fifty metropolitan

areas.”71

Figure 2.3: Abravanel conducting an education concert (Courtesy of the Utah Symphony)

69“Population Estimates,” United States Census Bureau, http://www.census.gov/popest/, accessed 4 June


2015.
70Martin Mayer, “How Good Is Utah Symphony?” The Salt Lake Tribune, 24 January 1960, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
71 Martin Mayer, “Recordings,” Esquire, June 1973, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.

31
Figure 2.4: Abravanel with school children (Courtesy of the Utah Symphony)

In addition to following and expanding the tradition, Abravanel took the Utah

Symphony in new directions. From the beginning Abravanel was determined to program

contemporary music. In Abravanel’s definition, “anything that the person who calls it

contemporary feels is unfamiliar, is novel, is new.” Contemporary works could be written

in a new idiom, like modern works, or could be older works that had not been accepted

into the repertoire.72 He programmed three twentieth-century works in his second concert:

Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring, Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings, and William

72Lowell Durham, “V. ‘Is Contemporary a Four-letter Word?’” in Conversations with Abravanel, 2–5,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 4.

32
Schumann’s Sideshow for Orchestra.73 Despite the dissatisfaction of an unnamed,

“powerful” board member (Glen Walker Wallace, the Vice President of the Orchestra in

1939–1947 and President in 1947–1952) and George Gadsby, the head of the Utah Power

& Light Company, Abravanel stood his ground.74 The conductor’s commitment to

promoting contemporary works was affirmed in an interview with Durham, when

Abravanel spoke to the future reader of the interview script: “I urge all of you, whenever

you first go to a contemporary music concert, go with an open mind, because it’s a

marvelous opportunity in a small town. . . . “Take advantage of them [performances of

contemporary music], because in many cities they don’t have that opportunity. So go; it’s

two hours maximum, many only one and one-half hours. And go with a feeling — ‘Let

me see what it’s all about.’”75 Abravanel believed that contemporary music was

important, because “the only way we can repay all those people whose music we

enjoyed — all the Beethovens and Schuberts and Mozarts and Bachs — is by lending a

willing ear to the composer in our midst.”76

Abravanel’s passion for promoting contemporary music was reiterated in his 1982

address to the students at the eight-week Tanglewood Music Festival. Among his several

remarks, the first was a plea to give contemporary composers opportunities to perform—

“It is our sacred duty as performers (and most of you are performers, except a handful) to

73Lowell M. Durham, Conversation with Abravanel, Chapter IV, “Is Contemporary Music a Four-letter
Word?” page 6, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 4; however, Abravanel’s recall was different from the
Utah Symphony’s performance record, which indicated Barber’s Adagio for Strings was performed on
November 8, 1947 (Abravanel’s first concert in Utah) and Copland’s Suite from Appalachian Spring and
Schumann’s Slide Show performed on January 31, 1948 (sixth concert).
74Durham, “Is Contemporary Music a Four-letter Word,” 6–7; Abravanel, interview by Jay M. Haymond,
24 September 1981, 25–26.
75 Ibid., 8.
76 Ibid.

33
give those composers, who sometimes have changed the language, and therefore are

difficult for us at first to understand, to hear, to be moved by — it is our first duty to give

them their hearing.”77 Just as Beethoven’s or Mozart’s music was not always embraced

during their lifetimes, contemporary composers faced the challenge of audience

opposition and deserved their fair chances. Abravanel asked of his orchestra musicians in

Utah the same thing—to be open-minded about new music. He said, “In my experience I

am proud of very few things; of one thing I am proud — my musicians knew that almost

anything they would be forgiven, but NOT if they got a new piece of music and said ‘I

don’t want to play that trash.’”78 With this belief, Abravanel continued programming and

recording twentieth-century, underperformed music throughout his directorship,

including works by Edgard Varèse, Darius Milhaud, George Gershwin, Arthur Honegger,

and Erik Satie.

77 Maurice Abravanel, “Remarks by Maurice Abravanel,” 1982, 1–2, Utah Symphony Archive.
78 Ibid., 2.

34
CHAPTER 3. RECORDING MARKET, VANGUARD, AND THE UTAH

SYMPHONY’S RECORDING CAREER

“The hallmark of Vanguard was to take chances.”


— Ari L. Goldman, “Seymour Solomon, 80, Record Label Founder,”
The New York Times, 19 July 2002.

Abravanel and the Utah Symphony recorded Mahler’s symphonies for Vanguard Records

in the 1960s and 1970s. The collaboration between Vanguard and the Utah Symphony

relied on the targeting of a market niche and capitalized on the market openings created

by technological advances and other social changes. This chapter opens with an

introduction of the recording industry in the mid-twentieth century. Next, select

recordings by the Utah Symphony show the orchestra’s strategic recording of

underrepresented works, which led to recording Mahler’s Eighth and Seventh

Symphonies. Lastly, this chapter uses a similar story of the Louisville Orchestra to show

that, with a creative mind and sensitivity to market opportunities, recordings can be used

as a marketing tool to reach a wider audience.

Recording Industry

In the midst of major labels, many smaller companies existed as early as in the

1910s and 1920s, as the market started expanding after World War I. In the United States,

record sales went from about $3 million in 1900 to about $106 million in 1921.1 At the

end of the 1920s the number started increasing again. The Great Depression however hit

1The number was estimated by Tim Brooks, Review of Murrell’s The Book of Golden Discs, Antique
Phonograph Monthly, 5:2, pp. 8–13, quoted in Pekka Gronow, “The Record Industry: The Growth of a
Mass Medium,” Popular Music 3 (January 1, 1983), 59.

35
the industry, and the sales dropped to $6 million in 1933. Independent labels thus started

closing down; by 1934, when the British Decca opened an American branch, the only two

major competitors were RCA Victor and the American Record-Brunswick-Columbia

group.2 After the low point, the sales started to increase through World War II, although

the increase could have been faster without the war. The record sales spiked after the war,

jumping from $66 million in 1944, to $109 million in 1945, and to $218 million in 1946.3

The postwar period until 1980 saw continuous growth in the recording industry; the

record sales reached $3.682 billion in 1980.4 The rising sales created opportunities for

small companies. The number of active record companies grew rapidly from three in the

mid-1930s to several hundred by 1950.5

While the growing market attracted new companies, technologies created needs

for new recordings. Advances in recording technology had changed the world of

phonographs several times across the twentieth century. In 1925, electric microphones

expanded the types of music recorded; the substitution of instruments such as tuba and

bassoon with low strings was no longer necessary, and instrumental music and orchestral

works could be more easily recorded, ending the domination of vocal music in the

analogue recording era. In 1948, long-playing microgroove records were made available

by Columbia, which improved sound quality and encouraged the recordings of longer

works. The microgroove discs allowed for two directions of indentation to record two

2 Gronow and Saunio, An International History of the Recording Industry, 58.


3 Gronow, “The Record Industry: The Growth of a Mass Medium,” 63; the US source is the Recording
Industry Association of America.
4 Ibid., 65–66.
5 Ibid., 71.

36
channels of sound; therefore, the stereo technology, first available in 1931, could finally

be used in recordings. In 1957, stereo discs started to be mass-produced. As how the

previous technological changes encouraged the market to rerecord music, stereo discs

started another wave of rerecording.6 All of Mahler’s symphonies, for example, had been

recorded on monaural discs and were waiting to be rerecorded onto stereo discs in the

late 1950s and early 1960s.7

Moreover, smaller record companies could more easily enter the market with

magnetic tape recorders mobilizing recording sessions. After World War II, American

troops found tape recorders in radio stations of occupied Germany; although a prototype

of the tape recorder appeared as early as 1900, the German tape recorders finally solved

the problem of tape hiss and distortion.8 With the tape recorder, any small or even one-

person recording company was able to bring the equipment to an orchestra’s concert hall

instead of flying the entire orchestra to the record company’s city and finding a studio

large enough for all the musicians. Vanguard, for instance, recorded all of Mahler’s

symphonies at the Mormon Tabernacle in Salt Lake City, using portable recording

equipment.

6 Although some efforts went into using multiple recordings of the same session to convert mono
recordings into stereo ones, most works did not have multiple recordings left and needed to be rerecorded
with two channels.
7 Although Abravanel did not begin recording Mahler's symphonies until fifteen years after the introduction
of the LP, some researchers have acknowledged the new format’s role in the Mahler revival. For example,
Ashby notes: “In trying to explain the Mahler phenomenon, others have looked not to technologically
assisted warfare and genocide but to technological advances in middle-class leisure electronics—to the
long-playing record as the first real means of reproducing this composer’s long musical spans, or to high
fidelity as a vehicle for this orchestral complexities.” Arved Mark Ashby, Absolute Music, Mechanical
Reproduction (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010), 221.
8 Gronow and Saunio, An International History of the Recording Industry, 96–97.

37
The changing programming of radio from live performances to recorded programs

also encouraged more recordings. From the 1920s, any stations obtaining a Class B

license, which “allowed a station significant power and a spot in the prime frequency

range,” were prohibited from playing recorded music.9 Although using recorded materials

in some cases was allowed, such as to provide cheaper advertisements for advertisers,

live programs were much more common and valued than those using phonographs.10 In

the 1930s, such rules were loosened but the debates surrounding the practice continued.

Although in the 1920s transcribed programs were considered inherently inferior, the

commercial profit mattered in the 1930s and 1940s. Although musicians worried that

consumers would stop buying records if they could hear music for free on the radio, the

playing of music on the radio had the potential to promote and popularize music. The

debate was finally settled with Bing Crosby’s first “transcribed” show on October 16,

1946, prerecorded and edited, opening a phase of radio that accepted the use of

phonographs.11 Furthermore, with the television becoming a more common household

item in the 1950s, radio revenues started to decline and hiring musicians for live

performances was no longer economical. Recordings became essential for radio programs.

With the booming market, new technologies, and the radio’s changing

programming, the recording industry faced a new era filled with opportunities. As more

smaller companies joined the expanding market, major record companies started to

change their strategies; instead of trying to produce music of all ranges, they focused on

9Albin Zak, I Don’t Sound Like Nobody: Remaking Music in 1950s America (University of Michigan Press,
2010), 12.
10 Ibid., 13.
11 Ibid., 15–30.

38
established artists and mainstream genres, leaving specialized, non-mainstream genres

like folk and jazz for independent record labels.12 The major labels after World War II—

Columbia, RCA Victor, Decca, Capitol, MGM, and Mercury—released 158 out of 163

records that sold more than a million copies between 1946 and 1952. Out of the six labels,

all but MGM had been major players in the market of classical music.13

To compete with major companies, smaller companies focused on non-

mainstream repertoire, responded quickly to the trends, and became the channel for

reflecting and shaping culture. King Records, founded in 1943, was “active in virtually

all genres of vernacular American music,” including blues, country, black gospel, and

R&B, “recording musicians and styles overlooked by the large labels.”14 The label

inspired many other independent labels in the 1940s and 1950s and changed American

music.15 Sun Records discovered Elvis Presley in 1953, having found “the right young

white singer” to sing black music, and went on to record many other talents such as Carl

Perkins, Roy Orbison, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Charlie Rich.16 Savoy was founded in 1942

and profited from black gospel music in the 1960s under Herman Lubinsky’s direction.17

Savoy’s recording of Charlie Parker in 1948 marked an important music history moment,

12 Gronow, “The Record Industry: The Growth of a Mass Medium,” 71.


13 Gronow and Saunio, An International History of the Recording Industry, 95, 99.
14
Jon Hartley Fox, with foreword by Dave Alvin, King of the Queen City: The Story of King Records,
Music in American Life (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2009), xv.
15 Ibid., xv.
16Barbara Barnes Sims, The Next Elvis: Searching for Stardom at Sun Records (Baton Rouge: Louisiana
State University press, 2014), xii.
17Robert Cherry and Jennifer Griffith, “Down to Business: Herman Lubinsky and the Postwar Music
Industry,” Journal of Jazz Studies 10/1 (2014): 1–24.

39
and Parker’s subsequent recordings for Savoy have been reissued on LP.18 When smaller

American record companies did record classical music, they looked beyond the core

repertoire. For example, the Artist label released excerpts of Berg’s Wozzeck, and

Paraclete Recordings from Connecticut released Scriabin’s piano music in 1947.19

Vanguard Records

In the case of Vanguard, the combination of inventiveness and musical sensitivity

helped the company thrive. Vanguard was founded in 1950, when two musically-trained

Solomon brothers, the 26-year-old Seymour and 19-year-old Maynard, were unsatisfied

with recordings available in the market and decided to take a $10,000 loan from their

father to open their own record company. In the summer of 1950, Seymour Solomon

went to Vienna to record three albums of Bach cantatas; released at the end of the same

year, these recordings became the company’s earliest recordings.20 Seymour was a

violinist and Maynard a cellist and, later, a musicologist. Their training in music made

them adept at identifying the market’s needs, spotting artists with great potential, and

recognizing worthwhile repertoire that had not been recorded. These strategies worked

similarly in the markets of folk, classical, and jazz, thereby establishing Vanguard as one

of the leading independent record labels by the mid-1960s.

After its beginning in 1950, Vanguard made great strides in the folk music market,

mainly under Maynard Solomon’s direction. Vanguard earned its status in folk revival for

18 Gronow and Saunio, An International History of the Recording Industry, 110.


19 Ibid., 112–113.
20John Conly, “From Bach to Baez: The Vanguard Story,” Billboard, 19 Nov 1966; Jerome F. Weber,
“Vanguard,” in Oxford Music Online, www.oxfordmusiconline.com, accessed 13 May 2015.

40
releasing the recording The Weavers at Carnegie Hall in 1957. The Weavers, a folk

music group that previously sang with the Almanac Singers, was placed under the FBI’s

surveillance following the allegation in 1950 that Pete Seeger was tied to Communism.

The group disbanded in 1952, and its recording company Decca ended the contract and

later deleted their recordings. In 1955, the Weavers’ manager Harold Leventhal decided

to organize a reunion concert despite the continuing Red Scare. The sold-out concert took

place on Christmas Eve at Carnegie Hall. Leventhal made sure the concert was recorded.

The concert marked the return of the group, but many labels refused to produce the

recording, until Maynard Solomon purchased the right and released the recording.21 This

album was a success; “the concert and subsequent recording marked the revival of folk

music in the United States” and Vanguard established the reputation “for allowing a good

deal of artistic freedom.”22 It also revived the Weavers’ recording career and led to the

company’s signing Joan Baez in 1960 and many other important folk singers.

Vanguard’s move was risky but not uninformed; the Weavers had proven their

ability to sell with the popular hit “Good night, Irene” in their 1950 recording with Decca.

Although the alleged connection to communism placed the musicians on the blacklist, the

political charge possibly made the Weavers’ music more appealing to the audience who

disagreed with McCarthyism and sympathized with blacklisted musicians. In other words,

the blacklist turned the group from a mainstream market to a specialty one, exactly what

an independent label like Vanguard would target.

21Ronald D. Cohen, Rainbow Quest: The Folk Music Revival and American Society, 1940–1970 (Amherst:
University of Massachusetts Press, 2002), 102–103.
22Jon Thurber, “Seymour Solomon, 80; One of Vanguard Label Founders,” Los Angeles Times, 23 July
2002; for more details about Vanguard’s contributions to folk revival, see Norm Cohen, “The Folk Revival
Reissued: The Vanguard Label,” The Journal of American Folklore 102/404 (1989): 195–198.

41
Vanguard’s repertoire ranged from artists suspected of having communist

affiliations or inclinations, such as the Weavers and Paul Robeson, to large choral works

like Robertson’s Book of Mormon Oratorio and Honegger’s Le Roi David. Vanguard was

not fearless in entering unprofitable fields; as a smaller record company, Vanguard had to

target specialty audiences, as did other New York-based companies promoting folk music

like Elektra and Prestige.23 Vanguard’s bold move in releasing the Weavers’ 1955 live

concert in the folk music market was the same strategy as its focus on choral works and

twentieth-century composers in the market of classical music recordings, both of which

made the company competitive in the thriving market. Vanguard’s willingness to take

chances resulted in the making of the Utah Symphony’s recordings of Mahler’s Eighth

and Seventh symphonies, the focus of the following chapter.

The Utah Symphony’s Recording Career

Besides promoting more recent music, as discussed in Chapter 2, Abravanel

explored recording with the Utah Symphony. Making records was not new to Abravanel;

before moving to Utah, he had recorded Kurt Weill’s Street Scene, Debussy’s Three

Ballades, and Ravel’s The Songs of Don Quichotte à Dulcinée for Columbia Records.24

When the Utah Symphony expressed interest in making recordings, Abravanel consulted

Columbia Records and learned that it was difficult for a smaller orchestra to enter a

market that had been dominated by major orchestras and major labels since the beginning

23Ron Eyerman and Scott Barretta, “From the 30s to the 60s: The Folk Music Revival in the United States,”
Theory and Society 25/4 (August 1, 1996), 530.
24Major Figures in American Music: Maurice Abravanel, Oral History of American Music, Yale
University, Interviewer: Deborah Bookspan Margol, 219 a–z, p. 447.

42
of the twentieth century. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra started recording in 1916

under Frederick Stock for RCA Victor, the Boston Symphony Orchestra started in 1917

under Karl Muck for RCA Victor, the New York Philharmonic started in 1917 under

Josef Stransky for Columbia, the Philadelphia Orchestra started in 1917 under Leopold

Stokowski for Columbia, and the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra started in 1917 under

Ernst Kunwald for Columbia. The next in line were the Minneapolis Symphony, the

Detroit Symphony Orchestra, and the Cleveland Orchestra, who started making

recordings in 1924 under Henri Verbrugghen for Brunswick, in 1928 under Ossip

Gabrilowitsch for Victor, and in the 1920s under Nikolai Sokoloff for Brunswick,

respectively. The National Symphony Orchestra started making recordings in 1941 under

Hans Kindler for RCA, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra started in 1941 under

Fabien Sevitzky for Victor and Capitol, and the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra after

World War II under Fritz Reiner for Columbia.25

These orchestras mainly recorded with two of the major labels: RCA Victor and

Columbia. In the late 1930s, RCA recorded with Boston, and Columbia recorded with

Philadelphia, New York, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and Minneapolis.26 Even when orchestras

changed record companies, they tended to alternate between these two companies; for

example, Philadelphia switched from RCA to Columbia in 1943 and returned to RCA in

1968.27

25The information about these orchestras is from Robert R. Craven, edited, Symphony Orchestras of the
United States (New York: Greenwood Press, 1986).
26James North, “Leopold Stokowski and His Symphony Orchestra: Personnel Roster for the RCA Victor
Recordings,” ARSC Journal 44/1 (2013), 15.
27 Craven, Symphony Orchestras of the United States, 350.

43
Besides recording major orchestras, RCA Victor and Columbia maintained house

orchestras. Columbia created the Columbia Symphony Orchestra in 1913; the name

applied to recordings made by the West Coast Columbia Symphony Orchestra and the

East Coast Columbia Symphony Orchestra. These two entities did not have regular

rosters and called local musicians as needed. Sometimes other orchestras’ recordings

were credited as the Columbia Symphony Orchestra due to mistakes or the use of

pseudonym.28 Between the late 1930s and 1955, RCA recorded with Stokowski and

created a series of recordings under the name of “Leopold Stokowski and His Orchestra,”

whose members included musicians from the New York Philharmonic, the NBC

Symphony, and freelancers.29 The NBC Symphony, founded in 1937 by RCA’s broadcast

department, mainly performed for radio broadcasts and on the NBC network; the NBC

symphony started recording in 1938 until it disbanded in 1954. Allowing their parent

companies to conveniently make recordings, these house orchestras presented another

hurdle for smaller orchestras seeking contracts with major labels.

Moreover, it was not cost-effective for record companies to record small

American orchestras due to the national scale mandated by the American Federation of

Musicians, especially in comparison to the cheap cost of making recordings in Europe.30

Nevertheless, Abravanel started recording with the Utah Symphony in 1952 and

28James H. North and Tom Tierney, “The Columbia Symphony Orchestra: An Exploration of the
Recording History of a Phantom Orchestra,” ARSC Journal 45/2 (2014): 156–78.
29James North, “Leopold Stokowski and His Symphony Orchestra: Personnel Roster for the RCA Victor
Recordings,” ARSC Journal 44/1 (2013): 15–33.
30Maurice Abravanel, “The Utah Story: No Deviltry, Just Good Sense: How Recording Put a Fine
American Orchestra on the Map, Made it a Better One, and Enriched the Repertory to Boot,” High Fidelity
24/8 (August 1974): 18, 20, Maurice Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78, Special Collections and Archives,
University of Utah, J. Willard Marriott Library, Salt Lake City, Utah.

44
continued to look for recording opportunities in the hope of bringing his musicians extra

income.31 To compete in the market, it worked with smaller record companies to find a

market niche. Utilizing its strength—choral tradition in Utah—and Abravanel’s interest

in recent works, it became known for the recordings of choral, modern, and less familiar

works.

Early Recordings

Under Abravanel’s direction, the Utah Symphony recorded around 120 albums

between 1952 and 1978, establishing close relationships with Westminster between 1957

and 1960 and Vanguard between 1960 and 1974.32 During Abravanel’s first season

(1947–1948) in Utah, he was approached by the Concert Hall Society, a New York

record company founded by Samuel and David Josefowitz, and “offered a practically

unlimited number of recording sessions if [Abravanel] would go to Europe.”33 Abravanel

however declined, because he wanted to make recordings with the Utah Symphony.

When the Josefowitz brothers later started another label, the Handel Society, they asked

Abravanel again. The maestro picked Handel’s Judas Maccabaeus, partly because the

work had not been recorded.34 The recording was made with the Utah choruses in 1952

31Martin Mayer, “On Record: Dr. Abravanel and the Utah Symphony Orchestra,” Esquire, November
1958, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
32 This number varied in different sources and it might have included reissues.
33 Abravanel, “The Utah Story: No Deviltry, Just Good Sense,” 18.
34Maurice Abravanel, interview by Jay M. Haymond, 30 September 1981, Utah State Historical Society
Oral History Program, 46-47, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 4.

45
and received positive reviews, but it did not sell well and thus was the Utah Symphony’s

last and only recording with the Concert Hall.35

After the collaboration with the Josefowitz brothers, Abravanel recorded a live

performance of Leroy Robertson’s Book of Mormon Oratorio in 1953 for Studio Records

(5303 RC). Composition of the work had stretched over decades, and Abravanel’s

involvement aided its completion. Robertson, a professor at Brigham Young University

(1925–48) and the University of Utah (1948–62), was first encouraged by a member of

the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (or the “Mormon Church”), Melvin J.

Ballard, in 1919 to compose a work based on the Book of Mormon.36 He had been

working on his Oratorio on and off since 1924,37 but it was not until 1938 when he

started working on it regularly.38 In 1946, the First Presidency of the Mormon Church

expressed interest in the work and proposed to premiere it at the centennial celebration in

1947. At that time Robertson was spending his 1946–1947 sabbatical year taking courses

towards his doctorate at the University of Southern California. To finish the Oratorio, he

gave up the sabbatical after one semester and moved back to Utah. However, when he

learned that Crawford Gates’s Promised Valley was chosen for the celebration, he put

aside the almost finished work.39 In June 1947, Abravanel met Robertson during his visit

to Utah and saw his largely completed score. Abravanel was impressed and encouraged

35 Abravanel, “The Utah Story: No Deviltry, Just Good Sense,” 18.


36 Marian Robertson Wilson, “Leroy Robertson and the Oratorio from the Book of Mormon: Reminiscence
of a Daughter,” Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 8/2 (1999), 6.
37L. Brent Goates, “Leroy Robertson’s ‘Book of Mormon Oratorio’ Set Feb. 18,” Deseret News, 11
February 1953; Robertson Wilson, 7.
38Robertson Wilson, “Leroy Robertson and the Oratorio from the Book of Mormon: Reminiscence of a
Daughter,” 7.
39 Ibid., 10–11.

46
Robertson to finish it.40 In 1953, Abravanel scheduled a performance for Robertson’s

Oratorio, prompting him to finally finish the work.41

For his Oratorio, Robertson chose “what constitutes in the eyes of many the

supreme episode of the entire book.”42 From the stories over a thousand years covered in

The Book of Mormon, Robertson selected two books—Helaman and 3 Nephi—that

spanned about a century from 52 B.C. to A.D. 35. The Book of Helaman includes

Samuel’s prophecies about Jesus’s birth and death, and the Third Book of Nephi details

the birth and death of Jesus and the signs experienced by the Nephites (one of the four

groups from Jerusalem that had settled in the ancient Americas). According to the book,

during the three days of darkness following Jesus’s crucifixion, many Nephites were

killed; afterwards, Jesus was resurrected, appeared in the ancient Americas, and taught

the Nephites how to pray. The Lesser Doxology, which is not in The Book of Mormon,

concludes the oratorio.

These events are divided into three parts of Robertson’s Oratorio: the prophecy of

Samuel, the birth of Christ, and the appearance of Christ to the Nephites. The three

characters, sung by the soloists, are Samuel, the Lamanite prophet; the Evangelist; and

Jesus Christ. The Nephites are sung by the choruses. As the soloists narrate the story and

the choruses frequently repeat words for emphasis, the orchestra sets the mood for the

drama. Tuneful melodies are often passed among instruments, choruses, and soloists.

Despite the large scale of the work, the music is transparent.

40 Ibid., 11.
41 Ibid., 12.
42 Ibid., 8.

47
Abravanel and the Utah Symphony premiered Oratorio from the Book of Mormon

on February 18, 1953, shortly after its completion. The premiere was truly a local event;

four of the five soloists were local singers, the organist was the Tabernacle organist

Alexander Schreiner, and the choruses were the University of Utah combined choruses.

In the same year, Abravanel conducted the work twice more: on March 14 in Ogden and

April 6 back in the Mormon Tabernacle. The April performance drew a large crowd

because it took place four hours after the conclusion of the Mormon Church’s Annual

General Conference. It was on April 6 when the concert was recorded live by the Allen

Duff Associates, including Allen Jensen from the KSL Radio in Salt Lake City and

Marion Duff Banks.43 The 1953 recording was the first of three recordings of the work,

all of which were conducted by Abravanel. In the following two years, Oratorio from the

Book of Mormon was performed each April 6.44 The decision to perform the work at the

Mormon Tabernacle around Easter Sunday three years in a row (1953, 1954, and 1955)

could not have been coincidental; although the Utah Symphony remained separate from

the Mormon Church and did not perform with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir until 1978,

the repeated performances and recordings of Robertson’s Oratorio from the Book of

Mormon showed Abravanel’s commitment to local composers and his desire to build an

amicable relationship with the church.

The aforementioned early recordings—of Handel’s Judas Maccabaeus and

Robertson’s Oratorio from the Book of Mormon—demonstrated Abravanel’s pattern of

43 Ibid., 12.

This recording remained unknown to many outside Utah, as some reviews of the second recording
(1961) of the work stated that it was the first.
44“Utah Symphony Sets Oratorio By Robertson,” Provo Herald, 4 April 1954; “‘Book of Mormon
Oratorio’ Draws Wide Ticket Demand,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 30 March 1955.

48
programming and recording underperformed, large-scale choral works. This pattern was

influenced not only by the long-established choral tradition in Salt Lake City but also by

the conductor’s interest in recording works outside the standard repertoire or that had not

been recorded. In the following three decades, Abravanel continued recording works in

the same pattern with independent record companies, including Westminster and

Vanguard.

Partnership with Westminster

Although the Utah Symphony started recording in 1952, its first long-term

recording contract was with Westminster in 1957. Westminster was founded in 1949 in

New York by James Grayson, Michael Naida, and Henry Gage. The company originally

aimed to make recordings cheaply in Europe and sell them in the United States.45

Together, Westminster and the Utah Symphony produced premiere recordings as well as

recordings of choral works.

At this time, the Utah Symphony started working around the American Federation

of Musicians’ mandate of paying musicians on a national scale for all recording

sessions.46 The mandate did not warrant fairness; the national scale for recordings,

45Pekka Gronow and Ilpo Saunio, An International History of the Recording Industry (London: Cassell,
1998), 114.
46The requirement of paying the musicians according to a national scale is still in place. On page 21 of the
Sound Recording Labor Agreement on the website of the American Federation of Musicians
(www.afm.org), everyone in the orchestras is to be paid with a minimum rate: “All members of the
symphony orchestra, whether called to the engagement or not, shall be paid for at least the first two (2)
hours of the basic session call ($244.49 effective February 1, 2006, $255.62 effective February 1, 2007,
$263.28 effective February 1, 2008, $268.55 effective February 1, 2009, $273.92 effective February 1,
2012, $278.03 effective February 1, 2013 and $280.81 effective January 13,2014) and shall not be called or
required to attend if they are not scheduled to perform.” Rates for different kinds of sessions are also
specified on page 22. The document does not state that each state can determine its own pay scale. “Sound

49
disregarding the differences in living standards in different cities, could be much higher

than the rate for concerts and rehearsals in smaller cities and above what recording

companies were willing to pay. In the case of the Utah Symphony, “the national

recording scale was about three times as much as the minimum paid to one of its

musicians for the same amount of time worked under the local master agreement.”47 The

national scale in theory ensured that all musicians in the United States would be paid

equally, but in practice motivated record companies to record major orchestras to

guarantee a return of their investment, since orchestras with fame of the level of the New

York Philharmonic or the Philadelphia Orchestra, for instance, were likely to sell more

records. By attempting to maintain a fair wage across the country, the American

Federation of Musicians inadvertently prevented most regional orchestras from making

recordings, which in turn limited musicians’ income and orchestras’ ability to promote

their work.48

The Utah Symphony and Westminster devised a way to work around the national

scale and sustain the orchestra’s recording career. According to Westminster’s recording

contract for the Utah Symphony in 1957, the symphony society would pay the musicians

while the record company would pay for “everything else and [give] the orchestra a

Recording Labor Agreement: February 1, 2006–January 12, 2015,” American Federation of Musicians of
the United States and Canada, www.afm.org, accessed 13 February 2016.
47 Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts, 221.
48As The New York Times critic Harvey Phillips argued in a 1975 article about American orchestras
making recordings, the American Federation of Musicians’ national scale would actually “limit
opportunities for its not-so-fortunate brethren” and “a recording company can often afford to take a chance
with a less than international-stature ensemble” in Europe because the lack of such a rigid national scale.
See more details in Harvey E. Phillips, “American Orchestras Are Back in the Recording Studios,” The
New York Times, 28 September 1975.

50
higher royalty.”49 Under this plan, the musicians would be paid “the equivalent of one

service plus twenty percent” and the higher royalty from the recording company would

be used to pay the musicians “the difference owed to them up to the national scale.”50

The plan was then reported to the local union and brought to the American Federation of

Musicians. Its president, Herman D. Kenin, required one petition in writing from each

orchestra member to the local orchestra management.51 The petitions were quickly

obtained, and the Utah Symphony continued recording for Westminster in December

1957.52 Although a few other orchestras, such as the Seattle Symphony, also tried to work

around the national scale, most of them acquired additional funding to supplement the

compensation to meet the national scale requirement.53 In 1969 the Utah Symphony’s

waiver was extended, when the musicians entrusted Abravanel to negotiate with the

union.54 In 1972, the waiver was abolished, but it had served its purpose;55 as Abravanel

explained in an interview with High Fidelity, “[by] this time we were well enough

established so that we were able to continue our program at full speed.”56

With Westminster, Abravanel and the Utah Symphony produced many rare

recordings. They first recorded Handel’s Israel in Egypt; Gershwin’s Piano Concerto in F,

49 Abravanel, “The Utah Story: No Deviltry, Just Good Sense,” 18. As Abravanel explained in the same
article, this agreement was used by Westminster and Mercury with major orchestras.
50 Abravanel, “The Utah Story: No Deviltry, Just Good Sense,” 19.
51 Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts, 221–222.
52 Ibid., 222.
53Philip Hart, Orpheus in the New World: the Symphony Orchestra as an American Cultural Institution
(New York: W. W. Norton, 1973), 184–185.
54 Ibid., 185.
55 Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts, 225.
56 Abravanel, “The Utah Story: No Deviltry, Just Good Sense,” 20.

51
An American in Paris, and Rhapsody in Blue; and Saint-Saëns’s Organ Symphony.57 The

next recording projects included Handel’s Judas Maccabaeus; Copland’s Billy the Kid

and El Salón Mexico; Grofé’s Grand Canyon Suite; Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess Suite,

Grieg’s Peer Gynt Suites Nos. 1 and 2 and Piano Concerto in A minor; César Franck’s

Symphony in D Minor; Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess; and Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake.

Abravanel recorded two of Handel’s works in 1958, both of which were released

in 1959 for the two hundredth anniversary of the composer’s death. The record reviews

applauded Abravanel’s abilities to lead multiple groups of musicians. The recording of

Israel in Egypt was “remarkably good,” with the conductor’s good handling of the

performing forces, including the orchestra, choruses, and soloists.58 In the recording of

Judas Maccabaeus, the “well-disciplined and assured” choruses performed well, and

Abravanel “achieves as much variety as Handel permits him to.”59 Judas Maccabaeus

was rerecorded so quickly after the 1952 version on the Handel Society label, probably

because the previous version was monaural. The stereo sound in both recordings was

spacious and particularly suitable for works with large performing forces.60 Indeed, stereo

sound was frequently singled out for its merits for large, choral works, as seen in the

reviews of many of Abravanel’s Mahler recordings.

Westminster’s strategy to make recordings cheaply with European orchestras

stopped working by the 1960s, when the living standards in Europe greatly improved and

57 Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts, 222.


58 Nathan Broder, “Handel: Israel in Egypt,” High Fidelity 8/7 (July 1958): 48.
59 Nathan Broder, “Handel: Judas Maccabaeus,” High Fidelity 9/8 (August 1959): 54.
60R. G., Review of Handel’s Judas Maccabaeus, Records and Recording, November 1960, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.

52
eventually increased the cost of recordings.61 The Utah Symphony’s partnership with

Westminster therefore ended in 1960. Westminster was sold to ABC-Paramount Records

in the early 1960s, and the Westminster catalog was again sold to MCA Records in 1979.

Westminster’s recordings continued to be reissued after its closure. Although the Utah

Symphony could not make enough of a profit to cover their expenses before Westminster

folded, the reissues did bring continuous income for the orchestra until 1978.62

Partnership with Vanguard

When the Utah Symphony’s window to Westminster was closing, a door to

Vanguard opened. Seymour Solomon, one of the co-founders of Vanguard Records,

wrote to Abravanel to inquire about his interest in working with the company: “It has

come to our attention that in view of the situation which has developed with the recording

company with which you have been connected, you may be interested in considering

making recordings for Vanguard Records.”63 Abravanel responded with interest and

started communicating with Vanguard; in another letter two weeks later they started

discussing possible repertoire for recording, including “Mendelssohn’s ‘Elijah’ Oratorio,”

“the Milhaud works,” and “the LeRoy Anderson pieces.”64 In February, the decision of

switching to Vanguard was discussed in a board meeting, and Abravanel was given the

61 Gronow and Saunio, 114.


62 Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts, 223.
63 Seymour Solomon to Maurice Abravanel, 14 January 1960, letter, Abravanel Papers. Ms 517, Box 13.
64 Seymour Solomon to Maurice Abravanel, 29 January 1960, letter, Abravanel Papers. Ms 517, Box 13.

53
green light to negotiate with Vanguard.65 Vanguard drafted a similar pay agreement to

that between the Utah Symphony and Westminster: the orchestra would pay the

musicians for recording, and the record company would pay other costs and gave the

orchestra a higher percentage of royalty. In particular, Solomon offered a 16% royalty “of

the wholesale price on each record sold, provided your Board furnishes the entire payroll

for musicians, conductor, recording hall and orchestrations, as well as the soloists

involved” and guaranteed 1,000 sales per recording.66 Thereafter, Vanguard and

Abravanel worked closely in the 1960s and finished a few more projects in the 1970s.

With Vanguard, Abravanel produced many premiere recordings, against the trend

of duplicating recordings. In the classical music recording market, major labels had

focused on the standard repertoire. For instance, Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony was

recorded by many conductors, and Toscanini recorded the Scherzo from Mendelssohn’s

A Midsummer Night’s Dream five times.67 By 1954, “21 different versions of

Beethoven’s Eroica had appeared on the LP market, both new recordings and pressings

transferred from 78 rpm discs. Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet was available in just as

many versions. There were ten recordings of Mozart’s D minor piano concerto [Concerto

for Piano and Orchestra in D minor (K. 466)], and five interpretations of the St Matthew

Passion.”68 Similarly, when LP became available in 1948, major labels first rerecorded

65Minutes of the Meeting of the Executive Committee of the Utah Symphony Board, 1 February 1960,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 24.
66 Solomon to Abravanel, 29 January 1960.
67Lance W. Brunner, “The Orchestra and Recorded Sound,” in Collected Work: The Orchestra: Origins
and Transformations (New York, NY: Scribner’s Sons, 1986), 502.
68 Gronow and Saunio, An International History of the Recording Industry, 113.

54
works from the standard repertoire.69 Heading a smaller company that required finding a

market niche to remain competitive, Seymour Solomon agreed with Abravanel that

making duplicate recordings was unfruitful. In a 1988 interview, Abravanel fondly

remembered the collaboration with Vanguard and explained his intentional choice of

recording under-recorded works:

But much later, then, when I started doing recordings, and with a very bright firm:
Vanguard— You know, Seymour Solomon agreed with me that it was foolish to
duplicate recordings that were already in the catalog a million times unless they
could prove, or they had a chance, of being best sellers—in other words, bringing
a new point of view. But mostly we did recordings of works that had never been
recorded. So I remembered Varèse, and I knew that only his small-scale works
had been recorded. Neither Arcana, nor Amériques.70

The trend of duplicating recordings of core repertoire was of course profit-driven, but,

when the market became saturated, Abravanel and Solomon’s focus on less-recorded

works enticed people to buy the Utah Symphony’s recordings.

Equally impressive to Vanguard’s adventurous selections of repertoire was their

long list of first stereo recordings. Although stereo sound technology had been available

since the early 1930s, stereo LPs were not mass produced until 1957. The 1960s was

therefore a time in which rerecording works with stereo sound became popular, and

Vanguard surely took advantage of technological advances. Sound quality was one of the

common reasons that critics recommended Vanguard’s recordings. Later Vanguard again

followed the newest trend and introduced four-channel recordings to the market, although

four-channel sound turned out to be a short-lived fad.

69 Brunner, “The Orchestra and Recorded Sound,” 505.


70Olivia Mattis, “Conversation with Maurice Abravanel,” 1988, page 2, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box
119.

55
The partnership between Vanguard and the Utah Symphony focused on

recordings of choral and underrepresented works. In 1961, Abravanel rerecorded

Robertson’s Oratorio from the Book of Mormon (VRS 1077), eight years after the work’s

premiere recording. This new recording was released nationwide and received numerous

reviews from major cities including Washington D.C., Chicago, San Francisco, and

Seattle as well as journals like Audio Magazine and The American Organist. Reviewer

George Stowe from the Hartford Courant declared the recording a “powerful and

eloquent testimony to Robertson’s talents.”71 Since outside critics were unfamiliar with

the work, they compared it to other choral masterpieces. The combination of “a certain

sturdy modernity” and “a good deal of rather solid musical construction,” for instance,

drove Audio Magazine critic to compare Robertson’s Oratorio to other works about the

Messiah and Bach’s B Minor Mass.72 Robertson’s careful selection of the events in The

Book of Mormon achieved the desired effect, as the birth, death, and crucifixion of Jesus

is central to all denominations of Christianity. As some critics described the recording:

“[t]his is a record everyone can enjoy, not only those of the Mormon faith.”73 The

recording showcased Utah talents—four soloists: Roy Samuelsen, Kenly W. Whitelock,

Jean Preston, and Warren Wood (among whom Whitelock and Wood were Utahns); three

Utah choruses: University of Utah Chorus, University of Utah Chorale, and the South

High Girls’ Chorus; and the Mormon Tabernacle organist Alexander Schreiner. Most of

the record reviews focused on describing Robertson’s work, but a few comments about

71 George W. Stowe, Hartford Courant, 26 November 1962, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
72Edward Tatnall Canby, “Leroy Robertson: Oratorio from the Book of Mormon,” Audio Magazine 46/3
(March 1962): 46, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
73 Herman Schaden, Washington Star, 10 December 1961, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.

56
these musicians’ “sensitive” and “fervent” performance pointed to a satisfying

recording.74 Overall, the recording put Robertson on an equal footing with composers in

the Western canon, emphasized the universal aspects of the Mormon faith, and

showcased Utah musicians in a choral-orchestral work.

Under Abravanel’s baton, the Utah Symphony recorded Honegger’s Le Roi David

in 1961. Le Roi David (1923), based on a biblical drama with the same title by René

Morax (1921), was originally incidental music and revised into a symphonic psalm.

Although the recording was not the work’s premiere recording, it was the only one listed

in the Schwann catalog. Calling for soloists (narrator, soprano, mezzo-soprano, and

tenor), chorus, and orchestra, this large-scale work was “no easy task” and Abravanel’s

recording brought “the best sound we have heard from the Utah forces.”75 Both Netania

Davrath and Martial Singher, the soprano and the narrator, were praised. The success of

this recording, as Abravanel explained, led to the recording of Mahler’s Eighth

Symphony: “After the very great success of the University of Utah and the Utah

Symphony choral recordings, especially of King David, I mentioned jokingly to the

Vanguard people about doing Mahler’s Eighth Symphony. Vanguard told me after the

success of King David, we could do anything and they would be with us.”76

Among the Utah Symphony’s other premiere Vanguard recordings was also

Alessandro Scarlatti’s Messa di Santa Cecilia. It was recorded shortly after the recent

74 Music Ministry, April 1962, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25; Canby, “Leroy Robertson: Oratorio
from the Book of Mormon.”
75Enos E. Shupp, Jr., “The New Records,” H. Royer Smith Company, January 1963, Abravanel Papers, Ms.
517, Box 25.
76Maurice Abravanel, speech transcript, “Convocation for Maestro Maurice Abravanel Mahler Award,”
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 3.

57
rediscovery of the work and showed Abravanel’s interest in promoting underrepresented

works. Messa di Santa Cecilia was composed in 1720, five years before Scarlatti’s death,

but then forgotten. It was rediscovered in the twentieth century, edited by Fritz Steffin,

and published by Bote & Bock in Berlin and Wiesbaden in 1957.77 Abravanel and the

Utah Symphony gave the work its American premiere in 1961 and recorded it in 1962.78

As a first recording with the “spacious, realistic, and clear” stereo sound and a chorus and

an orchestra that performed with “forcefulness and effectiveness,” Abravanel’s recording,

considered “important and highly praiseworthy,” was the combination of “musical

satisfaction” and “historical fascination.”79

While Abravanel’s recording of Messa di Santa Cecilia was well received, his

recording of Gottschalk’s A Night in the Tropics, which also involved a new edition,

drew harsh criticism. From the time of its composition in 1859, the orchestral score had

been missing 36 measures. Although a piano score was available, the orchestral version

had been long neglected with no recording available. When Abravanel made the

recording in 1964, only one orchestral reconstruction by Howard Shanet, who conducted

his edition in 1955, was available. Upon Vanguard’s inquiry about possible American

works for recordings, Shanet suggested Gottschalk’s work; however, when Vanguard

decided to go with Abravanel, Shanet prohibited the group from using his edition. To

77 Malcolm Boyd, “Alessandro Scarlatti,” in Oxford Music Online, www.oxfordmusiconline.com, accessed


4 June 2015; Carole Franklin Vidali, Alessandro and Domenico Scarlatti: A Guide to Research (Taylor &
Francis, 1993), 58.
78The work calls for five soloists (SSATB) and ripienists (2 violins, 1 viola, and basso continuo). In
Abravanel’s recording, Jean Preston (soprano), Blanche Christensen (soprano), Baryl Jensen Smiley (alto),
Ronald Christensen (tenor), Warren Wood (bass), and the University of Utah Alumni Chorus joined forces
with the Utah Symphony.
79 John W. Barker, The American Record Guide 28/7 (March 1962), Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.

58
provide a version for the Utah Symphony, Gaylord Hatton, under Abravanel’s

supervision, used several different sources to create a complete orchestral score. Shanet’s

disagreement with Hatton’s edition was reflected in his harsh review.80 Nonetheless, most

of the other reviews embraced the group’s own reconstruction. As High Fidelity critic R.

D. Darrell stated, the work was “consistently well played and recorded in brightly warm

and natural stereoism.”81 In fact, this recording offered a viable option for knowing the

work before a more satisfying edition of the score was finally available in 2000.82

Abravanel would again use a newly available Critical Edition to record Mahler’s Seventh

Symphony, turning a recent scholarly endeavor into a sound recording.

After recordings Mahler’s Eighth Symphony in 1963 and Seventh Symphony in

1964, Abravanel continued to search for less-recorded works, including underrepresented

works from the twentieth century such as those by Edgard Varèse. Portraying Varèse’s

perception of his new country with new and unfamiliar sounds, siren, Amériques was

modernistic and difficult for both performers and listeners. With a grant from the

Rockefeller Foundation, Abravanel recorded Varèse’s Amériques in 1966. His tendency

to “shape the piece dynamically and to go all out only for certain climaxes” made the

recording “easier to take” but “[dulled] the effect a little.” Overall, the playing was “of

remarkably high quality” and “in most respects the conception [was] fully worthy of the

80
Howard Shanet, “En Garde, Vanguard!” The Saturday Review, 14 March 1964: 118, Abravanel Papers,
Ms. 517, Box 25.
81 R. D. Darrell, “Gottschalk: A Night in the Tropics,” High Fidelity 14/2 (February 1964): 112.
82 Shanet’s reduced score was not accepted as the norm, and so were two other editions. Eugene List’s
edition in 1969 “focused on Gottschalk's melodies rather than his rich orchestrations,” and Gunther
Schuller’s in 1998 “was better but still took liberties with the original.” Finally, Richard Rosenberg’s in
2000 “has tackled all the surviving orchestral and operatic manuscripts, with great fidelity to the original
text and great success overall.” S. Frederick Starr, liner notes for Louis Moreau Gottschalk: Complete
Works for Orchestra, Hot Springs Festival Symphony Orchestra, Richard Rosenberg, Naxos 8.559320,
2000.

59
piece.”83 The same album also included Milhaud’s L’Homme et Son Désir, which

portrayed jungles of Brazil, and Honegger’s Pacific 231, which imitated a locomotive.

Abravanel’s Milhaud was “sensuous and crystalline,” and his Honegger “[brought] that

locomotive to life.”84 All three works in the album were composed between 1918 and

1921 and explored unusual sounds and textures. Containing three works that represented

“the French avant-garde of the twenties,” this album “successfully [filled] a large gap in

the recorded repertoire.”85 Moreover, the performance quality in all three difficult pieces

showcased the orchestra’s capabilities.

In 1964, Abravanel recorded Honegger’s Judith for Vanguard (VRS 1139, VSD

71139), providing another stereo recording for an underrepresented, large-scaled work.

Similar to Honegger’s Le Roi David, Judith was based on a biblical drama by René

Morax (1925), started as incidental music, and revised into a biblical opera in 1926.

Many reviews affirmed the recording’s sound quality, especially in comparison to the

mono recording in two 78 rpm discs made by Antwerp and conducted by Louis de

Vocht.86 The sound was commended for the “nice effects achieved by the separation of

the two sound-tracks, especially in some of the choral passages. The performance has a

‘live’ quality.”87 The recording was “another excellent recording from the 20th-century

83 Eric Salzman, “Varese: Amériques,” High Fidelity 16/8 (August 1966), 94.
84 Ibid.
85Philip L. Miller, “Varèse: Amériques,” American Record Guide 33/6 (February 1967), 451, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
86 Ibid.
87 Ibid.

60
choral-orchestral repertory to [Abravanel’s] credit.”88 While the musicians—orchestra,

chorus, and soloists—received genuine praise,89 the most applauded person in this

recording was the narrator Madeleine Milhaud, the wife of composer Darius Milhaud.

Her performance was delivered with “authority and conviction” and was the “strongest

and best part of the whole recording.”90 This recording also elicited comments showing

how Abravanel stood out in the recording market. Stephanie von Buchau’s review in San

Francisco’s FM & The Arts was mixed with compliments and criticisms: “[Abravanel] is

a very peculiar conductor that no matter what he conducts: Handel, Honegger, Mahler, he

always manages to sound faintly anachronistic at the same time he is delivering the score

with verve and interest.”91 Although not entirely flattering, these descriptions portrayed

Abravanel as somewhat eccentric while able to consistently deliver recordings of

substance.

The Utah Symphony’s recordings under Abravanel, including those of twentieth-

century, choral-orchestral, under-recorded, and local composers’ works, pointed to the

intersection of the business strategy, musical interest, and local resources, which did not

go unnoticed. Emerson Batdorff from The Plain Dealer was confident in Abravanel’s

choice of winners for recordings: “When it comes to picking modern works of dignity

and perhaps even of lasting merit you can’t go far wrong putting your money on Maurice

88Jo Reiter, “Honegger ‘Judith’ On New Vanguard,” Boston Globe, n.d., Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box
25.
89 Alfred Frankenstein, “Honegger: Judith,” High Fidelity 16/1 (January 1966): 88; Jo Reiter, “Honegger
‘Judith’ On New Vanguard,” Boston Globe, n.d., Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
90James H. Paul, “Records in Review: Judith and Some Pops,” The Jewish Advocate, 9 June 1966,
Abravanel Papers, Ms. 517, Box 25.
91Stephanie von Buchau, “Honegger, Judith,” FM & The Arts, April 1966, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box
25.

61
Abravanel.”92 He complimented Abravanel’s “sure instinct” in choosing works “that can

be listened to and enjoyed.”93 Abravanel’s recordings of the Mahler cycle were along the

same line, as the next chapter will discuss.

While the above-mentioned recordings were mostly of underrepresented

repertoire, Abravanel also recorded popular works, for example, Leroy Anderson’s short

pieces and two of Tchaikovsky’s ballets—The Nutcracker and Swan Lake. The album for

Anderson’s works, “the first extensive [collection] in several years,” included many

popular pieces such as “Sleigh Ride,” “Bugler’s Holiday,” “The Syncopated Clock,” and

“Typewriter.”94 Abravanel’s “gentler treatment” was, according to R. D. Darrell, close to

the interpretation of the composer—“genial and warmly lyrical in contrast to the far more

bravura readings offered by Fiedler and Fennell.”95 The complete version of The

Nutcracker, offered at a bargain price, could “tempt listeners previously unfamiliar with

the complete score to discover how much more there is in this ballet than in the familiar

suite or abridgments alone.”96 Musically, the recording of The Nutcracker was vibrant

with “verve and spontaneity,” and Abravanel’s “more broad and sober approach” offered

a nice alternative for the audience.97 Abravanel’s recording of excerpts from Swan Lake,

a “beautiful engineered” recording, was “slightly prosaic,” because a standalone ballet

92Emerson Batdorff, “Abravanel Picks Another Winner,” The Plain Dealer, 7 November 1965, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
93 Ibid.
94R. D. Darrell, “‘Fiddle Faddle and 14 Other Leroy Anderson Favorites,” High Fidelity 18/4 (April 1968):
30.
95 Ibid.
96 R. D. Darrell, “Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker, Op. 71,” High Fidelity 12/4 (April 1962), 80.
97The Denver Post, 28 November 1965; Jack Diether, “Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker,” The American
Record Guide 32/4 (December 1965), 311.

62
recording needed “more vividness and shiny brilliance.”98 The two Tchaikovsky albums

were recorded before they recorded Mahler’s Eighth, and the Anderson album was

recorded after it. Nonetheless, all three recordings presented well-known works in warm,

stereo sound, and the Anderson album and Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker offered more

complete versions than most of others on the market.

Abravanel’s most unusual recording was a 1964 collaboration (VRS 9160) with

the folk singer Joan Baez in a performance of “Cantilena” from Villa-Lobos’s Fifth

Bachiana Brasileira accompanied by a cello ensemble of eight cellists from the Utah

Symphony. Joan Baez’s career as a folk singer started at a successful guest appearance at

the Newport Folk Festival in 1959, and she made six recordings with Vanguard in the

early 1960s.99 Besides the Villa-Lobos piece, the 1964 album included eleven traditional

and folk songs with Baez using guitar to accompany herself. Although Baez was not an

opera singer, her voice was powerful and her interpretation confident; in keeping with

Abravanel’s conducting style of not adding too much personal interpretation, Baez’s

tempo only changed during sectional transitions. Jack Diether applauded the recording

for its instrumentation, recorded sound, and Baez’s voice. Abravanel used one cello in

each of the eight parts, “restor[ing] the chamber-music lightness.”100 This chamber sound

was fittingly recorded by Vanguard, so “each instrument receives its due in clarity and

presence.” Baez’s voice of “bell-like purity and lightness” turned the recording into “an

98 Ray Ericson, “Tchaikovsky: Swan Lake,” High Fidelity 9/8 (August 1959): 61.
99Mark C. Samples, “Baez, Joan,” The Grove Dictionary of American Music, www.oxfordmusiconline,
accessed 19 May 2015.
100Jack Diether, “Villa-Lobos: Bachiana Brasileira No. 5 for Soprano and Eight Cellos—Aria (Cantilena),”
The American Record Guide 31/6 (February 1965), 503.

63
ineffable and breath-taking piece of music.”101 By offering a classical piece on a folk

album, Vanguard demonstrated its inventiveness in the recording business, coordinated

artists across genres, and pooled their resources to expand their audience. These

recordings of a wide range of works from choral and modern works to popular and folk

music elucidates the orchestra and the record company’s strategy in delivering recordings

not on the market, which led them to recording Mahler’s music.

The Utah Symphony’s fruitful collaboration with Vanguard was interrupted in

April 1969 because of the declining sales in the market of classical music recordings.102

Before 1969, it had recorded most of Mahler’s symphonies—Mahler’s Eighth in 1963,

Seventh in 1964, Second in 1967, Fourth in 1968, and Third and Ninth in 1969. In the

1970s, Abravanel continued recording for several other record companies, including Vox,

Angel, CRI, and Orion. In 1973 the president of Vox, George de Mendelssohn-Bartholdy,

proposed to record the rest of Mahler’s symphonies, but Abravanel preferred to leave the

opportunity to Vanguard. Seymour Solomon, the producer and co-owner at Vanguard,

accepted Abravanel’s proposal and flew to Salt Lake City with his engineers in May 1974

to record Mahler’s First, Fifth, and Sixth Symphonies as well as the Adagio from the

Tenth Symphony, completing the Utah Symphony’s Mahler cycle.103 Thereafter,

Vanguard recorded Brahms’s complete symphonies (1976) and Sibelius’s complete

symphonies (1977) in Utah.104 In 1978, a year before retiring, Abravanel recorded

Robertson’s Oratorio from the Book of Mormon for the third time for Columbia

101 Ibid., 503, 504.


102 Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts, 224.
103 Ibid., 225.
104 Ibid., 226.

64
Masterworks, again with many local musicians, including soloists Hervey Hicks, John

Prather, Clayne Robison, and JoAnn Ottley and the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, directed

by Jerold Ottley (JoAnn Ottley’s husband). This would be Abravanel’s last recording,105

suitably closing Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s recording journey with a choral

work by a Utahn composer.

The Louisville Orchestra: A Similar Story

The Utah Symphony’s recording career was unusual but by no means unexampled;

a similar story may be found in Kentucky. Between 1948 and 1957, the Louisville

Orchestra and its music director from 1937 to 1967, Robert Whitney, commissioned 132

works, about a hundred of which were recorded.106 This project only lasted a decade but

left the Louisville Orchestra a long-lasting association with new music.107

The Louisville Orchestra was experiencing financial difficulties in the 1940s and

hit its low point after a three-day extravaganza in April 1947.108 In 1949, the orchestra, its

conductor Robert Whitney, and the orchestra president and Louisville mayor, Charles P.

Farnsley, searched for ways to overcome the large deficit. Reducing the orchestra size

and fund-raising only provided limited help, so Whitney and Farnsley decided to

105
Robertson Wilson, “Leroy Robertson and the Oratorio from the Book of Mormon: Reminiscence of a
Daughter,” 12–13.
106Jeanne Marie Belfy, “The Commissioning Project of the Louisville Orchestra, 1948–1958: A Study of
the History and Music” (Ph.D. diss., University of Kentucky and University of Louisville, 1986); Jeanne
Marie Belfy, “Judith and the Louisville Orchestra: The Rest of the Story,” College Music Symposium 31
(January 1, 1991): 36–48; Michael Mauskapf, “The American Orchestra as Patron and Presenter, 1945–
Present: A Selective Discography,” Notes 66/2 (2009), 385–386; Philip Hart, “Louisville Orchestra,” in
Orpheus in the New World: 192–211.
107 Belfy, “Judith and the Louisville Orchestra: The Rest of the Story,” 48.
108 Ibid., 38.

65
commission new works to make “a concrete contribution to the music” and, if they

happened to record a masterpiece, perhaps make a profit and leave their names in the

history book.109 Although the commission project was largely due to Farnsley’s advocacy,

Whitney, himself a composer, was sympathetic to contemporary composers’ lack of

performance opportunities and welcomed the suggestion.110

The commissions started in the 1948–1949 season, with six subscription concerts

premiering six newly-commissioned works by Joaquin Rodrigo, Virgil Thomson, Darius

Milhaud, Claude Almand, Gian-Francesco Malipiero, and Roy Harris. In March 1949, the

orchestra approached the dancer Martha Graham, who then proposed to have Schumann

compose the music.111 The orchestra’s financial crisis persisted, so Farnsley requested a

$40,000 grant from the Louisville Foundation in the spring of 1949. Five works were

commissioned in the 1949–1950 season from Robert Russell Bennett, William Schuman,

David Diamond, Paul Hindemith, and Claude Almand.112 Schuman’s work especially

marked a turning point for the orchestra and proved the commission project beneficial.

The premiere of Schuman’s Judith, with Graham dancing with the orchestra, attracted

national attention and turned both the composer and dancer into the orchestra’s

champions. The orchestra was then invited to New York to perform Judith in the

Carnegie Hall on December 29, 1950.113

109These were how Whitney remembered the reasons Farnsley used to convince him to commission new
works, from Robert S. Whitney (Transcript of Tapes 29–32, Series I, Record Group 60, Oral History
Collection, University of Louisville Archives and Records Center, 1970), pp. 76–83, quoted in Belfy,
“Judith and the Louisville Orchestra: The Rest of the Story,” 41.
110 Belfy, “Judith and the Louisville Orchestra: The Rest of the Story,” 39–41.
111 Ibid., 42–44.
112 Ibid., 42.
113 Ibid., 43–44.

66
In contrast with Abravanel’s strategic selection of repertoire for Vanguard, two

grants from the Rockefeller Foundation were crucial for the Louisville Orchestra to

record the commissioned works.114 A grant of $400,000 in 1953 helped launch the

recording project, and a second grant of $100,000 in 1955 helped sustain the project,

called the First Edition series. The first installment of recordings, including twelve

records, were produced in 1955. By the end of the 1970s, the series included more than a

hundred recordings and most of them were premiere recordings. Whitney’s successor

Jorge Mester also recorded unrecorded, nineteenth-century works.115 Individual mail-

order subscribers, libraries, and music schools subscribed to the series, because these

recordings provided “important documentation of certain aspects of American

composition during the mid-20th century.”116

The Louisville Orchestra’s ascent to fame was reminiscent of the story of the

Utah Symphony in that they both looked for paths less trodden in the market of classical

music recordings. Their exact paths, however, were different. The First Edition series did

not bring the expected profit, partly because, unlike the Utah Symphony, the Louisville

musicians were paid at the national scale mandated by the American Federation of

Musicians. In addition, the Louisville Orchestra started its own label and recorded mostly

newly-commissioned works, whereas the Utah Symphony worked with an established

114Mauskapf, “The American Orchestra as Patron and Presenter, 1945–Present: A Selective Discography,”
385.
115 Hart, Orpheus in the New World, 196.
116 Ibid., 195–196.

67
label and recorded neglected works. Nonetheless, through national publicity, recordings

brought both orchestras under the spotlight and promoted their growth.117

117 Ibid., 197.

68
CHAPTER 4. MAHLER IN UTAH, 1951–1964

In September 2014, the Utah Symphony announced its plan to perform the Mahler

symphony cycle in two seasons; the first four symphonies were programmed in the 2014–

2015 season and the rest in the 2015–2016 season. Explaining his choice of Mahler as the

two-season focus, Music Director Thierry Fischer stated, “The Utah Symphony is still

very much alive as a Mahler orchestra” and that the Mahler cycle was a natural choice for

the seventy-fifth anniversary.1 To complement the Mahler performances, the McKay

Music Library at the University of Utah uploaded digitized versions of Abravanel’s

Mahler scores as each symphony was performed,2 and orchestra members were

interviewed for their memories about the times when they recorded Mahler under

Abravanel’s direction.3 These concerts would also bring forth two new Mahler

recordings—the First Symphony was released on September 11, 2015, and the Eighth

was recorded with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir on February 19 and 20, 2016 and

schedule to be released in 2017.4 Mahler is again celebrated in many forms in Salt Lake

City.

The Symphony’s initial steps towards programming Mahler’s works began in the

1950s, culminating with Abravanel’s recordings of Mahler’s Eighth and Seventh

1Catherine Reese Newton, “Utah Symphony revving up Mahler cycle again,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 7
September 2014,
http://entertainment.sltrib.com/articles/view/utah_symphony_revving_up_the_mahler_cycle_again,
accessed 7 September 2014.
2“The Annotated Mahler Scores,” School of Music, The University of Utah,
http://music.utah.edu/students/mckay-music-library/Scores.php, accessed 12 September 2014.
3“Abravanel Memories,” Utah Symphony, http://www.utahsymphony.org/the-mahler-cycle/abravanel-
memories, accessed 4 July 2015.
4 “Utah Symphony releases first recording under Music Director Thierry Fischer, Mahler Symphony No. 1,
on September 11,” Utah Symphony | Utah Opera, 21 August 2015, http://www.usuo.org/news-more/press-
releases/item/188-utah-symphony-recording-mahler-thierry-fischer, accessed 5 September 2015.

69
Symphonies in 1963 and 1964, respectively. Requiring three choruses, the Eighth

Symphony showcased Salt Lake City’s long choral tradition and Vanguard’s

entrepreneurship; the Seventh Symphony suited Abravanel’s propensity for conducting

underrepresented works. Abravanel’s decision to use the Critical Edition, newly

published in 1960, distinguished the recording from others, as this was the first Mahler

recording performed from a Critical Edition. Both recordings filled gaps in the catalog

and had immediate and long-felt repercussions. In 1974 Abravanel and the Utah

Symphony set a record by becoming the first American orchestra to have recorded a full

cycle of Mahler’s symphonies. Although Abravanel’s Mahler recordings were joined and

overshadowed by newer ones, they helped the Utah Symphony break into the national

and international markets and turned Mahler into a local favorite.

This chapter examines Abravanel’s Mahler performances from 1951 to 1965, his

first two recordings of Mahler’s symphonies, and the reception of the recordings. The

first performances before 1963 often included more popular works that featured vocalists,

which helped attract the local audience accustomed to choral music. In 1963 and 1964,

the concerts of the Eighth and Seventh Symphonies received welcoming reviews that

detailed the musicians’ remarkable performance, the active attendance of the local

audience, and local critics’ acceptance of the composer’s music. The recordings were

reviewed in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, London, Lausanne,

etc. The level of coverage—national and international—helped fuel local pride in the

orchestra. Besides commenting on the recordings, reviews indicated the increasing

demand for Mahler’s music in America, myths about the composer, and the listeners’

preference for more passionate, emotional readings of Mahler, especially evident in the

70
popularity of Bernstein’s recordings. The Mahler Medal from the Bruckner Society of

America and congratulatory letters from Erwin Ratz, the president of the Internationale

Gustav Mahler Gesellschaft and the editor of the Critical Editions, joined the array of

outside recognitions. Through the words of local and outside critics and reviewers, this

chapter considers how Abravanel’s concerts and recordings of Mahler’s symphonies

transformed a regional orchestra into a source of local pride and international renown.

Performances of Mahler’s Music in Utah from 1951 to 1961

Before conducting and recording Mahler’s Eighth Symphony in 1963, Abravanel

programmed Mahler’s works six times (see Table 4.1). Through these performances, the

Utahn audience experienced Mahler’s music live and, through the program notes, learned

about his life, works, place in music history, and the myth that he had been forgotten

since his death. Among the six performances, five included at least one vocalist,

demonstrating the strong vocal music scene in Utah. With the exception of the Second

Symphony, these early performances featured Mahler’s most popular works. Perhaps

thanks to Abravanel’s purposeful selection of more accessible pieces, Mahler’s music

was readily welcomed by the community.

Table 4.1: Performances of Mahler’s Music in Utah, 1951–1961

Date Mahler work Other works


January 10, 1951 Fourth Symphony Hindemith’s Matthias the Painter
(Soloist: Blanche William Grant Still’s Adagio and
Christensen, soprano) Animato from Afro-American
Symphony

71
Table 4.1. Continued

January 21, 1953 Das Lied von der Erde Schubert’s Eighth Symphony
(Soloists: Nell
Tangeman, contralto;
and Raymond Manton,
tenor)
January 20, 1954 First Symphony Purcell’s Trumpet Voluntary
Handel’s Concerto No. 10 in D minor
(Adagio—Allegro)
Walter Piston’s Prelude and Allegro for
Organ and Strings
Debussy’s La Mer
October 31, 1956 Lieder eines fahrenden Berlioz’s Roman Carnival Overture
Gesellen Gluck’s Che Faro, Handel’s Where’er
(Soloist: Risë Stevens, You Walk, and Mozart’s Voi Che Sapete
mezzo soprano) Mendelssohn’s Symphony No. 4
Bizet’s Two Arias from “Carmen”
Rimsky Korsakov’s Cappricio
Espagnol
March 16, 1960 Second Symphony
(Soloists: Beryl Jensen,
alto; and Jean Preston,
soprano)
Adagietto from the Fifth
Symphony
November 15, Fourth Symphony Brahms’s Third Symphony
1961 (Soloist: Jean Preston, Copland’s Outdoor Overture
soprano)

The 1950s

Three of the Mahler performances in the 1950s featured at least one vocalist. The

first vocalist to appear with the Utah Symphony, Blanche Christensen, was a native of

Los Angeles, who got married in 1945 and settled down in Salt Lake City. She performed

with the Utah Symphony between 1947 and 1968 and taught voice lessons for more than

72
40 years in Salt Lake City.5 She would again sing in the 1963 concert and recording of

Mahler’s Eighth Symphony as well as the 1966 performance of Mahler’s Second

Symphony. A mezzo-soprano, Risë Stevens sang with the Met from 1938 to 1961 and

was known for the role of Bizet’s Carmen, which she sang 124 times.6 Fittingly, the 1956

concert included two arias from this opera. Her fame brought in an audience of 4,000.7

Concert reviews singled out Stevens’s performance; Conrad Harrison called it “superb”

and “with rare intelligence and vocal beauty” and praised the symphony’s

“improvements and growth.”8 Durham considered Stevens a “co-artist with the orchestra”

and the performance of the work “moving” and “dramatic.”9 Although the 1956 concert

was Stevens’s only Mahler performance with the Utah Symphony, many more

established singers would appear in the Utah Symphony’s performances of Mahler’s

music.10 Respectively, Christensen and Stevens exemplified how the Utah Symphony

built long-term partnerships with local vocalists and invited guest singers to attract

listeners.

5“Blanche Christensen,” Deseret News, 6 December 2009,


http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/deseretnews/obituary.aspx?n=blanche-christensen&pid=136933884,
accessed 30 September 2015.
6Margalit Fox, “Risë Stevens, Opera Singer, Dies at 99,” The New York Times, 21 March 2013,
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/22/arts/music/rise-stevens-opera-singer-dies-at-99.html, accessed 1
October 2015.
7Conrad Harrison, “Symphony, Rise Stevens Thrill 4,000 At Debut,” Deseret News and Telegram, 1
November 1956, Maurice Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 82, Special Collections and Archives, University
of Utah, J. Willard Marriott Library, Salt Lake City, Utah.
8 Ibid.
9Lowell Durham, “Symphony Opens 17th Season,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 1 November 1956, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 82.
10 Beverly Sills and Maureen Forrester, for example, performed Mahler’s works with the Utah Symphony,
as will be discussed later.

73
The announcements, program notes, and reviews of the early concerts revealed

the support from local music critics, in particular Lowell Durham and Conrad Harrison.11

Durham was a central figure in Salt Lake City and a close friend of Abravanel. He earned

his Ph.D. in composition from the University of Iowa in 1945. After returning to Utah in

1946, he was the music director at the local radio station KSL, taught at the University of

Utah, and wrote for The Salt Lake Tribune. Beginning in 1948, he wrote program notes

for the Utah Symphony throughout Abravanel’s directorship.12 His Abravanel! would be

the only book-length biography of the conductor, documenting Abravanel’s time with the

Utah Symphony.

Durham played no small part in Utah’s Mahler tradition. Like Abravanel, Durham

was a Mahlerite. In Iowa, he studied with composer-conductor Philip Greeley Clapp, a

recipient of the Mahler Medal from the Bruckner Society of America in 1942. Under

Clapp, Durham performed in Mahler’s Second, Fourth, Fifth, and Eighth Symphonies as

well as Das Lied von der Erde and Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen.13 In the program

notes for Utah’s first Mahler concert, Durham revealed his interest in the composer and

expressed his hope that Abravanel would continue to program Mahler.14 In his concert

review for the 1954 performance of Mahler’s First Symphony, he confessed that he was

11Local critics mainly worked for Salt Lake City’s two biggest newspapers, the Deseret News and The Salt
Lake Tribune, established in 1850 and 1870, respectively.
12 Between 1947 and 1964, Durham was the chief administrative officer for the College of Fine Arts of the
University of Utah for sixteen years, first as a shadow dean then as the dean in 1954. He was instrumental
in allowing the symphony rehearse on campus for twenty years since 1948. Throughout the years, he
remained the “liaison man for the university with the symphonies.” Lowell Durham, “Lowell Durham, Salt
Lake City, Utah: an interview by Winnifred Margetts,” Everett L. Cooley Oral History Project, Tape Nos.
U-441 and U-442, 27 March 1986, 5, 10, 12–14, 16–17, 22, 27–30, 38, 48–52.
13
Lowell Durham, “Performing Arts: He Gambled and Won,” s.n., 3 December 1964, Abravanel Papers,
Ms 517, Box 83.
14 Lowell Durham, Program Notes, 10 January 1951, 21, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 31.

74
“one of those who have needled Mr. Abravanel to bring more Mahler to our community”

and thought that it would take more time for the community to embrace Mahler, because

“Mahler’s babies are never the regular nine-month variety; their incubation period is

somewhat longer.”15 Although Abravanel himself was a Mahlerite and would have

programmed Mahler’s music without Durham’s suggestion, it probably helped to have

another Mahler enthusiast to support his programming decisions.

Conrad Harrison had been a local critic and would also be a longtime supporter of

Abravanel and the Utah Symphony. He worked at the Logan Herald Journal and the Salt

Lake Telegram before joining the Deseret News in 1941, focusing on sports. He was on

the committee that hired Abravanel. In the 1950s, he was a music critic at the Deseret

News.16 Harrison left the newspaper business in 1960 when he was appointed as a water

commissioner. From 1974 to 1976 he was the Salt Lake City mayor.17 He would later

write Five Thousand Concerts, the only book on the Utah Symphony’s history.18

The 1960s

Through famous vocalists, enthusiastic critics, and a knowledgeable conductor,

the community was given a strong introduction to Mahler’s music; after the warm-up

15Lowell Durham, “Organ Wizard Schreiner Thrills Concert Throng,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 21 January
1954, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 74.
16 Paul Rolly, “Ex-mayor, journalist loved music,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 14 February 2008,
http://www.sltrib.com/news/ci_8258633, accessed 5 July 2015.
17 “Conrad Harrison, former mayor, dies,” Deseret Morning News, 14 February 2008,
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/695253024/Conrad-Harrison-former-mayor-dies.html?pg=all,
accessed 5 July 2015.
18Conrad B. Harrison, Five Thousand Concerts: A Commemorative History of the Utah Symphony (Salt
Lake City, Utah: Utah Symphony Society, 1986).

75
period featuring Mahler’s most popular works, his more difficult works would be

introduced to Utahns in the 1960s in concerts and recordings. In 1960, Abravanel

programmed an all-Mahler concert, featuring the Second Symphony and the Adagietto of

the Fifth Symphony. This concert opened the most intense Mahler decade in Utah, in

which Abravanel scheduled more than ten performances and recorded six symphonies

with the Utah Symphony.

The 1960s was an exciting decade for Mahler’s music. In 1960, the New York

Philharmonic held a Mahler festival with three prominent conductors: Bruno Walter,

Dimitri Mitropoulos, and Leonard Bernstein. The First, Second, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh

(first Nachtmusik only), Ninth, and Tenth (Adagio only) as well as four Rückert songs,

Kindertotenlieder, and Das Lied von der Erde were programmed with works by, for

example, Mozart, Rachmaninov, Ravel, Tchaikovsky, and Liszt.19 Bernstein dedicated

one Young People’s Concert to Mahler—entitled “Who Is Gustav Mahler?”—and

recorded his first Mahler cycle between 1960 and 1967.20 In Los Angeles, William

Malloch recorded the memories of musicians who knew or played under Mahler.21 These

interviews were issued on the bonus LP for Bernstein’s fourteen-record Mahler cycle.22

Although Mahler had been programmed in America between his death and 1960, the

New York Philharmonic boosted Mahler’s popularity through concerts, recordings, and

television.

19 Christopher Jarrett Page, “Leonard Bernstein and the Resurrection of Gustav Mahler” (Ph.D., University
of California, Los Angeles, 2000), 180–181.
20 Page, 219–232, 323–360.
21Edward R. Reilly, “Mahler in America,” in The Mahler Companion, edited by Donald Mitchell and
Andrew Nicholson, 422–437 (Oxford University Press, 1999), 433.
22 Page, 361–363.

76
As the Utah press observed the festivities around the nation, the Utah

Symphony’s 1960 concert was excitedly anticipated—“[a] big turnout is expected.”23

Many newspapers noted the scale of the work as well as the special timing for Mahler’s

centennial.24 The press emphasized that the Second Symphony was more difficult than

the ones previously performed; Durham’s concert review was titled “Difficult

‘Resurrection’ Symphony Wins Plaudits,” and Harrison stated “That [Abravanel’s]

orchestra responded through the extremely difficult score with one of its finest

performances, was also much to his credit.”25 Jean Preston, the soprano in the concert,

was a local vocalist; a native of Montpelier, Idaho, Preston studied music in Salt Lake

City, moved to Los Angeles, and later moved back to Salt Lake City.26 She would later

participate in more Mahler performances.27 The concert lived up to expectations.

Harrison called the concert “sensational,” and the audience gave a standing ovation.28

Durham applauded Abravanel and the orchestra’s performance—“[the orchestra] had

prepared themselves well for this work’s first local performance”—and especially praised

the “thrilling performance” of the chorus.29

23 “Ends Successful Season: Utah Symphony Final Tonight,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 16 March 1960.
24 Ibid.
25Lowell Durham, “Difficult ‘Resurrection’ Symphony Wins Plaudits,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 17 March
1960; Conrad Harrison, “Season’s Finale: Orchestra, Vocalists Rise to New Heights,” Deseret News and
Telegram, 19 March 1960, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.
26 “West Soprano Jean Preston Dated in Utah,” Deseret News, 11 April 1958.
27 Other vocalists in this performance included Beryl Smiley (alto) and the University of Utah chorus.
28Conrad Harrison, “Season’s Finale: Orchestra, Vocalists Rise to New Heights,” Deseret News and
Telegram, 19 March 1960, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.
29 Durham, “Difficult ‘Resurrection’ Symphony Wins Plaudits.”

77
One more concert featuring Mahler’s music took place before 1963. On

November 15, 1961, Mahler’s Fourth Symphony was programmed with Johannes

Brahms’s Third Symphony and Aaron Copland’s “Outdoor Overture.” The 1961 concert

again featured Jean Preston. Music and art critic Harold Lundstrom from the Deseret

News reviewed the concert with obvious enthusiasm;30 he called the performance of

Brahms “delightfully full-blooded” and with “honeyed warmth” and praised Abravanel

for “integrating some of the rather loosely constructed passages in which Mahler

occasionally seems to be hunting around for something to say.”31 As a whole, these six

performances—with two songs, two shorter symphonies, and the difficult Second—

brought Mahler’s better-known works into Utah. The next two performances would

feature two of Mahler’s least-known works.

Eighth Symphony, “Symphony of a Thousand”

As described by Abravanel, the 1963 performance of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony

in Utah was a “mad” and “enormous undertaking.”32 Close to nine hundred performers

were on stage, and more than five thousand listeners were in the audience. In the same

30 Harold Lundstrom’s relationship with the Utah Symphony was not as close as that of Durham and
Harrison. Abravanel pointed out several occasions when Lundstrom’s reports were faulty. According to the
maestro, when the symphony played for the Ballet West, the ballet thought Abravanel asked too much for
his musicians. (Maurice Abravanel, interview by Jay M. Haymond, 7 October 1981, Utah State Historical
Society Oral History Program, 30, Abravanel papers, Ms 517, Box 4.) In response to the incident,
Lundstrom started expressing his view that Salt Lake City needed another orchestra and “criticizing badly
whenever the Symphony played for Ballet or Opera.” (Abravanel, interview by Jay M. Haymond, 7
October 1981.) In Lundstrom’s concert reviews of the Utah Symphony’s Mahler performances, he did
occasionally mention the negative side of the concerts without directly criticizing the symphony.
31Harold Lundstrom, “Symphony Wins High Praise For Concert,” Deseret News and Telegram, 16
November 1961, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 75.
32Abravanel, “Convocation for Maestro Maurice Abravanel Mahler Award”; Paul Wetzel, “Mahler 8th,”
The Salt Lake Tribune, 9 April 1978, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 124.

78
spirit as the world and American premieres, the Utah premiere was communal; moreover,

because it took place at the Mormon Tabernacle, the Utah concert accentuated the

spiritual aspect of the work.

Premieres

The compositional history and premieres of the Eighth Symphony infused

important meaning into the work. When Mahler finished the symphony in the summer of

1906, he was quite satisfied with the work: “I have finished my Eighth Symphony. It is

the grandest thing I have done yet, and so peculiar in content and form that it is really

impossible to write anything about it. Try to imagine the whole universe beginning to

ring and resound. These are no longer human voices, but planets and suns revolving.”33

The all-inclusive nature of the work, when translated into performances, required the

collective effort of the community.

On September 10, 1910, when Mahler premiered this work (his last time

premiering his own work), the event was truly grand; the performance venue had 3,200

seats. To sell tickets, the impresario gave the work an evocative nickname, “Symphony of

a Thousand,” which fittingly described the large number of performers for this premiere.

The large scale also changed the meaning of the performance venue and audience. As

Karen Painter notes, the “location of the performance became important to musical

listening in ways never mentioned in reviews of Mahler’s earlier symphonies.”34

33Mahler’s letter of 18 August 1906, quoted in La Grange, Gustav Mahler, Vol. 3: Vienna: Triumph and
Disillusion, 1904–1907 (Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press, 2000), 926.
34Karen Painter, “The Aesthetics of Mass Culture: Mahler’s Eighth Symphony and Its Legacy,” in Mahler
and His World, edited Karen Painter (Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2002), 138.

79
Additionally, the audience became a key aspect of the performance—“the conductor and

audience were as much part of the experience as was the sounding music.”35 In short,

from the beginning, performances of Mahler’s Eighth became events of the masses,

contributed by musicians onstage, the audience offstage, and the venue housing the

concerts.36

Six years later, at its Philadelphia premiere, Mahler’s Eighth was again an event

of the masses. After witnessing the Munich premiere by Mahler, Leopold Stokowski

wanted to premiere the work in the United States, which took place on March 2, 1916

with the Philadelphia Orchestra. Stokowski’s successful American premiere brought

eight more performances in Philadelphia and one at the Metropolitan Opera on April 9,

1916. The American premiere, as David Paul argues in his dissertation, was meaningful

to the community; the large scope of Mahler’s Eighth “virtually guaranteed the

involvement of amateurs” and therefore united the community.37 Donald Mitchell

expressed a similar view: the Eighth Symphony, requiring “both amateurs (the chorus)

and professionals (soloists and orchestra),” exhibited a “communal character, an

apparatus designed for communal participation, to exalt and ennoble, inspire and

35 Ibid., 140.
36Although Painter used the term “masses” to relate to political movements, in particular the Austrian
Social Democratic reform, I use the terms “masses” and “mass” to emphasize the participation of a large
number of people, including musicians, amateurs, and the audience. See more details in Painter, “The
Aesthetics of Mass Culture: Mahler’s Eighth Symphony and Its Legacy,” 127–156.
37David Christopher Paul, “Converging Paths to the Canon: Charles Ives, Gustav Mahler, and American
Culture” (Ph.D. diss., University of California at Berkeley, 2006), 158. See more details about how
Mahler’s Eighth Symphony was received in Philadelphia in 1916 in Paul’s dissertation, in particular in
pages 160–168.

80
enjoy.”38 The strong sense of being a community, furthermore, turned into a pride for

achieving more than other communities, in Philadelphia’s case, New York.39

Concert in Salt Lake City: December 7, 1963

In 1963, Salt Lake City excitedly awaited the “most ambitious musical

undertaking in the history of the Utah Symphony Orchestra.”40 Jim Fitzpatrick, arts and

culture editor at The Salt Lake Tribune in the early 1960s,41 called the work the

“highpoint of this year’s season” in the season announcement. Both Alma Mahler’s

praise of Abravanel as the “ideal conductor” for Mahler’s music and Abravanel’s

borrowing of Bruno Walter’s score fueled the anticipation.42 As the concert neared, the

excitement of the orchestra’s recording project intensified. The recording sessions

following the concert were repeatedly mentioned in the newspapers. The composer’s

claim that the Eighth was “the greatest work” of his and “a gift to the nation…a great

dispenser of joy” was quoted.43 To prepare for the concert, the 85-member orchestra was

38 Donald Mitchell, “The Twentieth Century’s Debt to Mahler: Our Debt to Him in the Twenty-first (2001),”
in Discovering Mahler: Writings on Mahler, 1955–2005, selected by Gastón Fournier-Facio and Richard
Alston; edited by Gastón Fournier-Facio, co-ordinating editor Jill Burrows (Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK ;
Rochester, NY: Boydell Press, 2007), 563–564.
39 Paul, “Converging Paths to the Canon: Charles Ives, Gustav Mahler, and American Culture,” 164.
40“Symphony, Soloists, Choruses Ready Saturday Concert Classic,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 1 December
1963, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.
41 Tim Fitzpatrick, “Editor Column: The Tribune has been my family home for a century,” The Salt Lake
Tribune, 14 April 2015,
http://www.sltrib.com/content404v4.php?ref=/entertainment/nightlife/sltrib/news/56150011-78/tribune-
editor-lake-salt.html.csp, accessed 5 July 2015.
42Jim Fitzpatrick, “‘Firsts’ Spark the Selections: Massive and Powerful Is Orchestra Season,” The Salt
Lake Tribune, 15 September 1963, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.
43Harold Lundstrom, “Music in the News: ‘Symphony of Thousand’ Set Saturday,” Deseret News and
Telegram, 5 December 1963, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.

81
expanded. Seven soloists from the Metropolitan Opera Studio joined the Utah musicians,

including David Clatworthy (baritone), Jeannine Crader (soprano), Nancy Williams

(mezzo), Malcolm Smith (bass), Lynn Owen (soprano), Marlena Kleinman (mezzo), and

Stanley Kolk (tenor). One more soloist was the local soprano Blanche Christensen, who

had sung at the 1951 performance of Mahler’s Fourth Symphony. Three local choirs

joined the event: two University of Utah Choruses, directed by Newell B. Weight and

John Marlow Nielson, and the children’s chorus directed by Vernon J. Lee-Master,

supervisor of music in the Salt Lake Public Schools. The sheer scale of the performance

was meticulously calculated—400–500 chorus singers from two adult choirs, 150–200

children, 110–150 orchestra musicians, 8 soloists, 1 organist, and 1 conductor—“the

biggest (numerically) musical project the Utah Symphony Orchestra has ever done.”44

The concert was attended by a “capacity audience of 5,500,” who “responded

with a standing ovation.”45 Salt Lake critics could hardly express their enthusiasm. Jim

Fitzpatrick opened his review summarizing the concert: “Gigantic musical exaltation

delivered with unforgettable power constituted the lavish early Christmas present with

which the Utah Symphony Orchestra nearly overwhelmed a jam-packed audience in the

Salt Lake Tabernacle Saturday night.”46 Harold Lundstrom called the concert “superb”

and in particular applauded the soloists and choruses.47

44 Ibid.
45 Lowell Durham, “Utah/Mahler in the Tabernacle,” Musical America 84 (February 1964): 14–15.
46Jim Fitzpatrick, “Majesty, Power of Mahler Symphony Awe Audience,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 8
December 1963, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.
47Harold Lundstrom, “Utah Symphony Superb In Mahler Performance,” Deseret News and Telegram, 9
December 1963, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.

82
Similar to the Munich and Philadelphia premieres, the Utah performance of

Mahler’s Eighth brought a strong sense of community to Salt Lake City. Utah

newspapers emphasized the challenge to program such a monumental work, for which

the Utahns were proud of the orchestra’s endeavor, the available choruses in the

community, and the large Mormon Tabernacle that could host the event. Furthermore,

Utahns viewed the successful concert as proof of their musical standing. Many

newspaper articles mentioned that the concert was the work’s Utah premiere and the

second performance to the west of the Mississippi River (with the first by Eugene

Ormandy at the Hollywood Bowl in 1948) to support the claim that Salt Lake City was an

important musical center in the Western United States.48

While Mahler’s Eighth Symphony’s need for a large number of musicians united

the community, its spiritual connotations brought together Mormons and non-Mormons

at the Tabernacle. Literary scholar Carl Niekerk examines the literary and cultural

contexts of the Eighth Symphony to construct a coherent reading of the texts. According

to Niekerk, the sacred Latin text in a medieval hymn, “Veni, Creator Spiritus,” in the first

movement “demonstrates the existence of a tradition within Christianity . . . that centers

on the body and is close to Oriental wisdom,” while the German text from the last section

of Goethe’s Faust in the second movement “postulates the possibility of a global

community characterized both by difference and sameness.”49 The two movements

therefore fuse into a spiritual work; as the prayer in the first movement sets the stage for

48 “About Symphony No. 8,” Colorado MahlerFest,


http://mahlerfest.org/mfXXII/AboutSymph8/aboutsymph8.html; “Symphonic Music and Opera,”
Hollywood Bowl, http://www.hollywoodbowl.com/philpedia/hollywood-bowl-history/symphonic-music-
and-opera; both accessed 19 June 2015.
49 Carl Niekerk, “Mahler’s Goethe,” The Musical Quarterly 89 (2006), 261.

83
receiving divine bliss, Faust’s being carried into heaven in the second movement

transmits transcendental joy. As Niekerk explains, “Mahler’s symphony seeks to

articulate a truly transcultural model, one that aims at a notion of community that is

global and inclusive, not exclusive and national.”50

The performance venue occupied a central place of the performance. The

Mormon Tabernacle’s roof is “150 feet across and 150 feet long” with approximately

7,000 seats. Acoustically, it was designed to ensure that everyone could hear the speaker

clearly, since amplifiers were not available when the tabernacle was completed in 1867.51

Symbolically, performing such a pan-religious work at the Mormon Tabernacle

emphasized the universal, all-inclusive aspect of music and religion. For Mormons, the

sacredness of the venue may have further authenticated the symphony’s religious

significance. For others, the Tabernacle was transformed into a place for people of all

religions to experience spirituality and music. Fitzpatrick used words like “majesty,”

“awe,” and “exalted” to describe the music, emphasizing spirituality. Lundstrom

described how the symphony revealed “Mahler’s preoccuption [sic] and fascination with

heaven and heavenly life” and “expressed a serene belief in the ultimate triumph of

man.”52 Transcending religious branches and bringing together professional and amateur

musicians, the Eighth Symphony provided an opportunity to unite Mormons and non-

Mormons as well as performers and the audience in Salt Lake City.

50 Ibid.
51 “The Remarkable Acoustics of the Salt Lake Tabernacle,” Mormon Tabernacle Choir, 22 May 2014,
http://www.mormontabernaclechoir.org/articles/acoustics-of-the-salt-lake-tabernacle.html?lang=eng,
accessed 18 December 2015.
52 Lundstrom, “Utah Symphony Superb In Mahler Performance.”

84
Recording Sessions and the Making of the Recording

At first glance, Mahler’s Eighth Symphony might be an unusual choice as the first

Mahler symphony to record. If the number of performers posed a challenge to live

performances, the challenge of making a recording was greater. Indeed, at this time, there

were few monaural recordings from the previous decade and nobody had made a stereo

recording of the work. Upon a closer look, Mahler’s Eighth was a logical choice for Utah.

With the long history of choral music, Salt Lake City could provide multiple choruses

and a venue large enough to host nine hundred performers. After knowing that both

Leonard Bernstein and Eugene Ormandy would not record this symphony, Abravanel

decided to take on the challenge.53 As discussed in Chapter 3, the Utah Symphony’s

partnership with Vanguard began with recording choral works including Robertson’s

Oratorio from the Book of Mormon and Honegger’s Le Roi David. After the success of

Le Roi David, Vanguard promised to record any works Abravanel chose.54 Moreover,

Mahler was not a difficult pick for Vanguard, because both owners, Seymour and

Maynard Solomon, were Mahlerites.

The recording sessions of the Eighth were scheduled on three days: December 9

to 11 from 6 to 9 p.m. and an optional session at 4 p.m. on December 12, which was not

used.55 The sessions took place at the Mormon Tabernacle, as would the rest of the

Mahler cycle. The recording was done with “very long takes,” the typical way Abravanel

53 Abravanel, “Convocation for Maestro Maurice Abravanel Mahler Award.”

Bernstein, however, did record the Eighth in its entirety in 1966. Released in 1967, his recording
was a major competitor of Abravanel’s.
54 Abravanel, “Convocation for Maestro Maurice Abravanel Mahler Award.”
55 “Utah Symphony, Tentative Schedule,” Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 26.

85
and the Utah Symphony recorded.56 By recording long sections, Abravanel aimed to

preserve spontaneity, “the feeling of something really being created right on the spot, not

just reproduced perfectly over and over again.”57 In many recording sessions, the

orchestra pianist Ardean Watts was responsible for sitting “with Seymour Solomon in the

recording booth with the score” to “pick out any mistakes and mark them,” and therefore

he clearly observed the sessions and experienced the effects of long takes. He described

how the sessions went:

. . . both [Abravanel] and Seymour Solomon have the philosophy that continuity
was everything. And they did not like to record little snippets. Abravanel would
get started on a movement and he would want to just keep going. And Seymour
would say the same to me backstage. He said it’s amazing! Why did they keep
going? Why don’t they just stop? . . . I think he shared with Abravanel that there
was some mystic connected with nature. With the beat of music, that once it got
rolling you have to let it roll. And I think in a way the recordings reflect that.
There is a kind of continuity and there is also a kind of don’t get hung up in the
details. Get to the essence. Find the essence and drive for it.58

Watts’s descriptions also accentuated the active role of producers. To produce recordings,

the producer and sound engineer joined the conductor and musicians in the process and

final product. In particular, Solomon ensured the sound would be as good as the current

technology allowed.

The hardware was carefully chosen. Sixteen microphones were placed among the

musicians, ensuring clear reception of the sound. Although some might dislike the

separate sound from each of the sixteen microphones—as opposed to a more unified,

wholesome sound from fewer microphones—many critics specified the number of

56“Mephisto’s Musings,” High Fidelity / Musical America 16/9 (September 1966), MA-3, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 76.
57 Ibid.
58 Phone interview with author, 18 January 2016.

86
microphones and were impressed with the engineers’ attention to detail. Especially for

the chamber sound in the second movement, the sixteen microphones ensured the

individual instrumental groups were heard clearly. The effect of the sixteen microphones

in Abravanel’s recording was clear when compared to Bernstein’s 1967 recording. In

Abravanel’s recording, the separation of voices in the two channels is obvious: solo

voices usually come through the right channel, and sometimes different choirs come out

from different channels, creating a spatial broadness through sound. Although Bernstein’s

recording is also in stereo, the sound from the two channels is much more similar.59 A

new 3M tape, silver gray 200-series, was used to add “precious extra hiss-free db of quiet

at the low end of the volume range.”60 Therefore, when the level of the entire disc was

held low, the overall sound could then be amplified; according to one critic, “[t]hat’s the

proper way to make the loud parts louder.”61 The tapes were then taken to New York for

editing, and the finished recording was distributed in the U.S. and internationally by

Philips in 1964.

The recording’s liner notes were written by Jack Diether, a music critic, Mahler

scholar, and frequent contributor of liner notes for other Mahler recordings. Besides

musical descriptions, background for the work, translations of the texts, and brief

biographical information about the performers, Diether highlighted some aspects specific

to this recording, which probably inspired other reviewers’ discussion about them. First

of all, Vanguard used sixteen microphones and “a revolutionary new tape permitting

59
Leonard Bernstein and the London Symphony Orchestra, Mahler: Symphony No. 8, Columbia
Masterworks, 1967, LP.
60Edward Tatnall Canby, “Record Revue: Mahler: Symphony No. 8,” Audio 48/7 (July 1964): 36,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
61 Ibid.

87
dynamic contrasts ranging from ppp to fff to be registered without excessive tape hiss.”

These technologies were utilized to overcome the challenge of recording the large

work—“There are few if any works of music more challenging to the recording process

than the Mahler Eighth Symphony, and by the same token, there are few works in which

a triumph over the difficulties represent so much of a boon to the appreciation of the

music itself.”62 Secondly, Diether listed the impressive number of performers in this

recording—almost nine hundred total—as well as the recording venue, “one of the truly

great auditoriums of the world but also one of the few adequate to handle this colossal

work.” It was curious that he did not name the Mormon Tabernacle but called it “the hall

made available in Salt Lake City.”63 Perhaps Diether wanted to focus on the orchestra in

the notes and not confuse the buyers by mentioning the Tabernacle. With its

distinguished recording methods, hardware, and program notes, Abravanel and the Utah

Symphony’s first Mahler recording was ready to enter the market.

Record Reviews

The recording did not disappoint; it drew wide attention from newspapers and

record magazines in and outside the United States. Robert Sabin from American Record

Guide, for example, commended the achievements and recognized the challenge: “[The

Utah Symphony] could have won far cheaper victories with more popular works,

infinitely easier to perform. But they have nobly attempted to scale one of the mountain-

62Jack Diether, Liner Notes to Gustav Mahler Symphony No. 8, Maurice Abravanel and the Utah
Symphony Orchestra, Vanguard VSD 71120/1, LP, 1964.
63 Ibid.

88
peaks of music; and I heartily recommend this recording for its spirit of idealism, its

enthusiasm, and its by no means inconsiderable musical power.”64 Robert Marsh, music

critic for Chicago Sun-Times from 1956 to 1993 and for High Fidelity from 1954 to

1972,65 was even more affirming:

My conclusion is that an opportunity has finally been provided to get to


know the Mahler Eighth with the surety that the experience afforded by the
recording will stand up under such concert performances as fate may send my
way. One never gets on cozy terms with this work, any more than one gets cozy
with Mont Blanc, but familiarity—and respect—are now possible for all who seek
them. Moreover, we have discovered a new Mahler conductor of stature and
sympathy in a day when such men are precious indeed.66

Furthermore, Marsh confirmed Abravanel’s contributions to Mahler’s Eighth Symphony,

stating that the recording “may take the Mahler Eighth from the curio department and

convince other conductors and orchestras that it belongs in the regular symphonic

repertory . . .”67 Robert Angles from London’s Records and Recording complimented the

recording: “it will be a long time before I hear anything to match the glory he conjures

from the final pages of the Eighth, setting the seal upon a great Mahler performance that

marks a major event in the history of the gramophone.”68

These and many other reviews celebrated the first stereo recording of the Eighth

Symphony in a studio setting. The lack of a complete, stereo recording prior to that

64Robert Sabin, “Gustav Mahler: Symphony of a Thousand,” American Record Guide 30/10 (June 1964),
941, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
65 “Robert C. Marsh, 77: Classical Music Critic for 37 Years,” Chicago Tribune, 14 May 2002,
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2002-05-14/news/0205140038_1_chicago-sun-times-mr-marsh-music,
accessed 12 July 2015.
66 Robert C. Marsh, “Mahler's Eighth—a Stereo Debut,” High Fidelity 14/7 (July 1964), 51.
67 Ibid.
68Robert Angles, “Symphony of a Thousand,” Records and Recording, December 1965, 100, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.

89
produced by the Utah Symphony prompted the widely enthusiastic reception. Moreover,

the reviews focused on a variety of merits, ranging from the sound quality, the

conductor’s reading, the musicians’ performance, and the fact that the recording was

done in a Western city instead of a metropolitan city on the East coast. The outside

praises in turn made the symphony a point of pride in Utah. In short, through record

reviews from large cities, the recording spread the name of the orchestra and familiarized

outsiders with Salt Lake City.

Mahler’s Eighth was “a composition that cries out for the advantages of stereo.”69

Thus, the stereo sound could better represent the “mammoth ensemble” and the “episodes

of extreme delicacy and subtlety of coloring, which are just as much of a challenge to the

engineers as its thunderous climaxes.”70 Many reviews from specialized record

magazines detailed the recording’s acoustical and technical merits, especially its

capability of capturing details. In the Audio magazine, Edward Tatnall Canby

meticulously described the technologies involved, including the tapes and microphones.

Vanguard’s use of a new tape, according to Canby, was instrumental in bringing loud

passages to life—“With clean cutting and low rumble on very quiet plastic, the overall

disc level is held deliberately low, relying on higher-than-normal amplifier goin [sic] to

bring out the big climaxes. It works like a charm.”71 The “multi-mike stereo technique”

with sixteen microphones could “provide the musical balance that rounds out each group,

69Raymond Ericson, “Disks: Vast 8th: Mahler’s ‘Symphony of a Thousand’ Is At Last Recorded
Stereophonically,” The New York Times, 3 May 1964, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
70Ericson, “Disks: Vast 8th: Mahler’s ‘Symphony of a Thousand’ Is At Last Recorded Stereophonically”;
Sabin, “Gustav Mahler: Symphony of a Thousand,” 938.
71Edward Tatnall Canby, “Record Revue: Mahler: Symphony No. 8,” Audio 48/7 (July 1964): 36,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.

90
preserves the fine hall acoustics and yet projects the detail work without sonic

confusion.”72 Although the microphones did capture sound clearly, not all critics

appreciated the ability to distinguish individual instrumental groups. Bernard Jacobson, in

his 1967 review of Bernstein’s version, preferred the “much warmer ambience” in

Bernstein’s version than “the knife-edge clarity” of Abravanel’s.73 In High Fidelity,

Abravanel’s recording was included in an article titled “Tapes for Demo to Help You

Sell.”74 The recording was praised for the “able, forceful, if by no means definitive

performance” and the “easy revelation of detail, detail which can escape the listener at a

concert performance, which did escape the engineers in the monophonic recordings of the

past.”75 The clarity in the sound was again emphasized.

A recording’s capability of simulating a live concert mattered more to some

critics. Robert Marsh called Abravanel’s recording “the first Mahler Eighth recording that

really provides an experience comparable to that obtained in the concert hall” in his

column in the Chicago Sun-Time.76 In High Fidelity, his review devoted some space to a

discussion of the recording’s sound quality:

The two more important things about this new recording are these: first, it
preserves a performance that is more than equal to doing justice to the music:
secondly, it is technically on such a level that for the first time a playback system

72 Ibid.
73Bernard Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 8, in E flat,” High Fidelity Magazine 17/2 (February 1967),
94, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
74The review also included Mendelssohn’s string quartets played by Juilliard String Quartet (Epic),
Mozart’s piano concerts played by Rubinstein and conducted by Wallenstein (RCA), and works by
Albinoni, Corelli, Manfredini, and Vivaldi (Philips).
75Edwin S. Bergamini, “Tapes for demo to help you sell,” High Fidelity (December 1964): 48, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
76
Robert Marsh, “Stereo And Hi-Fi: the Mahler 8th,” Chicago Sun-Time, 25 May 1964, Abravanel Papers,
Ms 517, Box 25.

91
of good quality can really provide an accurate impression of what the work is like
under concert hall conditions. . . .
. . . In this Vanguard set you seem to be in the front row of the balcony
and everything comes to you with the relative tonal values of such a location.
There is a strong sense of being in a big hall, and the performers spread out before
you in an arc as wide as the space between your two speakers. Within the setting
of this stage, voices and the soloists are heard in a natural concert balance.77

This long passage exemplifies Marsh’s two-page review, which exalted every aspect of

the recording.

The stereo sound not only attracted reviewers’ recommendation but also

motivated some of them to learn more about the city and share their knowledge. When

Marsh reviewed the same recording’s tape version, he referred to his July review and

again applauded the sound engineers’ efforts. More importantly, he explained how his

trip to Salt Lake City changed his understanding of the sound space in the Mormon

Tabernacle:

Reviewing the discs, I spoke of a front-row balcony perspective. That


should now be amended. I was sufficiently impressed by the discs to drive, while
on vacation in August, a few hundred miles out of my way in order to have a look
at the Mormon Tabernacle. There I discovered that the Tabernacle has a balcony,
but a shallow one, and that the microphones apparently were placed about
midway on the main floor. Once you have seen the hall, the skill of the engineers
in achieving clarity and perspective is fully appreciated, since the excellent
qualities of the orchestral and vocal performances could easily have been dulled
through uncontrolled reverberation.78

Similarly, Martin Bookspan from New York’s WQXR took a trip to Salt Lake City and

wrote, “A few months ago I was in Salt Lake City, visiting with several of the community

and University leaders in the fields of music and the dance. Scenically, Salt Lake City

can hold its own with any of the glorious mountain cities in Switzerland, Austria or

77 Robert C. Marsh, “Mahler’s Eighth—a Stereo Debut,” High Fidelity 14/7 (July 1964), 51.
78 Robert C. Marsh, “Mahler: Symphony No. 8, in E flat,” High Fidelity 14/11 (November 1964): 137–138.

92
Northern Italy.”79 Saturday Review’s review focused on the acoustics in the Mormon

Tabernacle, “whose ample resonance and exceptional responsiveness are clearly audible

from the first burst of ‘Veni, creator.’” The reviewer pointed out that the venue was

unnamed in Jack Diether’s liner note, but the “unmistakable sound” was “the world’s

most unkeepable secret.”80 These reviews brought the location—Salt Lake City or the

Mormon Tabernacle—into the discussion of music.

In addition to stressing the stereo sound or introducing Salt Lake City, many

reviews demonstrated the need for a stereo recording by comparing available recordings.

Hermann Scherchen’s 1951 recording, by Columbia Masterworks with the Vienna

Symphony Orchestra, and Eduard Flipse’s 1954 recording, by Epic Record and with the

Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra, were both monaural.81 Bernstein made a stereo

recording of the first movement in the inauguration concert of Carnegie Hall in 1962, but

the movement was “only a third of the score.”82 Robert Marsh’s selective discography

from 1960 mentioned Flipse’s version as the only one for Mahler’s Eighth and stated that

it would “assist those with good imaginations in forming a reasonable impression of this

work; but more than that it cannot do. If you want to get to know the Eighth, this

monophonic-only version is worth its price, but let us hope for better.”83 Mark Koldys

stated that “sonically” Scherchen’s was “a sorry issue, and Columbia could have done

79Martin Bookspan, “Music scene,” WQXR, 31 May 1964, radio show script, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517,
Box 25.
80“Recordings in Review: Mahler from Utah,” Saturday Review, 27 June 1964, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517,
Box 25.
81 In England, only Scherchen’s version was available.
82 Ericson, “Disks: Vast 8th: Mahler’s ‘Symphony of a Thousand’ Is At Last Recorded Stereophonically.”
83Robert C. Marsh, “Mahler on Microgroove: A Selective Discography,” High Fidelity 10/7 (July 1960),
75.

93
more to improve the fidelity. But even the rumbly, clouded sound cannot hide the

masterful interpretation.” The same reviewer called Flipse’s the “worst of the lot”: “a

standard run-through recorded in unexceptional sound. No flashes of inspiration here to

salvage the enterprise: just ordinary playing and conducting.”84 The lack of a stereo,

complete recording at least partially contributed to the wide acceptance of Abravanel’s

recording.

Indeed, the sound in Scherchen’s and Flipse’s recordings could not compete with

that in Abravanel’s. From the beginning, Scherchen’s recording lacks depths, missing

details especially in the lower range, where various instruments are mixed into one

general sound. Moreover, winds and solo voices dominate the sound and overpower low

voices. Overall, the sound is distant and blurry.85 Flipse’s recording was made in a large

auditorium, where the wide space created reverberation and blurred the sound. Voices

and strings from the opening of the first movement, for example, are mixed into one

muddled sound.86 In comparison to these two recordings, Abravanel’s version excels in

clarity and depth.

With the comparison among these recordings, critics reasoned that Abravanel’s

stereo recording facilitated repeated hearing and in turn familiarize the public with

Mahler’s colossal work.87 Raymond Ericson, who was a managing editor at Musical

84Mark Koldys, “The Supplementary Repertoire: No.1: Mahler: Symphony No. 8,” The Daily Collegian, 4
April 1967, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
85
Gustav Mahler, Symphony No. 8, Hermann Scherchen, Wiener Symphoniker, Wiener Kammerchor,
Wiener Singakademie, and Wiener Sängerknaben, Forgotten Records, fr 356, 2010, CD.
86Gustav Mahler, Mahler: Symphonies Nos 8 & 10, Eduard Flipse, Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra, and
Rotterdam Combined Choirs; Wyn Morris, New Philharmonic Orchestra, Scribendum, SC 010, 2003, CD.
87Mahler’s Eighth Symphony had indeed been rarely performed in the postwar America, although the
work had a different performance history in the prewar Germany. According to musicologist Sybille
Werner, among over 2,000 worldwide performances of Mahler’s orchestral works between 1911 and 1939,

94
America in the mid-1950s and joined The New York Times in 1960,88 wrote, “With a

good recording available, it is possible to become thoroughly acquainted with the

symphony, to become adjusted to some of the qualities that on just a few hearings make

the work seem indigestible.”89 Robert Marsh was excited about the recording mainly

because “the large number of performers involved” prevented the work from being

performed often, and “the next best thing to a live performance is a good stereo

recording.” Marsh believed that repeated listening could benefit this work’s reception—

“The more you listen to the music, the more you realize that it has been maligned by

those who really do not know it very well.”90 Michael Steinberg, music critic for the

Boston Globe from 1964 to 1976, a musicologist, and later the famed program annotator

his Eighth Symphony was performed about 150 times, because “many of the numerous German choral
societies were eager to put on the two big choral symphonies” (with the other one being the Second, which
was performed 250 times). The most popular works were the Fourth Symphony and Das Lied von der Erde,
each of which was performed 350 times. (Sybille Werner, “Appendix 3Ad. A Performance History of
Mahler’s Works,” in Gustav Mahler: A New Life Cut Short (1907-1911), by Henry-Louis de La Grange
(Oxford University Press, 2008), 1661.) Bruno Walter alone conducted the Eighth 14 times between 1912
and 1936. Sybille Werner and Gene Gaudette, “Mahler Misconceived?” liner notes to The Music of Gustav
Mahler Issued 78s, 1903-1940, Urlicht AudioVisual, UAV 5980, 2013, p. 56.

After World War II, America became the center for Mahler performances, but the Eighth
Symphony had not been performed as regularly. Christopher Page’s dissertation on Mahler and Bernstein
listed ten performances of Mahler’s Eighth between 1916 and 1960, a low number compared to almost 80
performances of Mahler’s Second Symphony, which required only one chorus. Three of Mahler’s most
popular symphonies were performed much more often than the Eighth: documentation showed over 100
performances of the First Symphony, 60 performances of the Fourth Symphony, and over 70 performances
of Das Lied von der Erde. Christopher Jarrett Page, “Leonard Bernstein and the Resurrection of Gustav
Mahler” (Ph.D. diss., University of California at Los Angeles, 2000), 16–29.
88 “Raymond Ericson, 82, Music Critic for The Times,” The New York Times, 31 December 1997,
http://www.nytimes.com/1997/12/31/arts/raymond-ericson-82-music-critic-for-the-times.html, accessed 16
July 2015.
89 Ericson, “Disks: Vast 8th: Mahler’s ‘Symphony of a Thousand’ Is At Last Recorded Stereophonically.”
90 Marsh, “Stereo and Hi-Fi: The Mahler 8th.”

95
for the Boston Symphony from 1976,91 similarly applauded Abravanel’s efforts in

supplying a recording for such a large work. He stated that, by having “a recording that

does justice to [the symphony],” listeners could know Mahler’s Eighth better and in turn

understand the Ninth and Das Lied von der Erde.92

As for the performers, American reviews applauded the performance of

Abravanel, the Utah Symphony, and the choirs, but the soloists’ performance was

described as adequate but uneven. Steinberg, for example, described Abravanel’s reading

as “honorably accurate, though like most Mahler performances it is under-accented.”93

Steinberg thought less of the orchestra, in which the strings sounded thin, and the

choruses, whose tone was “unsubstantial.” Nonetheless, the recording was “the best way

now available of hearing the Mahler Eighth.”94 Ericson applauded the entire

production—including the orchestra, which “plays skillfully”; the choruses, who were

“expert and solid in sound”; the soloists, who were “uniformly good”; the sound

engineers, who solved “the physical problems”; and Abravanel, who gave “a coherent,

carefully paced reading.”95

Some critics rejoiced in Abravanel’s reading, some rejected it, and some

embraced it with minor concerns. Taken as a whole, praise outweighed criticisms, and the

maestro’s reading established him as one of the foremost Mahler conductors. Robert

91Anthony Tommasini, “Michael Steinberg, Music Critic, Teacher and Program Annotator, Is Dead at 80,”
The New York Times, 29 July 2009, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/arts/music/29steinberg.html,
accessed 15 July 2015.
92Michael Steinberg, “New Recordings: Mahler 8th From Utah And 5th by Bernstein,” Boston Globe, 3
July 1964, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
93 Ibid.
94 Ibid.
95 Ericson, “Disks: Vast 8th: Mahler’s ‘Symphony of a Thousand’ Is At Last Recorded Stereophonically.”

96
Marsh detailed the strength in Abravanel’s performance: “He is deeply involved with this

music, and he plays it not for surface or show but for content. This is a performance with

very broad, powerful phrases, a sure sense of movement, and a line that moves in a

majestic and resolute fashion from one soaring climax to another.” Marsh’s description

emphasized Abravanel’s attention to the overall structure. The conductor’s tempo or

dynamic changes were in line with Mahler’s instructions. His refraining from inserting

personal adjustment to the score or exaggerating local effects kept emphasis on the work.

Moreover, Abravanel was favorably compared to Mahler’s most famous disciple Walter:

“Since I never heard Bruno Walter conduct the work, I cannot tell if his approach is

suggested or not; but much of Walter’s skill as a Mahler conductor was his ability to fuse

the composer’s scores into solid architectural forms, and this power Abravanel also

possesses.”96 Marsh’s review concluded with a bold exclamation, “we have discovered a

new Mahler conductor of stature and sympathy in a way when such men are precious

indeed.”97

Marsh’s comments on Abravanel’s reading demonstrated the praise typically

given to the maestro’s conducting: clearly presenting the structure, remaining loyal to the

score, and focusing on overall effects rather than local effects. Raymond Ericson

commended Abravanel’s “coherent, paced reading.”—“It is more thoughtful than Mr.

Flipse’s somewhat prosaic version, not as exciting as Mr. Bernstein’s roof-raising

performance of the first part. In its measured, honest way, Mr. Abravanel’s recording

makes all the points in the Mahler score. For this the listener should be grateful, since a

96 Marsh, “Mahler’s Eighth—a Stereo Debut,” 50.


97 Ibid., 51.

97
superior recording is not likely to come along for some time.”98 Paul Turok stated “. . .

Maurice Abravanel, whose musical insight and complete control over his performing

forces permits Mahler’s enormous composition to unfold with stately magnificence. The

climatic passages are carefully graduated in intensity, rather than exploded with frenzied

hysteria, so that the overall effect is completely convincing.”99 Marsh’s and Ericson’s

remarks pointed to the conductor’s deliberate choice to focus on the big picture. As

Ardean Watts remembered, Abravanel “would tend to integrate everything.”100

On the other hand, some critics still doubted if Abravanel could deliver a

successful recording. Robert Sabin compared Abravanel to Walter but reached a much

less enthusiastic conclusion than that of Marsh.

Mr. Abravanel, after all, is not a great conductor, and he does not imbue this
visionary score with the sweep, the impact, the unearthly beauty that Bruno
Walter used to bring to Mahler. (If you will compare his phrasing, his dynamics,
his tempos and transitions, and his handling of the choruses and soloists with
those of Mr. Flipse in this work you will see the difference between a veteran,
steeped in the Mahler tradition, and a dedicated, but more tentative,
interpreter).101

Sabin’s evaluation of Abravanel was less detailed and more subjective than Marsh’s;

whether the conductor was “great” was subjective and seemed to carry too much weight.

In other words, the perceived reputation of the conductor predisposed some critics to

undervalue Abravanel’s reading.

Three years later, when Bernstein released his recording of the Eighth in its

entirety, Abravanel’s recording often served as a comparison. In High Fidelity, Bernard

98 Ericson, “Disks: Vast 8th: Mahler’s ‘Symphony of a Thousand’ Is At Last Recorded Stereophonically.”
99 Paul Turok, “On Tape,” Music Journal 22/9 (December 1, 1964): 64.
100 Phone interview with author, 18 January 2016.
101 Sabin, “Gustav Mahler: Symphony of a Thousand,” 938.

98
Jacobson’s review considered both Bernstein’s and Abravanel’s recordings fulfilled three

important requirements for a successful recording for this work: a conductor who had

“the enormous measure of the work,” an orchestra and three choruses that had been

“drilled to a high level of precision,” and a recording that could “do justice to the huge,

resonant climaxes in which the score abounds.”102 Jacobson recognized strengths in both

versions but at the end preferred Bernstein’s:

Bernstein’s gradual broadening of tempo through the big choral development in


Part I is a questionable procedure, and it brings back the Veni, creator spiritus
motif at a speed anti-organically slower than that of the beginning of the
Symphony. To me, Abravanel’s handling of this passage is formally more
satisfying. On the other hand, it could be argued that Bernstein’s holding back is
exactly what is needed to give the start of the recapitulation the overwhelming
weight it needs. . . . In any case, Bernstein’s reading is far and away the finest
over-all realization of the work in my experience. Abravanel achieves a
commendable and valuable degree of accuracy; Bernstein achieves sublimity, and
this is much more to the point.103

The different styles of Abravanel and Bernstein are obvious from the beginning of

the symphony (see Table 4.2 for tempo comparison).104 Abravanel’s recording opens

with a steady tempo between 110 and 120 bpm until m. 42, where “Riten” is marked in

the score. The four-bar ritardando in mm. 42–45 only slows down slightly to around 95

bpm. The tempo drops to around 85 bpm at rehearsal 7, marked as “A tempo.”

Bernstein’s version, on the other hand, has more tempo changes in the first 45 measures.

The opening tempo is noticeably faster than Abravanel’s version, and it quickly slows

down in m. 7 and speeds up upon the entrance of the next “Veni, Veni, creator spiritus”

102 Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 8, in E flat,” 92, 94.


103 Ibid.
104Gustav Mahler, Gustav Mahler: the Complete Symphonies, Leonard Bernstein, the New York
Philharmonic, and the London Symphony Orchestra, Sony, SX12K 89499, 2001, CD.

99
in m. 8. The same slight but quick ritardando happens in mm. 19–20 before entering

“spiritus, o creator, veni” in m. 21. In mm. 42–45, Bernstein’s ritardando, at around 80

bpm, is more obvious than Abravanel’s, accentuating the return to A tempo in m. 46.

Here Bernstein’s tempo is at around 95 bpm, faster than Abravanel’s.

Table 4.2: Tempo comparison, mm. 1–47 of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony, first movement

Rehearsal # Measure # Abravanel (1963) Bernstein (1966)


1–7 110–120 bpm 130 bpm
1–2 8–20 110–120 bpm 110–120 bpm
3–6 21–41 110–120 bpm 120–130 bpm
(Riten) 42–45 ~95 bpm ~80 bpm
7 46–47 ~85 bpm ~94 bpm

Abravanel’s and Bernstein’s different interpretations of the marking ritardando

reveal their different views of the structure. To Abravanel, the ritardando section opens

the next section, as the tempo continues to decrease from m. 42 to m. 46. To Bernstein,

the ritardando in mm. 42–45 bridges two different sections, and therefore its tempo is

much slower than the surrounding sections. By sustaining a steadier tempo, Abravanel

follows more closely the score’s instructions in these 46 measures. The steady tempo also

substantiates many critics’ statements about Abravanel’s interpretation being more loyal

to the score, but less exciting. Bernstein’s decision to change tempos twice before the

ritardando, despite no such indications in the score, explains many people’s impression

that Bernstein’s Mahler was more passionate or exciting, although the conductor could

insert too much of himself into the music. Critics’ comparisons of Bernstein and

Abravanel also revealed a common belief that Mahler’s music required impassioned

exertion. As Abravanel would be compared to Bernstein again when their recordings of

Mahler’s Seventh Symphony were released, we will return to this issue later this chapter.

100
Although the Utah Symphony was not as well-known as Abravanel, the

comments about it were mostly positive. The most ardent supporters celebrated the

victory of a regional orchestra and held that the Utah Symphony had broken the myth that

only star orchestras or orchestras in metropolitan areas could produce good music. Robert

Sabin expressed this point of view:

The most welcome and significant thing about this recording is that it was
achieved in Salt Lake City. That a work of such extraordinary challenge and
superhuman proportions could be prepared, performed, and recorded so well in
one of our Western cities is a heartening tribute to the progress of orchestral
music and of musical taste and understanding in the United States.105

In other words, Abravanel’s recording not only showed the progress of Salt Lake City but

also hinted at the progress of the entire nation.

In his radio show on the New York classical radio station WQXR, Martin

Bookspan106 played the first part of the symphony on May 31, 1964 and described the

performance as “well played and sung” and “well recorded.” Like Kupferberg, Bookspan

applauded the musical achievements of the Utah community and viewed it as an

indication of the overall progress of musical activities in the United States:

And let this be a lesson to those smug dwellers in our large Metropolitan cities
who tend to regard as provincial any musical goings-on west of the Hudson.
There no longer are any musical provinces in this country: one is just as apt to
hear a surpassing performance of the Verdi Requiem in Anchorage, Alaska as in
Philharmonic Hall here in New York.107

More importantly, these two comments and many others from abroad showed that the

Utah Symphony’s first Mahler recording had made the orchestra known nationally and

105 Sabin, “Gustav Mahler: Symphony of a Thousand,” 938, 941.


106Martin Bookspan later wrote the liner notes for Abravanel’s recordings of Mahler’s Second and Sixth
symphonies as well as the Adagio of the Tenth Symphony.
107 Bookspan, “Music scene.”

101
internationally to a degree that would have been unthinkable had the orchestra merely

championed Mahler through live performances.

Critics agreed less on the vocalists than on other aspects. Overall, the choruses’

performance was recognized. Marsh stated that the choruses were “excellent” and the

soloists “more satisfactory than the group of vocal celebrities gathered on the Columbia

set [Bernstein’s version],” and Raymond Ericson called the choruses “expert and solid in

sound.”108 Negative comments like Steinberg’s were less common; he described the

choruses as “unsubstantial of tone, uncomfortable in the extreme high and low registers,

shaky sometimes when it comes to chromatic intonation” and the soloists “just about

adequate.”109

The soloists were measured against more strict standards than choruses, because,

no matter where this symphony was performed or recorded, most of the singers in the

choruses were amateurs. The general consensus was that the soloists were “a well-

selected group of young singers,” but “[s]ome of them are better than others.” Many

critics named their favorite or least favorite soloists. Among the eight soloists, Blanche

Christensen, singing the soprano part of Mater gloriosa, was singled out several times for

praise.110 Malcolm Smith (bass, Pater profundus), Lynn Owen (soprano, Una

poenitentium), and David Clatworthy (baritone, Pater ecstaticus) were also praised.111

108Marsh, “Stereo And Hi-Fi: the Mahler 8th”; Marsh, “Mahler's Eighth—a Stereo Debut,” 51; Ericson,
“Disks: Vast 8th: Mahler’s ‘Symphony of a Thousand’ Is At Last Recorded Stereophonically.”
109 Steinberg, “Mahler 8th From Utah And 5th by Bernstein.”
110Raymond Ericson, for example, stated “Miss Christensen stands out of the ethereal sound of her final
solo, as Mater gloriosa.” in “Disks: Vast 8th: Mahler’s ‘Symphony of a Thousand’ Is At Last Recorded
Stereophonically.”
111
Robert Marsh singled out Smith in “Mahler's Eighth—a Stereo Debut,” 51; Deryck Cooke singled out
Lynn Owen and Blanche Christensen in “Mahler. Symphony No. 8 in E flat major,” The Gramophone,

102
Tenor Stanley Kolk, as Doctor Marianus, was recognized as less satisfactory by several

critics.112 Although using famous soloists, as Bernstein’s Columbus recording did, might

have been an obvious selling point, Abravanel’s recording was attractive in other areas

and the less shining choruses and soloists did not hurt sales.

Many of the outside reviews, in particular those from record magazines or major

newspapers like The New York Times, were frequently quoted in Utah newspapers to

reassure the local audience of the orchestra’s achievements. Fitzpatrick quoted Martin

Bookspan’s praise in his radio show, highlighting Abravanel’s involvement in the Utah

Symphony’s growth.113 Another article from The Salt Lake Tribune quoted Raymond

Ericson’s praise in The New York Times for the sound engineers and conductor.114

Lundstrom extensively quoted Robert Marsh’s review in High Fidelity, which held the

recording in high regard for the soloists, choruses, orchestra, and the recorded sound.115

Lundstrom also quoted Marsh’s statement about Abravanel being a newly discovered

“Mahler conductor,” which would be repeated in Utah newspapers, because for some

recognition from out-of-state major publications confirmed Utah’s own accomplishments.

When Philips released the recording on November 27, 1964 in England, most

British critics embraced it immediately. At this time the Utah Symphony had not been

December 1964, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25; and Michael Steinberg singled out David Clatworthy
in “Mahler 8th From Utah And 5th by Bernstein.”
112
“Recording in Review,” Saturday Review, 27 June 1964, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25; Robert C.
Marsh, “Mahler's Eighth—a Stereo Debut,” 51.
113Jim Fitzpatrick, “Maestro Scores With Mahler: Symphony Recording Draws N.Y. Accolade,” The Salt
Lake Tribune, 7 June 1964.
114 “N.Y. Times Gives High Praise to Utah Symphony,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 6 May 1964.
115
Harold Lundstrom, “Abravanel—‘Mahler Conductor of Stature,’” Deseret News, 16 June 1964,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.

103
abroad, and its first international tour, taking place in 1966, expanded the reputation

achieved by its recordings of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony and later the Seventh. Since the

Utah Symphony was unfamiliar to British critics, the origin of the recording provoked

interesting comments; Wilfrid Mellers wrote, “The new Philips recording of the

Eighth . . . doesn’t probe to the heart of Viennese tradition but reveals, as in Salt Lake

City it well might, the ‘universal’ quality of Mahlerian rhetoric.”116 It was hard to know

what Mellers meant by “universal,” but the word recalled the pan-religious meaning

brought by a performance of the Eighth at the Mormon Tabernacle.

Robert Angles’s review in London’s Records and Recording, spanning three

pages and including a picture of Abravanel conducting Mahler’s Eighth in the Mormon

Tabernacle, provided details about the Eighth and the rare performances of the work: no

recordings were available at that time and only five performances had taken place in

England since the work was composed.117 Angles was impressed with many aspects of

Abravanel’s reading:

[Abravanel’s] reading of the Second Part is penetrating in the extreme, extracting


the utmost from each segment yet maintaining an unobtrusive sense of flow which
unfolds the music effectively yet without undue haste. He is continually alert to
mood and intention . . . But it is his overall control of Mahler’s vast canvas and
his forces that I find most impressive, a control which allows one to participate to
the full in the grandeur of the composer’s unique conception.118

116 Wilfrid Mellers, “After Mahler,” New Statesman, January 1965, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
117
Robert Angles, “Symphony of a Thousand,” Records and Recording (December 1965): 28-29, 100,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
118 Angles, “Symphony of a Thousand,” 100.

104
Angles believed that this recording, “setting the seal upon a great Mahler performance

that marks a major event in the history of the gramophone,” would be difficult to

surpass.119

Deryck Cooke’s review in The Gramophone was one of the few negative ones.

Cooke was one of the most influential critics in England; his performance version of

Mahler’s unfinished Tenth Symphony was first performed on August 13, 1964 and would

be published in 1976 with an extended preface.120 To Cooke, Abravanel’s recording was

a “great improvement” but “hardly the outstanding performance” he had been expecting.

Cooke stated that the recording of Mahler’s Eighth needed “a great interpretation by

international artists of the highest class.”121 The details Cooke pointed out included “an

absence of fierce rhythmic drive in the march music of Part 1, and a lack of sensitivity to

detail in Part 2,” contributing to the “earth-bound” quality. More specifically, in Part II,

Abravanel’s handling of rubato was “awkward,” and the final chorus was not “the real

ppp.” These critiques were subjective and not shared by other reviews. Cooke’s criticism,

atypically harsh among all reviews, was perhaps influenced more by the Utah

Symphony’s regional classification. Furthermore, Cooke thought the choruses and

orchestras overall did well, but noted that the high notes in the sopranos were thin and the

strings lacked “the depth of tone or the virtuosity needed in this music.” The soloists were

disappointing to him. The recorded sound did not receive as much discussion as in other

119 Ibid.
120
Rosemary Williamson, “Cooke, Deryck (Victor),” in Oxford Music Online,
www.oxfordmusiconline.com, accessed 14 July 2015.
121 Cooke, “Mahler. Symphony No. 8 in E flat major.”

105
reviews in record magazines; Cooke was satisfied with the “spacious” stereo sound, but

concerned with the separation of sound.122

Another review in Observer showed a similar tone to that of Cooke. While the

effort was commendable and the sheer existence of a recording of the Eighth was worth

celebrating, the performing group was “just not up to so taxing a piece.” The recorded

sound was indeed “spacious enough,” and Abravanel showed “a real sympathy with the

music.” The reviewer accepted the recording as a valuable addition for the time being but

questioned if it could “stand the test of repeated hearing.”123

Philips also brought the recording to other European countries besides England. A

review from Ireland again reported the sound as “spacious,” although the reviewer only

received a mono recording. The reviewer especially applauded the “admirable sleeve

notes and on enclosing the full text with translation.”124 A review from Lausanne,

Switzerland called the recording “une telle merveille” (such a wonder) and emphasized

how the recording might simulate a live performance: “A écouter cette musique, on

oublie tout cela: on croirait se trouver dans l’auditorium lui-même, comme si les solistes,

le triple chœur et l’Orchestre symphonieque de l’Utah, chantaient et jouaient seulement

pour nous, sous la direction de Maurice Abravanel, maître d’œuvre de la colossale

entreprise.” (“When listening to the music, one forgets everything else: you would think

you were in the auditorium itself, and the soloists, three choruses, and the Utah

122 Ibid.
123 Edmund Tracey, “Giant Symphonies,” Observer, 24 January 1965, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
124
Charles Acton, “Record Review: Doing Justice to Tippett,” The Irish Times, 27 January 1965,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.

106
Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Maurice Abravanel, the master of the

massive work, sang and played only for us.”)125

Based on the reviews in American newspapers and record magazines as well as in

international publications, Abravanel’s recording of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony was

largely a success. The endeavor in 1963 was brave, as the maestro recounted fifteen years

later, “I dare say that even my best friends and supporters thought that now I had really

become completely mad, not only to want to perform it, but also to record it.” The

recording was particularly meaningful in that it encouraged other orchestras to perform

Mahler’s Eighth Symphony, because, when other orchestras knew of the recording from a

Western city, some of them might think, as Abravanel said, “‘Look, if they [the Utah

Symphony] can do that in Salt Lake, why can’t we?’”126 Although it was difficult to

determine whether Abravanel’s recording of the Eighth did inspire others to record the

work, the recording surely won national and international recognition and introduced the

orchestra to the outside world. With this encouragement, Abravanel and the Utah

Symphony continued their Mahler endeavor.

Seventh Symphony

Mahler’s Seventh Symphony had been commonly recognized as one of the

symphonies from his middle period, a time when the composer turned away from the

125G. Ribemont-Desaignes, “Les disques: Une Symphonie de Mahler,” Gazette de Lausanne, 27/28 March
1965, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25. (My own translation)
126 Paul Wetzel, “Mahler 8th,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 9 April 1978, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 124.

107
Wunderhorn works and explored modernistic ideas.127 Despite the popular reception, it

has been a puzzle to comprehend.128 Deryck Cooke describes the symphony as presenting

“an enigmatic, inscrutable fact to the world: a most unusual attitude for a Mahler

symphony and one that arouses suspicions as to its quality.”129 The Finale of the Seventh

has caused debates since its premier. Cooke calls it “largely a failure.”130 Adorno’s

opinion is also harsh: “the Finale of the Seventh embarrasses even those who concede

everything to Mahler. . . . Even on the most strenuous immersion in the work, one will

scarcely be able to deny an impotent disproportion between the splendid exterior and the

meager content of the whole.”131

Scholars have used different strategies to explain the seemingly incoherent

symphony, typically aligning the work with modernism. Robert Samuels identifies

influences on Mahler’s symphonic form in three periods; while the early symphonies

from the First to the Fourth were influenced by Jean Paul, “ending with individualistic

triumph,” the middle symphonies from the Fifth to the Seventh were influenced by

Dostoevsky’s narrative, which posed “the Dostoevskian question of whether some sort of

127 Deryck Cooke described Mahler’s middle period: “Gone are the folk inspiration, the explicit
programmes, the fairy-tale elements, the song materials, the voice: instead we have a triptych of ‘pure’
orchestral works, more realistically rooted in human life, more stern and forthright of utterance, more tautly
symphonic, with a new granite-like hardness of orchestration.” Deryck Cooke, Gustav Mahler: An
Introduction to His Music (Cambridge ; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1988), 71.
128The problems in interpreting the meaning, timbre, and form for the critics in the fin-de-siècle Vienna
were discussed in Karen Painter’s 1996 dissertation. Karen Painter, “The Aesthetics of the Listener: New
Conception of Music Meaning, Timbre, and Form in the Early Reception of Mahler’s Symphonies 5–7,”
(Ph.D. diss., Columbia University, 1996).
129 Cooke, Gustav Mahler: An Introduction to His Music, 88.
130 Ibid., 90.
131Theodor W. Adorno, Mahler: A Musical Physiognomy, trans. Edmund Jephcott (Chicago: University Of
Chicago Press, 1996), 136–137.

108
redemption of their material is possible.”132 While analyzing the Seventh, Steven Allen

Gordon takes into account the political and social contexts.133 He considers the Seventh

an embodiment of “the contradictory impulses and paradoxes that resulted from the

gradual disintegration of Austrian liberal culture, and the characteristic discontinuities of

modernism.”134 Both interpretations emphasize and explain the existence of conflict and

tension, which was also a focus when Utah newspapers discussed the performance of the

symphony by Abravanel and the Utah Symphony.

Concert in Salt Lake City

In 1964, the Utah Symphony performed Mahler’s Seventh Symphony on

November 25, the day before Thanksgiving; the concert was part of the Sixth Annual

Festival of Contemporary Music held by the University of Utah.135 In Utah newspapers,

the concerts and recording of Mahler’s Eighth from the previous year were repeatedly

mentioned. Positive record reviews from major publications, in particular Robert Marsh’s

132Robert Samuels, “Narrative Form and Mahler’s Musical Thinking,” Nineteenth-Century Music Review
8/2 (December 2011), 237. Samuels uses Mahler’s Fifth Symphony as an example to show how redemption
works in music. The Fifth Symphony starts with C-sharp minor and reaches D major in the Finale. In other
words, D major of the Scherzo and Finale—transformed from C sharp, A, F—is the real key and the
destiny of the symphony. Progressive tonality, in particular strong in the Fifth Symphony, is “harnessed to
a symphonic narrative transformation,” described by Samuels as redemption.

The nineteenth-century writer Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821–1881) exerted considerable influence on


twentieth-century English modern novels. Peter Kaye’s Dostoevsky and English Modernism 1900–1930
(Cambridge University Press, 1999) examines Dostoevsky’s influence on British writers, including D. H.
Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, Arnold Bennett, Joseph Conrad, E. M. Foster, John Galsworthy, and Henry
James.
133Steven Allen Gordon, “Mahler’s Seventh Symphony, Modernism, and the Crisis of Austrian Liberalism”
(Ph.D. diss., University of California at Los Angeles, 1998).
134 Ibid., 9.
135The concerts for the festival were usually held at Kingsbury Hall on the campus of the University of
Utah, but this concert took place at the Mormon Tabernacle to accommodate the enlarged orchestra.

109
statement, “We have discovered a new Mahler conductor,” were quoted in concert

advertisements and news articles.136

Modern, unfamiliar elements were used in newspapers to attract ticket sales. The

unusual sound of the Seventh was portrayed by a picture of three percussionists playing

chimes and Swiss bells in the Deseret News on the concert day.137 The “forward-looking”

quality was supported by the “incongruous characteristics” of the symphony, evident in

Lundstrom’s colorful description: “broad and simple outlines,” “profound sincerity,”

“deeply impressive,” and “theatrical, bombastic, and tedious.”138 Surprisingly, according

to Lowell Durham, the concert was warmly accepted.139 Furthermore, Fitzpatrick called

Abravanel as “one of the large contributors,”140 including Abravanel and the Utah

Symphony in the Mahler revival. After the concert season was over, Fitzpatrick chose the

performances of Mahler’s Seventh and another modern work, Milhaud’s Pacem in Terris,

as the high points of orchestral concerts of the season.141

136Quoted from Marsh, “Mahler’s Eighth—a Stereo Debut,” 50–51. Some of the articles that mentioned
the quote included “Utah Symphony Plays Mahler Wednesday,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 22 November 1964,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 75; “Concert Wednesday,” Logan Herald Journal, 23 November 1964;
“Utah Symphony to Perform Mahler Symphony Nov. 25,” Provo Daily Herald, 23 November 1964; and
Lowell Durham, “Performing Arts: He Gambled and Won,” s.n., 3 December 1964, Abravanel Papers, Ms
517, Box 83.
137Harold Lundstrom, “Utah Symphony Presents Mahler Concert Tonight,” Deseret News and Telegram,
25 November 1964, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.
138
Harold Lundstrom, “Exploring His Thoughts,” Deseret News, 26 November 1964, Abravanel Papers,
Ms 517, Box 83.
139 Durham, “Performing Arts: He Gambled and Won.”
140
Jim Fitzpatrick, “Utah Orchestra’s in Tune With Mahler Symphony,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 26
November 1964, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 83.
141 Jim Fitzpatrick, “Luster Marks Symphony Silver Season,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 9 May 1965.

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Recording Sessions

After the concert, Seymour Solomon brought his engineers to Salt Lake City to

record the symphony. During the recording sessions on December 11 and 12, the

orchestra also recorded Milhaud’s Pacem in Terris and Honegger’s Judith. When the

recording was released in 1965, long and informative liner notes by Jack Diether

accompanied the record. Besides the genesis, background, and musical descriptions of the

symphony, Diether’s notes stressed that the recording was the first one to use the new

Critical Edition. Philips, the international distributor for Abravanel’s previous Mahler

recording, was ready to distribute the recording of the Seventh.

Record Reviews

Reviews of Abravanel’s recording of Mahler’s Seventh from other states in the

United States as well as England showed the far-reaching effect of recordings. Again, this

recording was the first in stereo and considered better than the two available mono

recordings. Moreover, record reviews emphasized that the recording was the first one to

use the newly-published Critical Edition. Although many reviews expressed high

expectations for an upcoming recording by Bernstein, Abravanel’s version was

recommended as the best option at the time.

Being the first stereo version was again important for Abravanel’s recording of

the Seventh, but the description of sound in the reviews was much briefer. Without much

elaboration, Marsh stated that Abravanel’s version was “the first stereo set to reach the

stores” and that it was “a splendid two-channel version, filled with the acoustical richness

111
of what I assume to be the Mormon Tabernacle in Salt Lake City.”142 Music critic Martin

Bernheimer from the Los Angeles Times stated that Abravanel provided “warm tone and

a good common-sense performance which makes all the wonted points effectively.”143

Dick Levy stated that “Vanguard’s superlative Stereolab sound stands out with dramatic

depth and realism.”144 The brief comments on the stereo sound did not mean the critics

cared less about the sound; through comparing different versions, critics endorsed the

superior sound in Abravanel’s recording.

The comparison between Abravanel’s recording and other available versions

continued to play a central role in record reviews. The two other versions, one by Hans

Rosbaud with the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra and one by Hermann Scherchen

with the Vienna State Opera, were both from 1953 and monaural. Sonically, Scherchen’s

is better than Rosbaud’s. Although the monaural sound in Scherchen’s recording lacks

depth, its clarity allows for a reasonable level of accuracy.145 Rosbaud’s recording not

only lacks depth but also has poor sound quality. Most instruments sound slightly

distorted.146 In comparison, the sound from the two channels in Abravanel’s stereo

recording truly simulates a three-dimensional space. The sound quality is much closer to

a live sound, and the clear sound more loyally transmits the details in Mahler’s work.

142Robert C. Marsh, “Stereo and Hi-Fi: 2 Mahler Symphonies: Best 7th Yet and Fine 4th,” Chicago Sun-
Times, 30 May 1966, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
143
Martin Bernheimer, “Gustav Mahler: Symphonies Exhumed and Revitalized,” Los Angeles Times, 29
May 1966, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 76.
144 Dick Levy, “Sharps and Flats,” Long Island Living, 28 April 1966, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
145Gustav Mahler, Symphony No. 7, Hermann Scherchen and Vienna State Opera Orchestra, Deutsche
Grammophon, 2002, CD.
146Gustav Mahler, Symphony No. 7, Hans Rosbaud and Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra, Archipel
Records, ARPCD0243, 2004, CD.

112
In comparing these three conductors’ interpretations, many critics held the view

that Scherchen’s was the most exciting, Rosbaud’s lacked support from the orchestra, and

Abravanel’s, while not as exciting, had the best sound. Bernard Jacobson’s words

exemplified this view:

Abravanel sometimes falls short of the intensity of accentuation to be


found in Scherchen’s good mono version on Westminster, but he keeps a far
firmer grip on the more complex passages, and he gives a clearer picture of the
work’s overall shape—though not as persuasive a one, I feel bound to add, as
Bernstein achieved in his superb Philharmonic performance last December. As for
the Vox recording by the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra under Hans Rosbaud,
I cannot understand how it ever came to be released. Rosbaud was one of the
greatest conductors it has been my privilege to hear, but the performance he
permits the orchestra to get away with in this work is an excruciating mess, and
the recording lacks any positive virtue to make up for its total lack of dynamic
contrast.147
Furthermore, Rosbaud’s interpretation is marred by choppy transitions when tempi

change. Scherchen’s reading is smoother and, as critics described, exciting; nonetheless,

Abravanel’s reading is convincing in its own right. Its far superior sound quality made it

all the more attractive. As Marsh stated, Abravanel’s was “the best we have ever had”

and it would make the Seventh “turn up on programs more often,” because the public

could better appreciate the symphony after repeated hearing.148

Abravanel’s recording of Mahler’s Seventh Symphony was not only the best

option among the available versions but also the first one using the new Critical Edition

published in 1960 by the Internationale Gustav Mahler Gesellschaft.149 When Mahler’s

147 Bernard Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 7,” High Fidelity 16/4 (April 1966): 100.
148 Marsh, “Stereo and Hi-Fi: 2 Mahler Symphonies: Best 7th Yet and Fine 4th.”
149 The society was founded in 1955 with Erwin Ratz as the president and Bruno Walter as the honorary
president with the complete Critical Edition as one of its missions. Reinhod Kubik, “The History of the
International Gustav Mahler Society in Vienna and the Complete Critical Edition,” in The Cambridge
Companion to Mahler, edited by Jeremy Barham (Cambridge University Press, 2007), 218–219.

113
Seventh Symphony was first published in 1909, Mahler was conducting the Metropolitan

Opera in New York and could not participate in the printing process. Therefore the first

edition contained a large number of errors—more than 800 according to Erwin Ratz.

Although the publisher Bote & Bock provided a list of errata, the faulty and incomplete

list did not fully amend the situation.150 Mahler’s habit of endlessly revising the score

even after its premiere and publication also demanded a new edition that considered the

later sources containing the composer’s revisions.

The editing process was challenging, and the first Critical Edition was not

embraced by all. Because of copyright issues and to keep the cost low, the Critical

Edition was done with the original publisher and the corrections and changes were made

on the original plates. The publisher was apathetic about printing a new edition, because

Mahler was not yet sufficiently popular. The editing project was conducted with limited

resources in many aspects. Ratz was not a trained philologist, and the workspace for the

editing project was Ratz’s apartment, around which the uncatalogued materials were

scattered. Frau Emmy Hauswirth, Ratz’s secretary, archivist, and later Vice President of

the Internationale Gustav Mahler Gesellschaft since 1991, was the only person who had

“an unerring knowledge of the precise location (in drawers of commodes, and under or

on top of various pieces of furniture) of scores, photocopies or sketches that may have

been needed (more often than not, urgently) for this or that editorial project.”151

150When Mahler was trying to publish the Seventh Symphony, he submitted the score to two publishers—
Peters and Breitkopf & Härtel—but was rejected by both. He then was going to publish it with a Leipzig
publisher Lauterbach & Kuhn, which was then purchased by the publisher Bote & Bock of Berlin and
Wiesbaden; hence the symphony ended up being published by the Berlin publisher.
151Zoltan Roman, “A Brief History of the Complete Critical Edition,” in Gustav Mahler: Werk Und
Wirken—Neue Mahler-Forschung Aus Anlaß Des Vierzigjährigen Bestehens Der Internationalen Gustav
Mahler Gesellschaft (Vienna: Vom Pasqualatihaus, 1996), 110.

114
Moreover, Ratz’s edition was criticized for its short, four-page critical report and for his

“Ausgabe letzter Hand” approach, of which “the aim is to come as close as possible to

incorporate all changes made by the composer during his life time, whether in the

manuscript sources or in printed copies (scores or parts).”152 In a critic’s words, the new

edition was “an aural souvenir, not of a work as it was published originally, but as it was

later performed and imagined under ideal conditions by the composer.”153

The Critical Editions nonetheless showed the rising interest in Mahler research

and helped promote his music; as scholar James Zychowicz stated in his 2011 article,

“the availability of [Mahler’s] music is critical for performance and study, as supported

by the publication of the Mahler Gesamtausgabe. . .”154 Abravanel’s recording of the

Seventh, the first Mahler recording to use any Critical Edition, revealed Abravanel’s

interest in participating in the scholarly endeavor.155

This point was emphasized in many reviews. Having finished the first American

dissertation on Mahler, “Bruckner, Mahler, Schoenberg,” in 1945, Dika Newlin wrote a

review with academic views. She devoted an extensive space to the new Critical Edition,

discussing the large number of errors in the first edition; the multiple sources, “all of

which may have been authorized by Mahler at one time or another”; and an example of

Erwin Ratz’s editorial decision on when to use tremolo on the mandolin, which

Abravanel did not follow. She agreed with the conductor’s decisions and called it “a

152 Ibid., 111.


153 Bernheimer, “Gustav Mahler: Symphonies Exhumed and Revitalized.”
154James Zychowicz, “Gustav Mahler’s Second Century: Achievements in Scholarship and Challenges for
Research,” Note 67/3 (2011), 466.
155Abravanel would again be the first to use the new Critical Editions for his recordings of Mahler’s Third
and Fourth Symphonies.

115
matter of taste.”156 Overall, Newlin embraced Abravanel’s interpretation—“In following

the new score, Abravanel probably has come as close as possible to Mahler’s intentions

insofar as we can know them today.”157 Bernard Jacobson’s review in High Fidelity again

emphasized the version as “the first recording of any Mahler work to use the new Critical

Edition.” The changes made in the Critical Edition, such as tempo indication, “give

Abravanel’s version a big start over previous recordings.”158

Being the finest version and using the Critical Edition, Abravanel’s recording

carried the hope that Mahler’s Seventh would finally become popular. Robert Marsh, for

example, believed that the Seventh would benefit from a good recording more than the

large-scaled Eighth: “It is plain that such Mahler works as the Third and Eighth

symphonies will never be heard very often because of the enormous performing forces

they demand, but purely instrumental symphonies such as the Sixth and Seventh ought to

turn up on programs more often, once the public appreciates their merits. In the case of

the Seventh, some results should be forthcoming.”159 Edwin Bergamini from Sight &

Sound Marketing believed that this recording could reach beyond those who admired

Mahler; he wrote, “[i]t takes a recording such as this, and a release by Vanguard and

Ampex with illustrated notes by Jack Diether, to give an 80-minute monolith such as this

156Dika Newlin, “The Mahler Seventh from Salt Lake City,” The American Record Guide 32/10 (June
1966), 950–951, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
157 Ibid., 951.
158 Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 7.”
159 Marsh, “2 Mahler Symphonies: Best 7th Yet And Fine 4th.”

116
a fighting chance with any customer who doesn’t happen to be a Mahlerian. Those

intrepid souls should be pleased with this new release, too.”160

Comments on Abravanel again emphasized his style of remaining loyal to

markings in the score. Paul Turok, a regular record reviewer for Music Journal, praised

Abravanel’s understanding of Mahler’s work as well as his refraining from indulging in

certain effects like “bombast”: “Maurice Abravanel leads a masterly-paced and well

articulated performance. Once again he proves to have the conception and technical

control to unfold Mahler’s huge structure with understanding and continuity.”161

Jacobson described Abravanel’s rendition as “conscientious and sensitive”; when

compared to Scherchen’s version, in which tempo changes are at times dramatic and

pauses too long, Abravanel’s reading is sometimes under-accented but “keeps a far firmer

grip on the more complex passages” and “gives a clearer picture of the work’s overall

shape.”162 Herman Schaden from Washington D.C. called Abravanel’s recording “a

performance that delves deeply into the Mahler mind and produces commendable

results.”163

Bernstein’s upcoming, highly-expected recording of the same work encouraged

comparison.164 Although she expected that Bernstein’s version might change the

160Edwin S. Bergamini, “Top Tapes of the Month: Mahler: Symphony No. 7,” Sight & Sound Marketing,
n.d., Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
161
Paul Turok, “Mahler: Symphony No. 7,” Music Journal (May 1966): 81, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517,
Box 25.
162 Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 7.”
163Herman Schaden, “Record Reviews: Fine Works of Mahler, Bruckner,” The Sunday Star, 30 January
1966, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
164In the U.S., Bernstein’s recording of Mahler’s Seventh was also released in 1966 (Abravanel’s in
February and Bernstein’s in September).

117
reception of Abravanel’s recording, Newlin recommended Abravanel’s recording in her

June 1966 review.165 Four months later, Newlin reviewed Bernstein’s recording of the

Seventh and compared it to that of Abravanel.166 She described the first movement in

Bernstein’s version as having “a thriller, more blaring sound than Abravanel’s.”167

Newlin was not completely satisfied with Bernstein’s more “hysterical” quality, in

particular in the Finale: “Bernstein really lets himself go in the Finale . . . To me, he

exaggerates the vulgarity of the movement more than is necessary; but perhaps that is the

only thing to do with it.”168 After comparing Bernstein’s and Abravanel’s readings of

Mahler, Newlin preferred Abravanel’s: “Bernstein, striving mightily to identify with

Mahler, too often finds his love for the composer unrequited by its object! Abravanel, by

not trying so hard to make Mahler’s points for him, frequently may achieve the more

convincing result.”169

The critics’ expectation of Bernstein’s recording foreshadowed the fate of

Abravanel’s Mahler recordings; as Jacobson stated, “Unluckily for Abravanel and

Vanguard, but luckily for the rest of us, Bernstein’s recording—which also uses the

Critical Edition—is no less triumphant than his concert performances last December led

us to expect.”170 As the 1960s unfolded, more and more Mahler recordings were made,

165 Newlin, “The Mahler Seventh from Salt Lake City,” 951.
166Dika Newlin, “Again, Mahler Symphonies by Leinsdorf and Bernstein,” American Record Guide 33/2
(October 1966): 114–116, 120, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
167 Ibid., 116.
168 Ibid., 116, 120.
169 Ibid., 120.
170 Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 7.”

118
Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s later Mahler recordings hence faced more

competition and drew less attention than the first two recordings.

In American reviews, the comments on the orchestra’s performance were brief.

Newlin considered the recording as a proof that “a ‘Vienna’ label is not a sine qua non

for an idiomatic interpretation of Mahler” anymore.171 Jacobson’s comment on the

orchestra was one of the longer ones: “The orchestra playing is better, the control in

complex passages firmer, and the observance of the score’s detailed nuances more

conscientious and searching.”172 Although only providing brief comments, most reviews

affirmed the orchestra’s performance. The brief comments suggested that the Utah

Symphony’s previous recording of the Eighth had made the orchestra better known.

At the time the Utah recording was released in England, Abravanel was less

known than Bernstein. Bernstein had recorded Mahler’s Eighth with the London

Symphony Orchestra in April 1966, whereas the Utah Symphony’s first international tour

would start in New York in September 1966 and end in England a month later.

Bernstein’s recording of Mahler’s Seventh was released before Abravanel’s, as suggested

by record reviews; hence British reviews unanimously measured Abravanel’s recording

against Bernstein’s.

In his detailed review of Abravanel’s recording, Deryck Cooke used two spots—

m. 80 in the first movement and mm. 78 and 80 in the Scherzo movement—to

demonstrate that the maestro’s reading tended to be “under-characterized” and that

Bernstein’s more dramatic reading more aptly portrayed Mahler’s world. In the first

171 Newlin, “The Mahler Seventh from Salt Lake City,” 951.
172 Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 7.”

119
movement, m. 80 opens the second subject, which “recalls its counterpart in the Sixth,

but its sentimentality is more languishing.”173 Concerning the entrance to this section,

Cooke wrote,

A characteristic example is the entry of the second main idea in the


Allegro of the first movement (bar 80): Bernstein holds back a little here, to give
the theme all the weight it so obviously requires, and thus emphasize the contrast
between its jerky motion and the fierce drive of the first theme. Abravanel
continues in tempo, in the absence of any indication by Mahler to the contrary,
and both the weight and the contrast seem rather under-characterized; this
tremendous movement can seem largely one long indiscriminate outpouring of the
same kind of thing, unless its oppositions are clearly underlined. Nevertheless, in
the outcome, Abravanel builds up the structure of the movement as impressively
as Bernstein, and he is equally successful with the other four.174

Abravanel’s and Bernstein’s different handling of the section starts from the four

measures, mm. 76–79, leading into m. 80 (see Table 4.3 for tempo comparison).

Bernstein slows down to 108 bpm upon entering m. 76 and continues to slow down to 90

bpm in m. 79. The tempo of Bernstein’s entrance into m. 80 is even slower, around 80

bpm. His tempo picks up to around 90 bpm from m. 83 to the end of rehearsal 11 (m. 95).

On the other hand, Abravanel maintains the tempo in mm. 76–79 and waits till m. 80 to

slow down only so slightly to 100–110 bpm. This tempo remains steady until rehearsal

11, when the tempo decreases to around 100 bpm.

Table 4.3: Tempo comparison, mm. 50–95 of Mahler’s Seventh Symphony, first
movement

Rehearsal # Measure # Abravanel (1964) Bernstein (1965)


6–9 50–75 110–120 bpm 100–110 bpm
10 76–79 110–120 bpm 108 down to 90
bpm

173 Cooke, Gustav Mahler: An Introduction to His Music, 90.


174
Deryck Cooke, “Mahler. Symphony No. 7,” The Gramophone, July 1966, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517,
Box 25.

120
Table 4.3. Continued

80–82 100–110 bpm ~80 bpm


83–87 100–110 bpm ~90 bpm
11 88–95 ~100 bpm ~90 bpm

Hence Bernstein clearly signals the upcoming new section at m. 76; in contrast,

Abravanel subtly presents the entrance of a new section. The score in fact does not

indicate any tempo changes. The marking “diminuendo” in mm. 77–79 is the only

indication of a structural change. The effect of the diminuendo is more obvious in

Abravanel’s version than in Bernstein’s. With the clear diminuendo, Abravanel follows

Mahler’s instructions and succeeds in gesturing the arrival of the next section; Bernstein

signals the structural change by inserting his own tempo changes rather than the dynamic

change instructed by the composer.

It is interesting that Cooke described Bernstein as holding back “a little” to “give

the theme all the weight it so obviously requires.” Bernstein’s holding back is arguably

more than a little. On the other hand, Abravanel was described by Cooke as “under-

characterized,” which might be true when his interpretation was compared to dramatic

versions like Bernstein’s; without a predisposed way of interpreting the work,

Abravanel’s version seems the right interpretation. Cooke’s comment that “Abravanel

continues in tempo, in the absence of any indication by Mahler to the contrary” was also

curious, as if the absence of any sign to remain at constant speed was an invitation to

change the tempo. Bernstein’s version seemingly swayed the standard toward a more

dramatic extreme, making alternative interpretations seem dispassionate in comparison.

Cooke also emphasized the different handling of four chords by trombones—two

chords from the upbeat of m. 79 to the downbeat of m. 80 and two chords from the

121
upbeat of m. 81 to the downbeat of m. 82 in the trombones—immediately following the

entrance at m. 80. Cooke stated, “Bernstein achieves the necessary weight, not only by

holding back, but by emphasizing the stabbing trombone chords on the up-beats; with

Abravanel, one is hardly aware that the trombones are playing.”175 Indeed, the chords are

much more present in Bernstein’s version than in Abravanel’s. On the one hand, without

indicating the need for such emphases, the score justifies Abravanel’s interpretation. The

upbeat chords are marked forte, but the notes played by strings are marked fortissimo and

therefore would naturally overpower the trombones. The downbeat chords are marked

piano, and the violin’s whole notes for those two measures (m. 80 and m. 82) are marked

as fp; again the trombones could rightfully be overpowered. On the other hand, these

chords make up an important part of the theme to contrast with the part of the strings.

Thus Abravanel’s version follows closely Mahler’s instructions, but Bernstein’s better

presents the rich character of the theme.

Cooke also pointed out “the explosive sforzando notes for solo tuba in the

Scherzo, which are electrifying with Bernstein, but pass by almost unnoticed with

Abravanel.”176 More specifically, the sforzando notes appear in m. 78 and m. 80 of the

Scherzo movement. Although these notes go by quickly, they hint at the distorted waltz,

which “anticipates the scherzo of the Ninth.”177 The two eighth notes starting on beat two

are marked with sfp below them and a staccato mark above them; thus Cooke was not

entirely correct—the two notes should be played as a sforzando and then immediately

175 Cooke, “Mahler. Symphony No. 7.”


176 Ibid.
177 Cooke only mentioned the “savagely distorted ‘popular’ waltz tune” is “sneered out viciously by
fortissimo trombones.” These two notes by the tuba seem to function similarly. Cooke, Gustav Mahler: An
Introduction to His Music, 90.

122
became piano. As Cooke described, these two notes are strongly emphasized in

Bernstein’s version. The notes, however, sound more like they are marked with an accent

mark rather than staccato, and their dynamics do not become piano, as the dynamic mark

sfp indicates. In Abravanel’s version, the notes sound as they are marked with the

articulation mark tenuto rather than staccato; the sforzando is indeed not clearly

presented, and therefore the effect of going from sf to piano is not apparent. In sum, both

readings are problematic. Bernstein’s overpowering solo tuba disrupts the flow, and

Abravanel’s under-powering notes lack energy.

Although Cooke commended Abravanel’s recording as “greatly superior” to his

recording of the Eighth and even “a considerable rival to Bernstein’s,” he preferred

Bernstein’s more involved style of interpretation to Abravanel’s “under-characterized”

reading. After all, “we should remember that Mahler himself was essentially a rubato

conductor.” Cooke praised Abravanel’s “impressive” handling of the structure of all five

movements but considered him as lacking “Bernstein’s brilliant insight into Mahler’s

uniquely fantastic world of sound in this particular work.” Nonetheless, Cooke found it

surprising that the Utah Symphony could “sustain the comparison” with the New York

Philharmonic.178

When Peter Gammond, a former music editor for Decca between 1952 and 1960,

reviewed Abravanel’s recording of the Seventh for Audio Record Review, he had just

listened to Bernstein’s “exciting, rich, full-blooded, if at times slightly wayward

performance of Mahler’s 7th.” Gammond was “pleasantly surprised . . . to find

[Abravanel’s version] a very satisfying set.” Similar to Newlin’s comparison of

178 Cooke, “Mahler. Symphony No. 7.”

123
Bernstein’s and Abravanel’s interpretations of Mahler, Gammond’s view was that

Bernstein was “inclined to exhaust one with his emotional manipulations,” while

“Abravanel’s performance is much steadier, on a more even keel.” According to

Gammond, although not as good as Bernstein’s recording of the Seventh, Abravanel’s

reading had “surpassed his own previous Mahler achievements” and contributed to

“clarity and understanding.” Gammond’s final recommendation was “there is no need to

buy this Philips issue with any reluctance.”179 Similarly, musicologist and Mahler scholar

Anthony Beaumont had heard Bernstein’s Mahler Seventh, this time a live performance

in April 1966 in the Royal Festival Hall in London. Beaumont was also pleasantly

surprised by the Utah recording—“One could hardly ask for better playing than this.”

Despite the “patches of ragged string playing,” he called Abravanel’s version “[a]ll in all,

a most worthwhile pair of records.”180 These comments by critics overseas not only

compared Abravanel to Bernstein but also set the Utah Symphony and the New York

Philharmonic side by side. Although the close release dates may have reduced the sales

of the Utah recording, the constant comparison emphasized that the Utah musicians

measured up to the internationally known group in New York.

While out-of-state and oversea reviews focused on a variety of musical and

technical aspects, reviews from Utah emphasized the recording’s significance for Mahler

reception. Fitzpatrick stated that the recording would “add to [Abravanel and the Utah

Symphony’s] growing reputation as interpreters of this lately recognized master.”181

179
Peter Gammond, “Mahler: Symphony No. 7 in E minor,” Audio Record Review, n.d., Abravanel Papers,
Ms 517, Box 25.
180 Anthony Beaumont, “Classical: Mahler. Symphony No. 7,” s.n., n.d., Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box
25.
181 Fitzpatrick, “Utah Orchestra’s in Tune With Mahler Symphony.”

124
Lundstrom, on the other hand, did not believe that the recording could “alter the 58-year

history of the ‘Seventh’,”182 since the recordings by Scherchen and Rosbaud had not

made the symphony popular. Nonetheless, even if the orchestra’s endeavors could not

popularize Mahler’s works, it was an achievement in itself that the orchestra was part of

the revival and could prove its growth through performing and recording Mahler’s works.

As when the recording of the Eighth was released and reviewed, Utah newspapers

quoted many of the reviews from outside Utah. The constant comparison between

Abravanel and Bernstein as well as the Utah Symphony and the New York Philharmonic

proved the Utah musicians’ worth and appealed to local critics. In Lundstrom’s article

titled “Sustains Comparison Very Well,” he used Cooke’s review in Gramophone to

show that the Utah Symphony could sustain comparison to the New York

Philharmonic.183 Fitzpatrick quoted Edward Greenfield’s review in the Manchester

Guardian, which compared Abravanel’s recording of Mahler’s Seventh to Bernstein’s.

Fitzpatrick stressed Greenfield’s view that the Utah Symphony was “less glamorous” but

“a first rate ensemble; musically knowledgeable, and have a distinctive and appealing

style of their own.”184 Outside reviews thus helped establish the Utah Symphony’s

standing in and outside Utah.

The reception of Abravanel’s recording of Mahler’s Seventh was similar to that of

the Eighth in that critics celebrated the first stereo recording of the work as well as the

efforts and achievements of a less-prestigious orchestra. Additionally, Abravanel’s use of

182 Lundstrom, “Exploring His Thoughts.”


183Harold Lundstrom, “‘Sustains Comparison Very Well,” Deseret News and Telegram, n.d., Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 76.
184Jim Fitzpatrick, “Recording Boom: Utah Symphony Boosts Mahler Renaissance,” The Salt Lake
Tribune, 15 January 1967.

125
the new Critical Edition was recognized in almost all reviews from outside Utah and

overseas, highlighting the conductor’s awareness of the advances in Mahler scholarship.

Although Bernstein’s recording was released first in England, Abravanel’s version was

recommended because his reading offered a competitive alternative to Bernstein’s.

Abravanel, Bernstein, and Mahler

The comparison between Abravanel and Bernstein and many critics’ preference

for Bernstein’s interpretation suggested an emerging “mainstream” modeled after

Bernstein, the most acclaimed Mahler champion of the 1960s. His celebrated status and

directorship at the prestigious New York Philharmonic further legitimated his intense

view on Mahler. In the Young People’s Concert about Mahler, “Who Is Gustav Mahler?”

as well as in his 1967 article in High Fidelity, Bernstein stressed the conflict embodied in

the dualistic roles of Mahler: “Mahler the Creator vs. Mahler the Performer; the Jew vs.

the Christian; the Believer vs. the Doubter; the Naïf vs. the Sophisticate; the provincial

Bohemian vs. the Viennese homme du monde; the Faustian Philosopher vs. the Oriental

Mystic; the Operatic Symphonist who never wrote an opera.”185 The duality in Mahler,

according to Bernstein, also included his identity of being both a nineteenth-century and a

twentieth-century composer. As a nineteenth-century composer, “[Mahler] took all (all!)

the basic elements of German music, including the clichés, and drove them to their

ultimate limits.”186 As a twentieth-century composer, Mahler experimented with form,

texture, and orchestration, but “they all emanated from those nineteenth-century notes he

185 Leonard Bernstein, “Mahler: His Time Has Come,” High Fidelity 17/9 (September 1967), 51–52.
186 Ibid., 53.

126
loved so well.”187 For Bernstein, this duality came to symbolize the conflict in the

modern society; Mahler’s music, in Bernstein’s words, foretold the tragedies in the

twentieth century, and, only after these tragic events, could listeners understand the

composer’s music.188 With Bernstein’s charming presence and overt enthusiasm, the

lecture attracted the public to Mahler; furthermore, the new medium—television—helped

Bernstein make great strides in his own career.189

Bernstein’s description of Mahler’s extreme and conflicting music explained his

oftentimes emotional and flamboyant interpretation of Mahler. Bernstein constantly

exaggerated tempo and dynamic changes to emphasize instability, a key ingredient for

the post-Cold War America. As David Paul explains in his dissertation, “Mahler was

celebrated for giving musical embodiment to the tensions, contradictions, and conflicts of

life—those things that totalitarian regimes sought to resolve through the forceful

imposition of ideology.”190 Bernstein’s intense interpretation of Mahler can also be

explained by his deep identification with the composer; Bernstein performed Mahler’s

187 Ibid., 54.


188 Ibid., 52. As musicologist Matthew Mugmon explains in his dissertation that Bernstein related Mahler
to tonal modernism in order to distance Mahler’s music from serial music. Mahler was therefore not simply
the beginning of modernism but instead modernism that was deeply rooted in the past. Matthew Steven
Mugmon, “The American Mahler: Musical Modernism and Transatlantic Networks, 1920–1960” (Ph.D.
diss., Harvard University, 2013), 199–241.
189For more details about the Young People’s Concerts, see John Christian MacInnis, “Leonard
Bernstein’s and Roger Englander’s Educational Mission: Music Appreciation and the 1961–62 Season of
Young People’s Concerts” (Master’s thesis, Florida State University, 2009).
190David Christopher Paul, “Converging Paths to the Canon: Charles Ives, Gustav Mahler, and American
Culture” (Ph.D. diss., University of California, Berkeley, 2006), Abstract 2.

127
music as if it were his own: “But when I perform Mahler I feel as if I have written the

music. ‘What a brilliant key change I made here’, I tell myself.”191

Not everyone embraced Bernstein’s identifying with Mahler. Jay Gottlieb

remembered his conversation with Nadia Boulanger about Bernstein;192 he said, “I can

tell you what those conversations sounded like: NB telling LB that he should calm down

and stop claiming to be the reincarnation of Mahler!’”193 Nonetheless, by relating the

conflict-ridden aspect of Mahler’s music to the disquiet in modern society, Bernstein

turned Mahler into a prophet; and by firmly placing himself into Mahler’s music,

Bernstein himself became a prophet, at least of Mahler. The tension in Mahler’s music,

emphasized in Bernstein’s versions, was embraced perhaps because it fittingly delineated

American society from totalitarian governments and comforted American audiences, as

suggested in David Paul’s dissertation.194

While Bernstein emphasized the suffering, polarized Mahler, Abravanel focused

more closely on observing the composer’s meticulous performance directions.

Consciously or not, Abravanel avoided exaggeration when he talked about or conducted

Mahler’s works. Abravanel’s reading was frequently called “under-accented,” especially

in comparison to that of Bernstein. In short, Abravanel did not try to mythologize Mahler

191
Records and Recording, June, 1966, quoted in Page, “Leonard Bernstein and the Resurrection of Gustav
Mahler,” 294.
192Gottlieb started his association with Bernstein in 1958 and published the book Working with Bernstein:
a memoir (New York: Amadeus Press) in 2010.
193
Email correspondence between Gottlieb and Mugmon, June 29, 2009, quoted in Mugmon, “The
American Mahler: Musical Modernism and Transatlantic Networks, 1920–1960,” 244.
194David Christopher Paul, “Converging Paths to the Canon: Charles Ives, Gustav Mahler, and American
Culture” (Ph.D. diss., University of California, Berkeley, 2006).

128
or his music; instead, he emphasized the importance of relating Mahler’s music to

contemporary life and the contemporary audience.

In 1966 and 1978, Abravanel revealed his view on Mahler when interviewed by

local critics. In March 1966, just before an all-Mahler concert, Jim Fitzpatrick discussed

Abravanel’s view of Mahler; Fitzpatrick’s article boldly opened with “Gustav Mahler is

just the right composer for our time and place.” Abravanel explained why Mahler was

relevant to the current time: “Up until a few years ago, we were too busy with the

necessities of life, enough to eat, a roof over our heads and enough clothing, to worry

about such profound questions as ‘Why am I on earth?’ . . . But now, not having to worry

about the necessities, we worry about more important things.”195 Abravanel was not

specific about why the time was now stable; compared to the first half of the twentieth

century, which included two world wars and the Great Depression, the 1960s was indeed

much more prosperous, especially with the blooming technological advances. In Salt

Lake City, various sorts of infrastructure construction such as “improvement in the water

system” and “development of recreation facilities” were carried out, increasing the city’s

budget from $3.4 million in 1940 to $14.5 million in 1961.196 One of the “more important

things,” according to Abravanel, was Mahler’s music. “It is the message, not just the

notes. It is his ‘yearning,’ his seeking after God that makes him so appealing.” Abravanel

set Mahler apart from Bruckner, “a man of simple faith,” and Schonberg, “essentially a

195
Abravanel’s words quoted in Jim Fitzpatrick, “Many-Faceted Composer: Mahler Message Vital,
Maestro Says,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 20 March 1966, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 76.
196Thomas G. Alexander and James B. Allen, Mormons & Gentiles: A History of Salt Lake City (Boulder,
Colorado: Pruett, 1984), 259.

129
Romantic,” and called Mahler “a modern man, tortured and neurotic.”197 Therefore,

Abravanel believed that, to the modern audience, Mahler’s music was relevant and his

“message vital.”198

Prior to the 1978 concert of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony, an extended interview in

The Salt Lake Tribune with Abravanel offered another rare opportunity to understand the

maestro’s thoughts on Mahler. As Paul Wetzel quoted Abravanel, “the greatness of

Mahler Eighth is really not because of its numbers. It is because of its message, of the

directness of the musical language, and the greatness of both the text of the old Latin

hymn and of Goethe’s ‘Faust’ lines.” To Abravanel, the communicating capability of a

work could “hit you like a wave,” one way to evaluate the power of music.199

Although Abravanel was also Jewish, he did not attempt to identify with the

composer. Unlike Bernstein, an involved Mahler interpreter, Abravanel’s role as a

conductor was an observer, who should carefully follow the directions in the score, and a

medium, through which music could flow as naturally as possible. Abravanel once talked

about Bernstein’s Mahler: “I loved Lennie, but sometimes, I felt, he tried to make Mahler

too different, too neurotic.”200 This statement suggested that Abravanel perhaps

consciously avoided Bernstein’s way of interpreting Mahler. Abravanel’s method of

conducting Mahler was less controlling, as he explained: “I tried to let the music speak . . .

I did not try to make Mahler more Mahler. Mahler didn’t try to be different—he was

197Abravanel’s words quoted in Fitzpatrick, “Many-Faceted Composer: Mahler Message Vital, Maestro
Says.”
198 Fitzpatrick, “Many-Faceted Composer: Mahler Message Vital, Maestro Says.”
199
Paul Wetzel, “‘Musical message is greatness of Mahler Eight,’” The Salt Lake Tribune, 9 April 1978,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 124.
200Abravanel’s own words quoted in Gerald Gold, “Maurice Abravanel—an emotional response to the
symphonies,” The New York Times, 9 June 1991.

130
different. But he was also part of the Austrian musical heritage. So, when I conducted

Mahler, I didn’t try to perform his music as a music of extremes.”201 These words

indicated that Abravanel’s interpretation of Mahler’s music was the result of his

deliberate choice instead of incapability. Unfortunately, his reading was often faulted as

lacking, especially in stark contrast to Bernstein’s style.

As a conductor and music educator, Abravanel was both practical and idealistic;

he cared about practicalities such as funding for the arts as much as the positive effect of

“good” music.202 By programming and recording Mahler’s music, Abravanel perhaps

hoped to combine his ideal and practical sides, sending “vital” messages in “good” music

that could communicate. These beliefs of Abravanel’s informed his interpretation of

Mahler and influenced the reception of Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s Mahler

recordings. While most critics embraced Bernstein’s “sublime” interpretation,

201 Ibid.
202 “He [Abravanel] is convinced that good music builds character and encourages mature behavior.”
(“Maurice Abravanel . . . Musical Director and Conductor,” 1974, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 26.)
Abravanel believed that good music was beneficial for people, and the audience deserved to hear the best
music even if they were inexperienced listeners. Abravanel’s definition of “good music” covered a broad
range of works; on one occasion, he used Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Brahms, and Copland as the examples
of good music. Maurice Abravanel, interview with Jay M. Haymond, 30 September 1981, Utah State
Historical Society Oral History Program, 56, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 4.

His efforts in securing funding for the arts were evident in his involvement in the National
Endowment for the Arts in 1970, when he was appointed by President Nixon as a member of the first
Advisory Music Panel. The term was six years. In 1972 President Nixon was quoted to have praised
Abravanel’s contribution in music—“I have been especially impressed by your determined efforts to take
the best of symphonic music to rural areas, including Indian reservations, and to enhance not only adult
appreciation of good music but that of young people in our colleges and universities.”—and service at the
National Endowment for the Arts. Nixon stated, “You have earned the thanks not only of your fellow
Utahns, but of all Americans, and on their behalf I wish you the very best in all your future endeavors.”
(“Nixon Praises Abravanel’s Service,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 13 April 1972, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517,
Box 77.) In March 1982, Abravanel and other orchestra representatives, including John Williams, Gerard
Schwarz, Ani Kavafian, and James Buswell spoke on Capitol Hall to “protest the proposed 50 percent cut
in the 1982 budget of the National Endowment for the Arts.” “Artists Testify on Capitol Hill,” Symphony
Magazine (June/July 1981), 101, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 79.

131
Abravanel’s reading was an alternative less influenced by the conductor’s agenda and

identification.

Awards and Letters

Abravanel’s first two Mahler recordings won him and the orchestra more than

recognition in reviews. At the suggestion from Jack Diether and Dika Newlin, the

Bruckner Society of America decided to award the 1965 Mahler Medal to Abravanel.203

The medal was given mainly for the recording of the Eighth, but that of the Seventh,

released in 1965, helped consolidate the decision; Diether explained that “if any of the

directors had any qualms about awarding it to you at that time on the basis of a single

recording, even of such a colossal undertaking as the Eighth Symphony, I am sure they

will be reassured by this marvelous achievement of the Seventh.”204 Abravanel wanted to

accept the medal on the campus of the University of Utah. Kenneth E. Eble, head of the

English Department and brother of Charles Eble (president of the Bruckner Society),

handed the Kilenyi Mahler Medal to Abravanel on behalf of the society at a special

convocation on October 5, 1965, held by the College of Fine Arts.205

Before the ceremony, Utah newspapers explained the purpose of the Bruckner

Society and described the award. Many of them quoted a description about the medal—

203 Jack Diether to Maurice Abravanel, 1 September 1965, letter, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 14.

Chord and Discord listed the receivers of the Bruckner Medal and Mahler Medal, but the
publication was suspended between 1963 and 1969. Abravanel’s name was listed in the 1969 issue: Chord
and Discord 3/1 (1969), 126.
204 Jack Diether to Maurice Abravanel, 1 September 1965.
205 Both the Bruckner and Mahler Medals were named after their designer, Julio Kilenyi.

132
awarded annually to conductors who “accomplished most during the preceding musical

season toward furthering the general appreciation of Gustav Mahler’s arts in the United

States.”206 Previous recipients were also listed in the newspapers, including Otto

Klemperer, Serge Koussevitzky, Dimitri Mitropoulos, Eugene Ormandy, Fritz Reiner,

Artur Rodzinski, and Bruno Walter, equating Abravanel with other Mahler champions.207

The press coverage of the award accentuated the community’s pride in the achievements

of Abravanel and the Utah Symphony, now made official by the recognition from Vienna

and the Mahler Medal.

While the medal recognized Abravanel’s efforts in championing Mahler, the

ceremony highlighted the relationship between the maestro and the community. As Neal

A. Maxwell, vice president for Student and Public Affairs for the university opened the

convocation he emphasized how Abravanel had “given himself so fully and with finality”

to the community.208 In the acceptance speech, Abravanel included the community in the

honor: “This is the culmination of 18 years of effort by many, many people. Salt Lake

City and Utah have given me a sense of belonging. I am a Utahn.”209 Abravanel extended

the honor to not only the orchestra musicians but also the University of Utah choruses,

the Salt Lake City schools chorus, and their directors Newell Weight and Vernon Lee

206This description could be found in many Chord and Discord issues, as early as the issue from December
1935 (Vol. 1, No. 7). One of the newspapers articles quoted this description was “Symphony Conductor
Wins Award,” The Daily Utah Chronicle, 1 October 1965, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 76.
207Two of the news articles that listed the names were “Symphony Conductor Wins Award,” The Daily
Utah Chronicle, 1 October 1965, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 76; and “Honors to Abravanel: Utah
Symphony Leader To Gain Mahler Medal,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 2 October 1965, Abravanel Papers, Ms
517, Box 76.
208
Neal A. Maxwell, “Excerpts from comments by Neal A. Maxwell,” October 1965, Abravanel Papers,
Ms 517, Box 3.
209 Abravanel, “Convocation for Maestro Maurice Abravanel Mahler Award.”

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Master.210 Abravanel thanked Lowell Durham and Conrad Harrison for focusing on

musical details in their feedback on the orchestra’s playing, because details were his

“chief weakness” and “grand lines” his preference.211 Although Abravanel was the only

recipient, he included Utah musicians, directors, and critics in this honor and celebrated

his close collaboration with the community.

Besides the Mahler Medal, Abravanel’s first two Mahler recordings brought him

an honorary membership for the Internationale Gustav Mahler Gesellschaft in Vienna. In

a letter dated March 24, 1966 and addressed to Vanguard, Erwin Ratz—the president of

the society and the editor for the Critical Edition of the Seventh—expressed gratitude for

Abravanel’s recordings of Mahler’s Eighth and Seventh symphonies.212 The recording of

the Seventh was in particular emphasized:

Besonders hervorragend ist die 7.Symphonie, die zu den besten Platten


gehört, die es bisher von Gustav Mahler gibt. Ihr Verdienst ist umso größer, als es
bisher keine in Betracht kommende Aufnahme dieses Werkes gibt, das nicht nur
zu Mahlers bedeutendsten Werken gehört, sondern der gesamten symphonischen
Literatur.213

Especially the recording of the 7th Symphony is superb. It is one of the


best recordings of Gustav Mahler works ever made. You deserve all the more
credit, since to date no acceptable recording has been made of this work which is
not only one of the most significant of Mahler’s compositions but also of all
symphonic literature.214

210 Ibid.
211 Ibid.
212 Erwin Ratz to Vanguard, 24 March 1966, letter, Abravanel Papers. Ms 517, Box 14.
213 Ibid.
214 Erwin Ratz to Vanguard, 24 March 1966, letter, translator unknown, Abravanel Papers. Ms 517, Box 14.

134
Ratz probably did not know Abravanel personally, since in the same letter he asked for

the conductor’s biographical information for the society’s files and Abravanel’s address

because “Wir möchten auch ihm gern danken und ihn bitten, die Ehrenmitgliedschaft der

INTERNATIONALEN GUSTAV MAHLER GESELLSCHAFT anzunehmen”215 (“We

should also like to express our gratitude to him and ask him to accept an honorary

membership in the International Gustav Mahler Society.”)216

In the following month, a letter from Ratz to Abravanel expressed similar praise

and gratitude for the two recordings. The main purpose of the letter was to offer

Abravanel the honorary membership of the International Gustav Mahler Society.217 In the

letter, Ratz also asked Abravanel to bid his gratitude to the orchestra, choruses, and

soloists. Moreover, Ratz complimented the “beauty and sensitivity” in Abravanel’s

interpretation of the middle movements of the Seventh Symphony and emphasized this

was a rare accomplishment for a “non-Austrian”: “Die Schönheit und Einfühlung, mit der

Sie gerade die Mittelsätze der 7.Symphonie gespielt haben, die ja für einen

Nichtösterreicher kaum nachzuempfinden sind, haben uns sehr ergriffen.” (“The beauty

and sensitivity, with which you have conducted the middle movements of the Seventh

Symphony, were rarely recreated by a non-Austrian and moved us very much.”)218

215 Ratz to Vanguard, 24 March 1966, letter.


216 Ratz to Vanguard, 24 March 1966, letter, translator unknown.
217 Erwin Ratz, Erwin Ratz to Maurice Abravanel, 14 April 1966, letter, Abravanel Papers. Ms 517, Box 14.
218 Ibid. (My own translation)

135
Conclusion

Between 1951 and 1965, Abravanel and the Utah Symphony presented Mahler’s

works at eight concerts and recorded two of Mahler’s relatively under-performed

symphonies. The recording of the Eighth was possible because of Abravanel’s passion in

Mahler, the Utah community’s choral resources, and Vanguard’s engineering capabilities,

whereas that of the Seventh offered the first recording of any Critical Edition with

superior sound. Both recordings brought outside recognition to the conductor and the

orchestra, as shown in newspapers, magazines, the Mahler Medal from the Bruckner

Society of America, and congratulatory letters from Erwin Ratz. As the Utah Symphony

became known to the outside world, Abravanel’s name became associated with Mahler.

The recognition from the outside and Mahler concerts in Utah in turn planted the

composer’s name in the community. The overwhelmingly enthusiastic reception

encouraged Abravanel and the Utah Symphony to continue their Mahler journey and

resulted in four more recordings of Mahler’s symphonies in the 1960s, completing the

Mahler cycle in the 1970s, and giving many more performances of Mahler’s works in the

next fifteen years.

136
CHAPTER 5. MAHLER IN UTAH, 1965–1979

“I’m ready to make a deal with Maestro Maurice Abravanel of the Utah
Symphony. I’ll vote in favor of the new arts center in the upcoming bond issue — if
Maurice promises not to play more than 10 Mahler selections during the 1976 season.”

— Dan Valentine, author of The Salt Lake Tribune column


“Nothing Serious,” 14 November 1975

In this humorous column of random comments on community events, Dan Valentine

joked about Abravanel’s programming of Mahler. The columnist’s casual mentioning of

Mahler revealed the composer’s familiarity to Salt Lake City readers by 1975. Between

1963 and 1974, the Utah Symphony recorded all of Mahler’s symphonies and, to prepare

for the recordings, performed all but the Third and Sixth Symphonies. By 1974, the Utah

community was well-acquainted with the composer’s music.

Although the Utah Symphony’s recordings of Mahler’s Seventh and Eighth

Symphonies garnered wide acclaim in the mid-1960s, their next four Mahler recordings

in the second half of the decade did not generate the same level of excitement in the

national and international print media. Nevertheless, these recordings provided insight

into the Salt Lake community, technological history, and the orchestra’s growth. The

area’s long choral tradition produced many local choruses and made choral works

especially appealing to the local audience. Local singers, including Netania Davrath and

JoAnn Ottley, turned up in multiple programs, and famed vocalists, such as Beverly Sills

and Maureen Forrester, joined forces with the Utah Symphony. Just as Abravanel’s

recordings of the Seventh and Eighth Symphonies had demonstrated the virtues of stereo

recording, those of the Third and Ninth allowed Vanguard to show off their technological

expertise, in this case, four-track sound. Furthermore, concert and record reviews shed

137
light on the orchestra’s growing fame, resulted from their Mahler recordings and

domestic and international tours.

Abravanel’s last decade with the Utah Symphony saw the completion of their

Mahler recording cycle in 1974. The last group of recordings were all instrumental: the

First, Fifth, and Sixth Symphonies and the Adagio of the Tenth. Although these

recordings completed the cycle, they did not garner as much publicity as the first two

recordings. The lackluster reception indicated the saturated market; by 1974, four other

cycles—by Bernstein, Haitink, Kubelik, and Solti—were available. Nevertheless, the

Utah Symphony’s cycle closed the first full Mahler tour for the community, planted

Mahler’s music in Utah, and reached a milestone for the orchestra.

After the cycle was completed, Mahler continued to be a key part of Abravanel’s

relationship with the orchestra until his retirement. The conductor planned to perform all

of Mahler’s works in the two seasons between 1976 and 1978. His health problems and

heart surgery disrupted the plan, but he still conducted most of the works in subscription

concerts and on tour in his last four seasons. The overall reaction to these performances

was different than to the previous ones; critics reminisced about past performances and

compared them to the recent ones, newspapers noted the conductor’s reputation as a

Mahler conductor, and the maestro gained confidence in the orchestra’s ability to perform

and the audience’s capacity to appreciate Mahler’s music. In short, Abravanel and the

Utah Symphony’s Mahler recordings and performances between 1965 and 1979

demonstrated how the conductor’s Mahler project paralleled the orchestra’s growth and

turned Mahler into a composer that meant much to the community.

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1965–1969: Recording Mahler’s Second, Third, Fourth, and Ninth Symphonies

As the Utah Symphony continued performing and recording Mahler’s music in

the 1960s, works with vocalists were the focus, including the Second, Third, Fourth

Symphonies and Das Lied von der Erde (see Table 5.1). By the end of the decade, the

Utah Symphony had recorded all of the symphonies featuring vocal parts. Meanwhile, the

orchestra became better known throughout the country because of its recordings and tours.

These recordings might not have attracted as much publicity as the previous two, but they

documented the orchestra’s growing reputation and Mahler’s gaining attraction in Utah.

Table 5.1: Performances and Recording Sessions of Mahler’s Music in Utah, 1966–1969

Date Mahler works Other works


March 26, 1966 Second Symphony
(concert) (Vocalists: Blanche Christensen,
soprano; Bettie Kimery, alto; Civic
Choral, directed by Newell B.
Weight)
Adagietto of the Fifth Symphony
March 27, 29, 1967 Second Symphony Vaughn Williams’s
(concert) (Vocalists: Beverly Sills, soprano; Fantasia on Greensleeves
Florence Kopleff, contralto;
University Civic Chorale, directed
by Newell Weight)
November 29, 30, Das Lied von der Erde Schoenberg’s
1967 (Soloists: Maureen Forrester, “Transfigured Night”
(concert) contralto; William Cochran, tenor)
March 30, 1967 Second Symphony
(recording) (Vocalists: Beverly Sills, soprano;
Florence Kopleff, contralto;
University Civic Chorale, directed
by Newell B. Weight)
March 29, 31, 1968 Fourth Symphony Wagner’s “Good Friday
(concert) (Soloist: Netania Davrath, Spell” from Parsifal
soprano) Mozart’s Symphonie
Concertante for Violin,
Viola, and Orchestra

139
Table 5.1. Continued.

June 21, 23, 24, 25, Fourth Symphony Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto
1968 (Soloist: Jean Preston, soprano) No. 3
(West Coast tour) Ravel’s Daphnis and Chloe
Suite No. 2
June 22, 1968 Second Symphony Ned Rorem’s Lions
(West Coast tour, (Vocalists: Jean Preston, soprano;
Hollywood Bowl) Lili Chookasian, contralto;
Southern California Mormon
Choir)
The end of 1968 Fourth Symphony
(recording) (Soloist: Netania Davrath,
soprano)
March 9, 1969 Ninth Symphony
(concert)
May, 1969 Third Symphony Berlioz’s Requiem
(recording) (Vocalists: Christina Krooskos,
alto; Women’s Choir from the
University of Utah; Boys Choir
from Granite School District)
Ninth Symphony

Recording Mahler’s Second Symphony (1967)

Before recording the Second Symphony, Abravanel conducted the work twice in

concert. Concert reviews demonstrated the conductor’s closeness to the music and the

community’s familiarity with the composer. The 1966 concert was “enthusiastically

welcomed by his [Abravanel’s] Tabernacle listeners.” Jim Fitzpatrick called Abravanel’s

reading “luminous” and described Mahler’s musical world as “vast, strident and

tormented” as well as “informed with tenderness and sudden visions of light which reveal

a complexity of mind very close to the center of 20th Century thought.” Mahler,

according to Fitzpatrick, was “rather like Proust leading us into an immense world which

is not of our making but which is, nevertheless, an absolute statement of the human

140
condition.”1 In the following season, Mahler’s Second was chosen for the season finale.

The concert was “an unqualified triumph”2 and brought the season to “a standing-ovation

conclusion.”3 The chorus and soloists received praise: “The voices of the University

Chorale, reverent and restrained, blend with and support the brilliant soloists in the

solemn climax.”4 The maestro’s reading was “soul-satisfying”5 and exhibited “empathy

with Mahler.”6 In Abravanel’s hands, “[t]he nuances and the shifts in mood which the

composer built into his symphony came through most beautifully.”7 The upcoming

recording sessions were mentioned with the welcoming reception of the previous Mahler

recordings.8

The 1966–1967 season was also Abravanel’s twentieth season, for which many

sent congratulatory greetings, including Eugene Ormandy, Utah Governor Calvin L.

Rampton, and Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey.9 On March 28, 1966, Governor

Rampton presented Abravanel a gold wrist watch and a photo album, containing pictures

1Jim Fitzpatrick, “Successful Season: Symphony Finale: Majestic Mahler,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 27
March 1966, Maurice Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 76, Special Collections and Archives, University of
Utah, J. Willard Marriott Library, Salt Lake City, Utah.
2Jim Fitzpatrick, “Mighty Mahler Rendition Closes Symphony Season,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 30 March
1967, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 76.
3Donna Bowen, “Triumphant Season Ends,” Deseret News, 30 March 1967, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517,
Box 76.
4 Ibid.
5 Ibid.
6 Fitzpatrick, “Mighty Mahler Rendition Closes Symphony Season.”
7 Ibid.
8 Bowen, “Triumphant Season Ends.”
9Eugene Ormandy to Maurice Abravanel, 22 September 1966, letter, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 14;
Calvin Rampton to Maurice Abravanel, n.d., letter, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 15; Hubert H.
Humphrey to Maurice Abravanel, 19 October 1966, letter, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 15.

141
of the maestro’s “musical triumphs in Utah and on tours” as well as letters of praise from

various important figures in Utah.10 That day was proclaimed as “Maurice Abravanel

Day.”11 The Utah Symphony started receiving more attention nationwide after their first

international tour in 1966, in which they were invited to perform in the Athens Festival,

the annual summer festival held in Greece. After twenty years of Abravanel’s direction,

the Utah Symphony now enjoyed strong local support and worldwide exposure through

recordings and tours. Their Mahler recordings were no small part of that accomplishment.

On March 30, 1967, the day after the concert in the Tabernacle, Abravanel and

Vanguard started recording Mahler’s Second Symphony with the Utah Symphony, the

University Civic Chorale, and two soloists: Beverly Sills and Florence Kopleff. This

recording received an extensive review in High Fidelity by Bernard Jacobson, a frequent

reviewer for Mahler recordings. Previously, he praised Abravanel’s recording of the

Eighth Symphony for achieving “a commendable and valuable degree of accuracy”12 and

that of the Seventh for giving “a clearer picture of the work’s overall shape.”13 Instead of

using the conservative language in the previous two reviews, Jacobson’s review of

Abravanel’s recording of the Second made bold statements such as “With this

performance, Abravanel has advanced from the ranks of the very good Mahler

10“Utah Praises Work of Abravanel,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 29 March 1967, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517,
Box 76.
11 Calvin L. Rampton, Proclamation, n.d., Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 15.
12Bernard Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 8, in E flat,” High Fidelity Magazine 17/2 (February 1967),
94, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.
13Bernard Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 7,” High Fidelity Magazine 16/4 (April 1966): 100,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 25.

142
conductors into those of the great, and the continuation of his series must be looked

forward to with the keenest interest.”14

Critics embraced the recording’s sound. Jacobson described the sound as

“astonishing,” in particular about the dynamic range, which embraced “pianissimos like

the whisper of a summer breeze and fortissimos that may make even your neighbors think

the Day of Judgment has arrived.”15 The sound quality was so impressive that the

recording was the number one choice in an “unorthodox review of stereo releases that

show off, or show up, your system” by Norman Eisenberg, who often wrote about sound

equipment and had recommended eight recordings suitable for “assessing speaker

performance.” In the Vanguard recording of Mahler’s Second, the Dolby noise reduction

system provided “an unusually noise-free background again which all the stunning sonics

can emerge.” If the speakers were good enough, Eisenberg wrote, the listeners should be

able to hear “the guttiness of the strings,” “different tones” in the timpani, “internal

separation of orchestral choirs during complex passages,” “the chorus entrance in the last

movement: the singers’ voices should sound blended and well articulated,” and “the

closing bars where the orchestra is underscored by deep organ tones which should be

half-felt, half-heard.”16 These characteristics entailed Vanguard engineers’ attention to

detail and attracted not only the people interested in Mahler’s music but also those

serious about sound equipment. Eisenberg’s review thus included producers and sound

engineers among the contributors to a successful recording.

14Bernard Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 2 (’Resurrection’),” High Fidelity Magazine 17/11
(November 1967): 102, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 76.
15 Ibid.
16 Norman Eisenberg, “Eight Records to Judge Your Speakers by,” High Fidelity 18/6 (June 1968), 44.

143
The musical aspect was “breathtaking” according to Jacobson:

Abravanel’s previous Mahler releases (the Seventh and Eighth Symphonies) were
powerful, sensitive, and musical without ever quite scaling the heights of
sublimity. Now he has thrown caution to the winds and produced an interpretation
of awesome, inspired magnificence. Discretion and a sense of proportion,
however, have not deserted him, and it is these virtues—quite apart from the
quality of the recording—that seem to me to give him the edge over Solti.17

Jacobson singled out the conductor’s masterful handling of rehearsal 14 (m. 194) in the

Finale—“here Abravanel had me leaping out of my chair in veritable terror”—and “the

Kräftig section four pages later” (m. 220)—“conductor and engineers between them have

achieved a moment so intense as for once to justify the use, in its fullest sense, of the

word ‘sensational.’”18 As seen in the reviews of Abravanel’s recordings of the Eighth and

Seventh, his interpretation was often described as accurate but under-characterized;

Jacobson’s review was a rare one that praised the “sublime” and “sensational” quality of

the maestro’s interpretation.

Interestingly, Abravanel’s interpretation in this section sounds quite close to

Bernstein’s in his 1963 recording.19 Initially their tempos for the section’s two opening

measures (mm. 194–195) are quite different, with Bernstein’s only half of Abravanel’s

tempo. However, the long fermata in these two measures starkly contrasts to the regular

notes, making the difference in tempos in the two versions less significant. At m. 196,

Bernstein’s tempo is faster than Abravanel’s but not by much. Both versions slightly

decrease the tempo at m. 220. The similarities between the two versions in these 45

17 Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 2 (’Resurrection’).”


18 Ibid.
19Gustav Mahler, Gustav Mahler: the Complete Symphonies, Leonard Bernstein, the New York
Philharmonic, and the London Symphony Orchestra, Sony, SX12K 89499, 2001, CD.

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measures point to the possibility that Bernstein’s version planted a model in listeners’

ears, to which later recordings were compared consciously or unconsciously—the closer

a later recording is to Bernstein’s, the more likely it would receive positive reviews.

Table 5.2: Tempo comparison, mm. 194–239 of Mahler’s Second Symphony, fifth
movement

Rehearsal # Measure # Abravanel (1968) Bernstein (1963)


14 194 100–115 bpm 55–60 bpm
195 145–170 bpm 55–60 bpm
(Allegro energico) 196–209 ~140 bpm ~165 bpm
15 210–219 ~140 bpm ~165 bpm
(Kräftig) 220–237 ~133 bpm ~150 bpm
16 238–239 ~133 bpm ~150 bpm

Jacobson was similarly enthusiastic about the performance of the orchestra and

soloists. He stated that the Utah Symphony was comparable to “the London Symphony in

top form” and the orchestra had made Mahler’s Second Symphony “sound easy to play.”

As for the soloists, “Beverly Sills sings the solo soprano part beautifully,” and Florence

Kopleff’s “rich contralto is ideally suited to the music.”20 Additionally, Jacobson praised

Martin Bookspan’s “workmanlike set of notes and texts and translations.”21

Reviews from Utah either quoted outside reviews or highly regarded the

recording. Harold Lundstrom’s article quoted Jacobson’s review extensively, especially

the musical aspects, including Abravanel’s “awesome, inspired” interpretation and the

orchestra and soloists’ performance.22 David O’Neil emphasized the use of “nearly 100

corrections made in the Mahler score for the first time on record, changes approved by

20 Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 2 (’Resurrection’).”


21 Ibid.
22Harold Lundstrom, “‘Leaping Out Of My Chair,’” Deseret News, n.d., Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box
76.

145
the International Mahler Society.” Despite some minor problems, O’Neil praised aspects

including the acoustics in the Tabernacle, Abravanel’s “lively” interpretation, the

orchestra and chorus who performed “admirably,” Kopleff’s being “as lush-voiced and as

perfect as ever,” and Sills’s “beautiful voice.”23

Years later, Abravanel’s recording of the Second was still recommended, which

could be partially attributed to Beverly Sills. When Sills performed and recorded with the

Utah Symphony in 1967, her career was at a turning point; in 1966 she had sung

Cleopatra in Handel’s Giulio Cesare with the New York City Opera, which brought her

recognition that led to her appearance in several major opera houses in Europe in 1967–

1970.24 As Sills later recalled, “He [Abravanel] wanted me when nobody did.”25 Later her

booming reputation helped sustain the popularity of this recording. A 1970 record review

by Robert C. Marsh, reviewing Bernard Haitink’s and Rafael Kubelik’s recordings of

Mahler’s Second Symphony, mentioned Abravanel’s version as “worth having simply for

what Beverly Sills and Florence Kopleff achieve in the finale.”26 In 1981 King Durkee

reviewed a recent recording of Mahler’s Second by Solti with the Chicago Symphony

Orchestra and again reminisced about “the magnificent recording by Maurice Abravanel

and the Utah Symphony Orchestra with equally great vocal contributions from Beverly

Sills and Florence Kopleff.”27

23David O’Neil, “Utah Symphony Mahler Record Termed ‘Superb,’” The Salt Lake Tribune, 5 November
1967, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 76.
24Peter G. Davis, “Sills, Beverly,” in Oxford Music Online, www.oxfordmusiconline.com, accessed 24
July 2015.
25 David L. Beck, “Opera’s queen to sing with Utah Symphony,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 13 February 1977.
26 Robert C. Marsh, “Mahler: Symphony No. 2,” High Fidelity 20/2 (February 1970), 89.
27 King Durkee, “Strictly classical,” The Daily Gleaner, 20 October 1981.

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Although this recording was well received, the fast-growing market of Mahler

recordings in the late 1960s dampened the excitement.28 In September 1967, Jacobson

reviewed “the sixty-odd recorded versions currently available.”29 Any new Mahler

recordings at this time would not be hailed for the simple fact that they were made or

followed a new score; instead, they faced the competition of many existing recordings as

well as newer recordings soon to be made. The overwhelming positivity from 1964 and

1965, when the recordings of the Eighth and Seventh were released, would no longer be

seen for the rest of the Utah Symphony’s Mahler cycle.

Recording Mahler’s Fourth Symphony (1968)

Between the recordings of the Second and Fourth Symphonies, Abravanel

conducted the Second, the Fourth, and Das Lied von der Erde multiple times in and

outside Utah. While subscription concerts showed the local audience’s embrace of

Mahler’s music and the orchestra’s performance, concerts on tour demonstrated that the

orchestra’s past recordings had spread its name in performing Mahler’s works.

The performance of Das Lied von der Erde was exciting particularly because of

the famed contralto Maureen Forrester. While Beverly Sills was not yet famous when she

appeared with the Utah Symphony, Forrester had been recognized for her Mahler singing

28 A surge in the number of Mahler recordings could be seen in the early 1960s, around the time Abravanel
started recording Mahler’s symphonies. In Lewis Smoley’s discography, 32 recordings of Mahler’s
Symphonies Nos. 1 to 9 from 1936 to 1958 were listed. In the 1960s, 58 recordings were listed. If we use
Abravanel’s first Mahler recording as a vantage point, 46 Mahler recordings were listed before Abravanel’s
recording of Mahler’s Eighth, and 52 more recordings were listed since then till the end of the 1960s. The
increase of recordings was evident; more Mahler recordings were made in the second half of the 1960s than
in the previous three decades from 1936 to 1964. Lewis M. Smoley, The Symphonies of Gustav Mahler: A
Critical Discography (New York: Greenwood Press, 1986).
29 Bernard Jacobson, “The Mahler Symphonies on Records,” High Fidelity 17/9 (September 1967): 55–59.

147
at various European festivals in the 1950s.30 Utah newspapers and concert advertisements

noted Forrester’s reputation for interpreting Mahler;31 she was described as

“internationally acclaimed for her definitive Mahler interpretation,”32 and called “the

outstanding interpreter of the vocal works of Gustav Mahler.”33 Together, Forrester and

Abravanel were termed “two Mahler award-winners.”34

The concert was well received, and its reviews suggested that the community had

recognized Abravanel’s credibility in conducting Mahler’s music. The soloists were

applauded for unifying the song cycle “with the attainment of overall mood and a deep

comprehension of the musical bounds and the affinities of each fragment for its

neighbors.”35 Forrester’s vocal style was “dramatic” and Cochran’s singing was

“competent.”36 Abravanel’s reading was “heartfelt and beautiful.”37 As The Salt Lake

Tribune staff writer stated, “Abravanel again demonstrated his personal affinity for

30Martin Bernheimer, “Forrester, Maureen,” Oxford Music Online, www.oxfordmusiconline, accessed 24


July 2015.
31An announcement of the season from February 1967 explained that she had been “widely acclaimed for
her interpretations of Mahler.” Jim Fitzpatrick, “Utah Symphony Announces Season,” The Salt Lake
Tribune, 26 February 1967.
32 “Advertisement, Utah Symphony,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 26 November 1967.
33“First Appearance Here: Noted Contralto Sings Thursday, Will Be Utah Symphony Soloist,” Ogden
Standard-Examiner, 26 November 1967.
34David O’Neill, “Contralto, Tenor Featured: Symphony to Play Mahler,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 26
November 1967.

Maureen Forrester was listed as one of the recipients of citations for Mahler, along with other
prominent Mahler figures such as Dietrich Fisher-Diskau and Deryck Cooke, in the 1969 issue of Chord
and Discord, but the year and type of award were not clarified. “Recipients of Citations,” Chord and
Discord 3/1 (1969): 125.
35Harold Lundstrom, “An Awesome Height of Artistry,” Deseret News, 30 November 1967, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 76.
36David O’Neil, “Utah Symphony Gives Dazzling S.L. Display,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 30 November
1967.
37 Lundstrom, “An Awesome Height of Artistry.”

148
Mahler’s music”; the city had witnessed many other Mahler performances and was

becoming accustomed to Abravanel’s interest and authority in conducting Mahler. “[A]

seasoned guide,” Abravanel “led his orchestra through steep ascents and past gorgeous

vistas.”38

Mahler’s Fourth Symphony was performed in March 1968 and recorded

sometime before June.39 Critics embraced Abravanel’s “interpretive ability” and

Davrath’s “bell-like soprano tones.” DeAnn Evans emphasized the eclectic nature of the

work, describing it as “exultant, pensive, gay, sad, and whimsical all at once,” with the

first movement being “a delightful combination between the classical tradition and a

semi-contemporary style.” Davrath’s “clear, warm voice” was said to portray “a most

charming picture of heaven” in the fourth movement.40

In 1968 the Utah Symphony brought the Fourth on the West Coast tour. The

concert in Seattle on June 21 was attended by “a near-capacity audience, warm in its

response to the music.” The performance of the Fourth Symphony was “exemplary” and

“effectively-played,” and Abravanel was said to clearly know Mahler’s music.41 The

concert on June 24 at the War Memorial Opera House in San Francisco was “love at first

sight.” While Abravanel’s affinity with Mahler was only hinted at—“Abravanel’s

38 O’Neil, “Utah Symphony Gives Dazzling S.L. Display.”


39“Abravanel, Noted as Interpreter Of Mahler, to Present ‘4th’ Here,” Santa Barbara News Press, 19 May
1968, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.

Netania Davrath sang the vocal part. Jack Diether again wrote the liner notes.
40
DeAnn Evans, “Symphony ‘A Dream’ Comes True,” Deseret News, 30 March 1968, Abravanel Papers,
Ms 517, Box 77.
41 Some mishaps, including Preston’s voice being “far too light” in the fourth movement and some “defects”
in the string and horn sections, did not discredit the overall merit. The orchestra was “careful, almost
cautious” and “well-disciplined.” Rolf Stromberg, “The Utah Symphony Has Its Moments,” Seattle Post-
Intelligencer, 22 June 1968, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.

149
mountain of authority made all of this come through well”42—the conductor’s

interpretation was termed “[c]lear, almost French texture dominated, with a bright chirrup

kind of tone plus objective, ‘straight’ tempos,” contrasting Josef Krips’ “Viennese

style.”43 These descriptions were reminiscent of the record reviews of Abravanel’s other

Mahler recordings, which often viewed his reading as closer to the score and less

exaggerated than other Mahler conductors such as Bernstein. Other concert reviews for

this tour suggested that the orchestra and the conductor’s reputation had been validated

by tours and recordings. A San Francisco review called the Utah Symphony a “big-scaled,

excellent orchestra” that was “known for its American and foreign tours,” and another

termed the Utah Symphony “a distinguished orchestra” and Abravanel’s reputation

established “by a great number of impressive recordings.”44 Jean Preston’s singing was

described as “fresh and young, despite shakiness of tone” and “bringing joy and

considerable charm” to the symphony.45

On the same tour, the Utah Symphony performed Mahler’s Second Symphony at

the Hollywood Bowl on June 22. While Abravanel had conducted at the Bowl twice

before, it was the Utah Symphony’s debut in Los Angeles. Abravanel’s Mahler Medal

from the Bruckner Society and honorary membership from the Internationale Gustav

42 Marilyn Tucker, “Bay Debut By Utah Symphony,” Oakland Tribune, 25 June 1968.
43Heuwell Tircuit, “Good Program: Utah Symphony’s Welcome Visit,” San Francisco Chronicle, 26 June
1968, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.
44Alexander Fried, “Utah Symphony Excels,” The San Francisco Examiner, 25 June 1968, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 77; Marilyn Tucker, “Bay Debut By Utah Symphony.”
45 Fried, “Utah Symphony Excels”; Tucker, “Bay Debut By Utah Symphony.”

The concert on June 25 in Portland at the New Civic Auditorium was similarly embraced; the
orchestra’s playing was “nicely in the spirit” and the soloist “conveyed nicely the childish fancies.” Hilmar
Grondahl, “Utah Symphony Shows Fine Artistry In First concert At Civic Auditorium,” The Oregonian, 26
June 1968, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.

150
Mahler Gesellschaft as well as the Utah Symphony’s being invited to perform at Athens

Festival built up expectations.46 The Los Angeles Times critic Martin Bernheimer called

Mahler’s Second “a Utah specialty” and “a giant-size undertaking.”47 However, the

performance was less than ideal, possibly due to amplification problems and reduced

rehearsal time. The performance “failed to do justice to the Utah orchestra’s reputation,

and it failed to reinforce the positive impression left by the ensemble’s recordings.” The

“intonation, articulation, balance and accuracy” seemed to all have gone wrong.48 The

acoustics of the amphitheater perhaps prevented the orchestra from sounding like a large

ensemble.49 While Daniel Cariaga called Abravanel’s reading “elegant,” Bernheimer

thought the performance was dull, especially in comparison to the group’s recording of

the same work, which showed that Abravanel’s “concept of the Mahler Second is not the

cautious, foursquare run-through offered Saturday.”50 Although the ending “inspire[d] a

degree of conviction,” but it was “too late to counterbalance—or redeem—what had gone

before.”51 This concert was one of the few negatively-reviewed ones, but the high

expectations beforehand and the privilege of opening the Bowl reflected Abravanel and

the Utah Symphony’s growing fame.

46“Utah Symphony: Inspired Leadership Wins Top Respect,” Citizen News, 14 June 1968, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.
47Martin Bernheimer, “Mahler, Via Utah, to Open the Bowl,” Los Angeles Times, 20 June 1968, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.
48Martin Bernheimer, “First Coast Tour: Utah Symphony Plays Mahler Score at Bowl,” Los Angeles Times,
24 June 1968.
49Daniel Cariaga, “Utah Symphony Brings Bowl an Atypical, Worthy Concert,” Press Telegram, 24 June
1968.
50Cariaga, “Utah Symphony Brings Bowl an Atypical, Worthy Concert”; Bernheimer, “First Coast Tour:
Utah Symphony Plays Mahler Score at Bowl.”
51 Bernheimer, “First Coast Tour: Utah Symphony Plays Mahler Score at Bowl.”

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The recording of the Fourth was released near the end of 1968 but did not receive

as much attention as the previous three Mahler recordings, probably because the Fourth

was the second most recorded symphony by Mahler, only less recorded than the First. At

this time, ten other versions existed, whereas thirteen recordings of the First were

available.52 Mark Kanny applauded Abravanel for using the new Critical Edition, which

“presents Mahler’s music without distortion.”53 Kanny particularly embraced the finale,

in which Davrath “conveys the childlike delight and simplicity of the music,” Abravanel

accompanies gracefully, and “altogether this is the most enticing and enjoyable version of

the song.”54 Fred Pleibel from the Los Angeles Times called the recording “the most

lightfooted and sunny Mahler Fourth on recordings” with strong solo winds,

“extraordinarily transparent engineering,” and “a charming performance” in the last

movement by Davrath. Pleibel also noted the “insipid playing of the Utah Symphony’s

violins,” which almost “negated” the otherwise successful recording.55 Bernard

Jacobson’s review in High Fidelity was no less harsh. Although the recording was the

first to use the Critical Edition, compared to that of the Second, it was “disappointing” —

“His [Abravanel’s] control here is much less firm and his accentuation less purposeful.”

Davrath’s singing in the last movement was “equally disappointing.” Nonetheless,

Jacobson recognized Abravanel’s overall achievement in recording Mahler’s symphonies;

he stated that Abravanel’s recording of the Fourth “would have seem more impressive if

52Fred Kirby, “Classical Music: Berlioz, Mahler Works Get Wax Action,” Billboard 50/48 (November 30,
1968): 44.
53 Mark N. Kanny, “Mahler: Symphony No. 4,” American Record Guide 35/2 (October 1968), 146.
54 Ibid., 148.
55 Fred Pleibel, “Classical LPs: Alla Breve,” Los Angeles Times, 8 June 1969.

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No. 2 had been less spectacular. But Abravanel has set himself a towering standard. Let

us hope that his future recordings will come closer to it.”56 Despite this less successful

recording, Abravanel and the Utah Symphony continued their Mahler journey and the

next two recordings would be better received than this one.

Recording Mahler’s Third and Ninth Symphonies (1969)

On March 9, 1969, Abravanel conducted Mahler’s Ninth Symphony with the

Utah Symphony, the only time he conducted this symphony in concert. In his review,

critic Bill Hansen continued the rhetoric about Abravanel’s growing authority on

interpreting Mahler—“During the past year the fame of the symphony rested on the

interpretation of this great man’s [Mahler’s] works. Who else but Maurice Abravanel has

recreated the genius of Mahler so excellently? Who else has proven so consistently that

he understands what the Austrian genius wanted to say?”57 Additionally, Hansen

applauded the orchestra for being able to “grasp and use the emotional ideas intended by

the composer” and Abravanel for his “excellent interpretation.”58

Two months after the concert, Abravanel recorded Mahler’s Ninth and Third

Symphonies with Vanguard. In the recording sessions, the Utah Symphony also recorded

Berlioz’s Requiem with the University of Utah Civic Chorale and A Capella Choir.59

Mahler’s Third Symphony, unlike the other symphonies, was not performed before being

56 Bernard Jacobson, “Mahler: Symphony No. 4,” High Fidelity 19/3 (March 1969): 96.
57 Bill Hansen, “Abravanel leads Mahler’s work,” n.d., s.n., Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.
58 Ibid.
59 “Symphony Records Mahler, Berlioz,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 4 May 1969.

153
recorded.60 Again Seymour Solomon brought sound equipment and engineers to the

Mormon Tabernacle; this time he was excited about “catching the unique sound of the

Tabernacle by experimenting with a new recording technique,” quadraphonic sound.

More specifically, he used 18 microphones—five among the singers, eleven in the

orchestra, and two directional microphones “a little distance in front of the stage.” The

two directional microphones, facing the back of the building, were to pick up the sound

of the building. These microphones recorded sound on a four-track system instead of the

two-track stereo system that had been used.61 When the recording was being played, the

sound from the two groups of microphones among the musicians would be played in the

two speakers in front of the listeners, and the sound from the two directional microphones

would be played in the two speakers behind the listeners. The main purpose of this

“Surround Stereo,” as Vanguard called it, was to reproduce “the actual acoustical

properties of the auditorium recorded in and of surrounding the listener with the sound as

though he were seated in a concert hall.”62 Essentially, one could even identify the place

of recording through the “differences in reverberation.”63 Vanguard introduced the

system to the press at its headquarters on June 25, 1969, and the Utah Symphony’s

60 Abravanel would finally conduct this work in a concert in 1979, his last season with the Utah Symphony.
Harold Lundstrom incorrectly stated that “[t]he Mahler ‘Third Symphony’ with the Civic Chorale was
performed during the 1968–1969 season” in “Putting It On Tape Differently,” Deseret News, 5 May 1969.
The Utah Symphony’s record suggested that Mahler’s Third Symphony was only performed twice before
the 2014–15 season: once in January 1979, conducted by Abravanel, and once in February 2001, conducted
by Keith Lockhart. (“The Utah Symphony’s Mahler Tradition,” Utah Symphony,
http://www.utahsymphony.org/the-orchestra/85-the-utah-symphonys-mahler-tradition, accessed 26 July
2015.) No other sources that indicated a performance of Mahler’s Third by the Utah Symphony before
1979 could be found.
61 Lundstrom, “Putting It On Tape Differently.”
62 Fred Kirby, “Vanguard’s 4-Track System,” Billboard 81/27 (July 5, 1969): 3.
63 Ibid.

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recordings of Mahler’s Third and Ninth Symphonies were among the first releases of the

new technology.64 These earliest four-track recordings were only available on reel-to-reel

tapes.

The idea of four-track sound seemed a logical progression from stereo sound.

Many other companies followed suit to develop their own quadraphonic systems. The

new technology was not widely accepted, however. Firstly, it was expensive to set up the

system. As the way to produce four-channel sound was not yet standardized, some

modification of equipment was necessary. Although the tapes could be played on the

stereo systems available at that time, to hear the quadraphonic sound, consumers needed

extra equipment, including open-reel equipment with “special heads to reproduce the four

tracks simultaneously” or a conversion kit that included “the four-track playback head

and an extra set of playback preamps.” Plus, a second pair of speakers were needed.65

Secondly, when quadraphonic LPs became available in the early 1970s, the various

competing formats were incompatible, among which the most competitive ones were SQ

(used by CBS, Sony, and EMI), QS (developed by Sansui), and CD-4 (used by JVC and

RCA).66 The market was divided by these formats, and no single format could provide

the consumers with all the artists they liked. For instance, if a consumer wanted “four-

channel recordings Leonard Bernstein (SQ—Columbia), Herbie Mann (CD-4—Atlantic),

64Other first releases included Berlioz’s Requiem (also recorded by Abravanel and the Utah Symphony),
Joan Baez’s David’s Album, Buffy Sainte-Marie’s Illuminations, and Jean Jacques Perrey’s The Amazing
Electronic Sound. Kirby, “Vanguard’s 4-Track System.”
65Robert Long, “Ping-Ping-Pong-Pong: Does Vanguard’s new four-channel ‘Surround Sound’ foreshadow
the stereo of the future?” High Fidelity 19/9 (September 1969): 62–63.
66 SQ and QS used matrix formats, whereas CD-4 used the discrete format.

155
and B. B. King (QS—ABC or Command),” he or she needed all three systems.67 Lastly,

the requirement of having four speakers created inconvenience; some critics pointed out

that “most rooms have a door in one corner, and the hi-fi magazines were full of stories

of critics’ wives who had had to duck under a speaker with the coffee tray.”68 Due to

these factors, the four-track sound “lasted only a couple of years and was given a quiet

burial.”69

Because of the trouble of setting up a quadraphonic reproduction system, early

reviews of Abravanel’s recordings of Mahler’s Third and Ninth Symphonies discussed

the LP discs instead of the tapes, as the reviews listed serial numbers of LPs (starting

with VCS) instead of tapes (starting with VSS). Since the LPs could only reproduce

mono or stereo sound, the technical discussion in these reviews merely mentioned a

“four-track option.”70 As a set, these two recordings were welcomed for the lower price,

the “special acoustical qualities” of Mormon Tabernacle, and “exceptionally high

engineering standards.”71

The recording of the Third was welcomed. The longest review came from Gerald

Fox, president of the Gustav Mahler Society of New York from 1987 to 2009.72 Fox

highly regarded the recording, which was “superbly played, on the whole stunningly

67Alfred W. Myers, “Four-Channel Sound Today: A Very Lively Corpse,” High Fidelity 26/11 (November
1976), 77. Myers discussed in detail the pros and cons of the different systems. Myers, 74–77.
68Pekka Gronow and Ilpo Saunio, An International History of the Recording Industry (London; New York:
Cassell, 1998), 185.
69 Ibid.
70 Robert C. Marsh, “Mahler in Utah,” High Fidelity 20/5 (May 1970): 84.
71 Ibid.
72“Short History,” in The Gustav Mahler Society, http://www.gmsnyc.org/history.php, accessed 16
December 2015.

156
recorded, and no less welcome for its distinguished competition.”73 Fox emphasized that

“[t]he vast acoustical spaciousness of the Mormon Tabernacle provides an ideal

ambience for the music’s grandiose transcendentalism.”74 He also praised the soloist

Christina Krooskos for singing “beautifully” and the chorus for “[achieving] the light

texture and charm appropriate to most of the Wunderhorn text in the fifth movement.”75

The most praiseworthy aspect was Abravanel’s interpretation:

Abravanel’s view of the symphony is soft-focused, rather favoring smooth


textures and understatement. This perspective may not encompass the compleat
Mahler, but it offers its own rewards. The broad and noble pacing is completely
viable except in the second movement, where I think more speed is required;
despite Mahler’s directive (“Sehr mässig, Ja nicht eilen!”—very moderate,
certainly not hurried!), the movement is, after all, a Tempo di Menuetto, not a
saraband.76

Although Fox did not completely agree with the tempo, he affirmed that Abravanel’s

version “offers its own rewards.” In other words, Abravanel’s interpretation might not be

the definitive version, but it was an attractive alternative. Fox used the opening of the

first movement to demonstrate how the conductor was loyal to the score:

More often than not, Abravanel is remarkably attentive to details. Note


how scrupulously he stresses all the accented notes of the opening phrase for eight
unison horns, but not the C and E (written), which are the only two unaccented in
the score. This textural fidelity is most telling. The introduction sounds at once
open and majestic, but also “Kraftig, Entschleden” [sic] (vigorous, resolute), as
the score has it.77

73Gerald S. Fox, “Grandiose transcendentalism: Horenstein and Abravanel in the Mahler Third Symphony,”
American Record Guide 37/9 (May 1971), 577.
74 Ibid.
75 Ibid., 577, 580.
76 Ibid., 577.
77 Ibid.

157
Instead of criticizing Abravanel for being less than exciting, Fox applauded the

conductor’s careful adherence to the score. Indeed, the two unaccented notes are played

slightly lighter than the other accented notes. Furthermore, Fox commended Abravanel

for providing, “for the first time on records, the newly-prepared critical edition.”

Abravanel went beyond using a newly published Critical Edition, as he did for the

Seventh and Fourth Symphonies. This time, “[h]is diligence and enterprise are especially

noteworthy considering that this edition is not yet even published. He actually took the

trouble to write in changes which W. Parks Grant (of the University of Mississippi)

uncovered while working on this edition, in Vienna, under the stewardship of Professor

Erwin Ratz.”78

Other briefer reviews similarly congratulated this recording. Robert Marsh from

High Fidelity stated that the recording was “a well-paced and well-played performance

that deals effectively with all the major interpretive problems and captures the very

Austrian, nature-worshiping, ebullient romanticism of the music.”79 Craig Palmer from

Pasadena, California embraced the recording from the “dynamic strength,” “a dramatic,

evocative contribution by alto Miss Krooskos,” “a gusty rendition by the Utah Chorale,”

“shimmery orchestral colors,” to clear interplay between instruments with “balance and

moderation.”80 Enos E. Shupp, Jr., a critic writing for the record company H. Royer

Smith in Philadelphia, praised the “spectacularly good” sound with “an appropriate

spacious quality.” The soloist Krooskos’s voice was “lovely” and the choirs “fresh and

naive.” Overall, Abravanel’s version, with the exception of the second movement, was “a

78 Ibid., 580.
79 Marsh, “Mahler in Utah.”
80 Craig Palmer, “Classical Records,” Pasadena Star-News, 17 May 1970.

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match for any [other versions] in spirit and conviction.”81 The New York Times critic

Donal Henahan singled out the “well-drilled choruses and a strong alto soloist.”82 Bert

Willard from the Santa Barbara News-Press suggested the recording, with its “stunning”

sound, to be put on the Christmas gift list.83 A later review from 1976, discussing the

reel-to-reel tapes, excitingly detailed the sound quality. The recording “captures the awe-

inspiring acoustical environment of the Mormon Tabernacle and one of the finest

orchestras in our country in a thrilling performance that lacks nothing in creating a you-

are-there feeling!”84

Abravanel’s recording of Mahler’s Ninth, with its warm sound and bursting

energy, was similarly embraced. Marsh commended Abravanel’s “pretty valid” approach

in using the final Adagio to set “the tone of the entire work and the three earlier

movements prepare us for its mood of resolution and final repose,” which achieved “a

thoroughly convincing performance.”85 An Ohio newspaper praised the use of the Dolby

noise reduction system and the “luscious” sound and “outstanding” engineering. The

interpretation of Abravanel, “one of today’s leading Mahler interpreters,” was “relaxed

yet smoothly flowing.”86 Shupp, Jr. applauded the “dramatic” and “mature” recording.87

81Enos E. Shupp, Jr., “Mahler: Symphony No. 3, Mahler: Symphony No. 9,” The New Records 38/2 (April
1970).
82 Donal Henahan, “Mahler Madness At Fever Pitch,” The New York Times, 2 August 1970.
83Bert Willard, “Sales of New Album Indicates Classical Music Still Popular,” Santa Barbara News-Press,
10 October 1970, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.
84John Sunier, “The Stereo Scene: Quad Revolution Goes On,” San Rafael Independent Journal, 3 January
1976, M12.
85 Marsh, “Mahler in Utah.”
86 Jack Rudolph, “Vanguard hits academic album big time,” Zanesville Post Crescent, 12 April 1970.
87 Shupp, Jr., “Mahler: Symphony No. 3, Mahler: Symphony No. 9.”

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Willard stated that Abravanel and the Utah Symphony had made the symphony “their

own” and called the recording “definitive,” “surpassing Walter, Bernstein, Barbirolli and

Klemperer in interpretation and realization.”88

The only criticism was about the less than ideal ending in the recording. As

Henahan stated, the end of Mahler’s Ninth, which should “fade away into nothingness”

was too regular and dissatisfying in Abravanel’s recording; “Abravanel, excellent on so

many counts, misses the end-of-the-world feeling, the suspension in space and time that

one waits for here.”89 Compared to two recordings by Bruno Walter, who premiered the

symphony in 1912, Abravanel’s version in fact has a slower ending. The last 27 measures

(mm. 159–185) take 2 minutes 21 seconds in Walter’s 1938 recording with the Vienna

Philharmonic, 2 minutes 48 seconds (18:16–21:04) in his 1961 recording with the

Columbia Symphony Orchestra,90 and 3 minutes 58 seconds in Abravanel’s. Walter

maintains a faster tempo throughout this last section and only slows down dramatically in

the last two measures. He even speeds up on some long notes. Abravanel keeps a slower

tempo, maintains the length of the long notes, and does not decrease the tempo as much

as Walter in the last two measures. Although Abravanel’s ending displays less contrast,

one could argue that his slower tempo creates more of the “end-of-the-world feeling.”

88 Willard, “Sales of New Album Indicates Classical Music Still Popular.”


89 Henahan, “Mahler Madness At Fever Pitch.”
90Gustav Mahler, Mahler: Symphony No. 9, Bruno Walter and Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, EMI, CD
H 7 63029 2, 1989, CD, https://www.naxosmusiclibrary.com/, accessed 1 January 2016 (recorded on 16
January 1938); Gustav Mahler, Bruno Walter Conducts and Talks about Mahler: Symphony No. 9,
Rehearsal & Performance, Bruno Walter and Columbia Symphony Orchestra, Sony, 1996, CD (recorded in
1961).

Walter’s version from 1938 was recorded live in his last concert with the Vienna Philharmonic;
soon afterwards, Adolf Hitler took over the city. Walter himself did not particularly like this recording
because of “its extraneous noises and technical limitations.” Robert C. Marsh, “Mahler’s Third and Ninth:
Both Worthy Tributes,” High Fidelity 12/6 (June 1962), 51.

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By this time, it was clear that Abravanel was “well on his way to completing the

entire Mahler repertoire.”91 Henahan stated, “The Utah Symphony Orchestra and its

conductor, Maurice Abravanel, advance two more steps toward completing a Mahler

cycle [with the recordings of Mahler’s Third and Ninth].”92 Marsh wrote, “Abravanel

continues his Mahler edition, which is now well past the halfway point, with six of the

symphonies in print.”93 In the following decade, as these critics anticipated, Abravanel

and the Utah Symphony would record the rest of the Mahler cycle.

Completing the Mahler Recording Cycle (1974)

Between February 1970 and October 1974, Abravanel and the Utah Symphony

performed Mahler’s First Symphony, Fifth Symphony, the Adagietto from the Fifth

Symphony, and the Adagio of the Tenth Symphony in subscription concerts and on

tour.94 These performances helped the orchestra prepare for the last installment of the

Mahler cycle. Meanwhile, the Utah community was getting to know Mahler’s music from

the multiple performances, program notes, concert announcements, and concert reviews,

many of which affirmed Abravanel’s reputation as a Mahler expert, the Mahler

recordings’ contribution to the orchestra’s fame, and that the maestro was indeed a

91 Willard, “Sales of New Album Indicates Classical Music Still Popular.”


92 Henahan, “Mahler Madness At Fever Pitch.”
93 Marsh, “Mahler in Utah.”
94These concerts started on February 7, 1970, when Abravanel performed Mahler’s First Symphony,
twenty-six years since he first performed this work on January 20, 1954. Between October 1971 and May
1974, the Adagietto from Mahler’s Fifth Symphony was programmed many times on tour: in 1971 on
October 9 and 10 and November 11; in 1972 on April 19 and 28, May 19, October 25 and 27, and
December 7; in 1973 on March 26 and 27 as well as on April 26, 27, and 28; and in 1974 on May 14.
Unfortunately, no reviews could be located.

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Mahlerite. Although the reception of the completed cycle outside Utah was lukewarm,

the preparation and process of recording a Mahler cycle turned Mahler into a trademark

of the Utah Symphony.

Table 5.3: Performances and Recording Sessions of Mahler’s Music in Utah, 1971–1974

Date Mahler works Other works


January 13, 14, 1971 Fifth Symphony Schubert’s Eighth
(concert) Symphony “Unfinished”
March 8, 9, 1974 Fifth Symphony
(concert) Adagio of the Tenth Symphony
April 13, 1974 First Symphony Bach’s Brandenburg
(concert) Concerto No. 2
Wagner’s “Good Friday
Spell” from Parsifal
May 27-June 1, First Symphony
1974 Fifth Symphony
(recording) Sixth Symphony
Adagio of the Tenth Symphony
Adagio of the Tenth Symphony

For the 1971 concert, Lowell Durham’s program notes reminisced about Bruno

Walter’s 1947 letter recommending Abravanel for the conductor position at the Utah

Symphony, and about the Mahler Medal awarded to Abravanel in 1965. The note also

connected Mahler recordings to the orchestra’s development—“The Maestro is

recognized as a leading Mahler authority by the nation’s major record reviewers. The

orchestra’s national and international reputations probably rest more with Mahler

recordings (Vanguard) than with any other single factor.”95 Concert reviews gave more

attention to Mahler’s Fifth than to Schubert’s Eighth.96 Despite a blizzard, 2,500 audience

95 Lowell Durham, Program Notes, 13 January 1971, 224, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 35.
96Schubert’s Eighth in fact had a longer history in Utah, as it was played on May 17, 1892 in the first
concert of a standalone symphony orchestra in Utah and many more times throughout the years.

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members, as reported by Harold Lundstrom, showed up at the Tabernacle.97 Another

local critic stated that the Tabernacle was two-thirds full and “favorable response was

seemingly 100 percent.”98 Abravanel’s interpretation was “extremely well balanced” and

the “keen musicality” of the orchestra “never short-changed the sense of humanism.”99

Lundstrom praised Abravanel for “exploiting this nervousness [from playing triplets

quickly] with commendable artistic bounds” and at the same time “did not miss the

dimension of depth.”100

For the all-Mahler concert in March 1974, featuring the Fifth Symphony and the

Adagio of the Tenth Symphony, Durham’s program notes again mentioned Abravanel

and the Utah Symphony’s “widespread acclaim” for Mahler’s music.101 The Ogden

concert on March 8 was warmly received by a “good-sized audience” and the

interpretation of Abravanel, “a specialist in Mahler music,” succeeded in bringing out

“the somber depths of the great work and its melancholy concern with sorrow and

despair.”102 The concert in the Mormon Tabernacle on March 9 was sold out, and the

audience was “spellbound” for the entire concert. Abravanel’s reputation of being a

“Mahler expert” was proved justified with this concert, and the orchestra played with

“great passion” and “great clarity.” For the Fifth Symphony, the trumpet and French horn

97Harold Lundstrom, “Abravanel Did Not Miss The Dimension of Mahler’s Depth,” Deseret News, 14
January 1971, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.
98George Raine, “To Make Up for Storm, Orchestra Tries Harder,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 14 January
1971, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 77.
99 Ibid.
100 Lundstrom, “Abravanel Did Not Miss The Dimension of Mahler’s Depth.”
101 Lowell Durham, Program Notes, 8 March 1974, 121, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 36.
102Ray Wight, “Warm Applause Given Maestro, Orchestra for Mahler Selections,” Ogden Standard-
Examiner, 9 March 1974.

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first chairs were singled out for their solos.103 At the end of the concert, Abravanel and

the orchestra received a standing ovation from the “near capacity audience.”104

The closing concert of the 1973–1974 season (on April 13, 1974) featured

Mahler’s First Symphony. In the Deseret News, Lundstrom emphasized Abravanel’s love

for Mahler—“If Gustav Mahler isn’t Maurice Abravanel’s ‘god,’ Mahler must at least be

the leading candidate. Surely, no one loves Mahler more than he does.”105 More than two

decades since his first Mahler concert and more than one decade since his first Mahler

recording, Abravanel’s deep interest in Mahler was hard to miss. However, Lundstrom

stated that this concert was “the only non-sellouts of the season,” and his ambivalent

concert review described that the conductor seemed “a bit impatient with the very slow

speed of the introduction [of Mahler’s First Symphony], and even more with its many

ritardando markings,” which might or might not have affected the overall performance of

the symphony.106 The Salt Lake Tribune’s David Beck was much more positive, reporting

the audience “erupted” as the last sound of Mahler’s First “had thundered into silence.”

Abravanel “spread his arms, as is his custom, and bowed graciously to the Tabernacle

throng” and gestured several principals to stand up to receive applause. When he returned

to bow one last time with the orchestra, the orchestra refused to stand up—“they sat, and

applauded him.” The warm reception from the audience and respect from the orchestra

members were evident. Although Beck did not describe the orchestra’s performance, he

103David L. Beck, “In Presenting Mahler’s Works: Symphony Performs Brilliantly,” The Salt Lake
Tribune, 11 March 1974, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.
104
Harold Lundstrom, “Wild, tranquil—that’s Mahler,” Deseret News, 12 March 1974, Abravanel Papers,
Ms 517, Box 78.
105Harold Lundstrom, “Mahler excitement caps concert season,” Deseret News, 15 April 1974, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.
106 Lundstrom, “Mahler excitement caps concert season.”

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was obviously impressed: “I — jaded by years of freebies, wary of any recording that

doesn’t come from Woolworth’s 98-cent ‘cutout’ rack — intend to buy the Utah

Symphony’s new Mahler recordings (the First, Fifth and the adagio from the Tenth) as

soon as they hit the stands.”107 Beck’s excitement was perhaps more than about owning

good recordings; the Utah symphony was close to completing the Mahler cycle, an honor

no other American orchestra had achieved.

As mentioned in Chapter 3, in 1973 the president of Vox, George de

Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, wanted to complete the Mahler cycle with the Utah Symphony,

but Abravanel sought out Seymour Solomon again. By September 1973, Abravanel’s

recordings of the last installment of Mahler Symphonies with Vanguard had been

announced in High Fidelity.108 Between May 27 and June 1, 1974 Solomon brought his

recording equipment and engineers to Salt Lake City to record Mahler’s First, Fifth, Sixth

Symphonies and the Adagio of the Tenth Symphony. The maestro had led the Utah

Symphony to perform the First and Fifth as well as the Adagio of the Tenth Symphony in

the previous years. Mahler’s Sixth Symphony was never performed in concerts

throughout Abravanel’s directorship in Utah.109 These recordings were again made with

107David L. Beck, “Symphony Ends Regular Season With Fine Concert,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 15 April
1974.
108“The Coming Season’s Recordings,” High Fidelity 23/9 (September 1973): 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26,
32. (Vanguard’s listings were on p. 32.)
109 It is unclear why Abravanel did not choose to perform Mahler’s Sixth Symphony in concert. The
controversy surrounding the order of the middle movements might have deterred Abravanel, especially
because the maestro valued credible editions. Although Erwin Ratz published a Critical Edition of the Sixth
in 1963, it reverted the movement order back to Scherzo/Andante and was criticized. Moreover, the Sixth
was not among Mahler’s more popular works. It was not premiered in America until 1947 by Dimitri
Mitropoulos, 41 years after its world premiere by Mahler. Lastly, the Sixth does not include any vocalist or
chorus; therefore, it did not provide the opportunity to showcase Utah’s choral resources.

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the four-track system; therefore, they were available in both stereo and four-channel

versions. A 14-LP box set was released in 1976.110

The reviews of Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s last four Mahler recordings

were uneven. In general, the reception was relatively tepid in comparison to their first

two Mahler recordings. After all, the other Mahler cycles completed prior to Abravanel’s

had increased the competitiveness of the market, including those by Leonard Bernstein

with the New York Philharmonic (Symphonies 1–7, 9) and London Symphony Orchestra

(Symphony 8) on CBS in 1960–1967; Sir Georg Solti with the Chicago Symphony

Orchestra (Symphonies 5–8), London Symphony Orchestra (Symphonies 1, 2, 3, 9), and

the Concertgebouw Orchestra (Symphony 4) on Decca in 1964–1971; Bernard Haitink

with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (Symphonies 1–9, Adagio of Symphony 10) on

Decca in 1962–1971; and Rafael Kubelik with Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra on

Deutsche Grammophon in 1967–1971. The strongest appeal of Abravanel’s cycle among

these was the consistency in the orchestra, recording venue, and sound quality, even

though it was recorded over a decade. These factors were considered by Robert Marsh,

when he reviewed Kubelik’s Mahler cycle in 1971, as strengths of “a real edition,” as

opposed to collections of recordings that were made by multiple orchestras, in various

110 The box set was originally scheduled to be released in 1975, shortly after the recordings of Mahler’s
First, Fifth, Sixth, and the Adagio of the Tenth. While no review of the box set could be located, two
sources can piece together the release time of Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s Mahler recording cycle.
The original plan was for unknown reasons delayed and the box set was scheduled to be released in 1976,
according to “Preview of the Forthcoming Year’s Recordings,” High Fidelity 25/9 (September 1975), 19,
107. An article about Abravanel’s receiving the award of best Mahler recording in 1976 stated that “[t]he
1975 Mahler award coincides with the release last month by Vanguard Records of a deluxe 14-record set of
all nine of Mahler’s Symphonies, plus the Adagio of his unfinished 10th.” (“Mahler symphony highlight of
1976 Festival series,” Santa Barbara News-Press, 10 July 1976, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.)
Therefore the box set was probably released around or before June 1976.

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halls, and in a long time span, as were Bernstein’s and Solti’s Mahler cycles.111 Kubelik’s

cycle was made by one orchestra but possibly in multiple recording halls. This selling

point was emphasized in Seymour Solomon’s statement about Abravanel’s cycle being

“the first recording of the complete Symphonies by one conductor and orchestra in the

U.S.,” as well as “performed in the final critically revised editions and recorded in the

exceptional acoustic environment of Salt Lake City’s Mormon Tabernacle.”112

With the last group of recordings released, critics could now evaluate the Utah

Symphony’s Mahler recording cycle.113 While Abravanel’s approach was accepted and

some recordings valued more than the others, these recordings were rarely called

definitive. In general, the sound quality and budget price were consistently the reason for

critics to recommend these recordings. Abram Chipman in High Fidelity described

Abravanel’s reading as “a model of coherent and firm music-making, allowing the drama

and passion of the scores to speak for themselves.”114 David Hall in Stereo Review

praised the generally high level of performance, “the acoustic excellence of the Mormon

Tabernacle,” and the “intelligent engineering work of the Vanguard recording staff.”115

Both critics also pointed out that the most obvious attraction for Abravanel’s versions

111Robert C. Marsh, “Mahler’s Symphonies—The Best Complete Set: Kubelik and DGG’s engineers
combine to provide a superb edition,” High Fidelity 21/11 (November 1971), 83–84.
112
“Vanguard Completes Its Mahler Cycle,” Billboard, 29 June 1974: 47; “Vanguard Finishes Mahler
Cycle In Stereo & Quad,” Billboard, 8 March 1975: 43.

Abravanel’s recordings of the Second, Eighth, and Ninth were done before the critical editions
were available.
113The box set did not receive separate reviews in 1976, perhaps because the market was quite saturated
and every recording from the set had been reviewed as it was released.
114 Abram Chipman, “Mahler: Symphonies: No. 1 in D; No. 5, in C sharp minor; No. 6, in A minor; No. 10,
in F sharp (Adagio only).,” High Fidelity 25/6 (June 1975): 98.
115 David Hall, “Gustav Mahler, Symphonist, in Utah,” Stereo Review 35 (October 1975): 105.

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was the low price; Second, Third, Fourth, and Ninth Symphonies were released on

Vanguard’s budget label Cardinal, and First, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth Symphonies as well as

Adagio from the Tenth were released on the even lower-priced Everyman label.116

Individually, these recordings received mixed comments. The recording of

Mahler’s First was not particularly commended. Hall thought the tempo “carefully

gauged” but the performance as a whole “a little cool and distant” and “simply do not

come through with enough impact relative to the rest of the music’s vertical

component.”117 Chipman described the recording as uninspiring and criticized the

conductor’s decision not to take the repeat in the first movement.118 The uninteresting

feeling perhaps stems from Abravanel’s overall faster tempo than in other recordings,

which contributes to a sense of rush through the entire symphony without much time for

contemplation. The repeat between four measures after rehearsal 1 and rehearsal 12 (mm.

63–162) reveals the divide between different interpretations. Most other versions take the

repeat, such as Kubelik’s 1967 recording with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra,

Bernstein’s 1966 recording with the New York Philharmonic, and Solti’s 1964 recording

with the London Symphony Orchestra. Some other recordings, such as Kubelik’s 1954

version with the Vienna Philharmonic and Haitink’s 1962 version with the

Concertgebouw Orchestra, skip the repeat. Abravanel marked in the score “Keine

Niederholung im Original (aber schon in 2. Ausgabe),” indicating that he did not hastily

116Chipman, “Mahler: Symphonies: No. 1 in D; No. 5, in C sharp minor; No. 6, in A minor; No. 10, in F
sharp (Adagio only).”
117 Hall, “Gustav Mahler, Symphonist, in Utah.”
118Chipman, “Mahler: Symphonies: No. 1 in D; No. 5, in C sharp minor; No. 6, in A minor; No. 10, in F
sharp (Adagio only).”

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disregard the composer’s intent (see Figure 5.1.)119 It is however curious that, while the

maestro tried to follow the newest editions in many other instances, he reverted to the

earlier editions for the exposition repeats in the First and Sixth Symphonies.120

119 Symphony No. 1, p. 19. Gustav Mahler, 1860–1911, “Symphony No. 1, Movement I,” McKay Music
Library: Our Collections and Exhibits, accessed January 1, 2016,
http://content.lib.utah.edu/cdm/ref/collection/uu-asc/id/184.

Leonard Bernstein had the first edition and wrote in the repeats on pages 8 and 17. Gustav Mahler,
“Symphony No. 1,” score marked by Gustav Mahler, Bruno Walter, Leonard Bernstein, ARCHIVES0014,
New York Philharmonic Leon Levy Digital Archives,
http://archives.nyphil.org/index.php/artifact/d629e8eb-d756-41d1-bf8d-7ad5d2c13cfc, accessed 31
December 2015.
120These two repeats are rare examples in Mahler’s oeuvre. One wonders if Abravanel took into
consideration the composer’s overall style.

169
Figure 5.1: Abravanel’s score of Mahler’s First Symphony, first movement, mm. 56–70,
p. 19 (Courtesy of the Maurice Abravanel Studio, McKay Library, School of Music,
University of Utah)

170
The “strong, well-played” Fifth was much more welcomed than the First.121 Hall

emphasized how “contrapuntal complexities become very neatly unraveled in this

conductor’s predominantly light-handed approach.”122 Chipman particularly appreciated

Abravanel’s success in “clarifying much of the woodwind writing—e.g., the oboe

appoggiaturas at No. 2 of the Scherzo.” Overall, the conductor’s interpretation was “brisk”

and “fairly energetic.”123 Indeed, even though some passages seem rushed in the last

movement, the energy and excitement is sustained throughout the symphony, while the

fourth movement provides a beautiful, relaxing break. In 1976, this recording was chosen

as “the best Mahler recording [of 1975] released anywhere in the world” by the Gustav

Mahler Society USA. Other recordings in the pool included those by Herbert von Karajan

with the Vienna Philharmonic, James Levine with the Chicago Symphony, Leonard

Bernstein with the New York Philharmonic, and Leopold Stokowski with the London

Symphony Orchestra.124 The Society, also called the Gustav Mahler Society of California,

was founded in 1963–64 by Avik Gilboa and dissolved in 1982.125 Seiji Ozawa won the

award in 1981 for his recording of the Eighth Symphony with the Boston Symphony.126

121 Fred Pleibel, “LPs: Alla Breve,” Los Angeles Times, 14 September 1975.
122 Hall, “Gustav Mahler, Symphonist, in Utah.”
123Chipman, “Mahler: Symphonies: No. 1 in D; No. 5, in C sharp minor; No. 6, in A minor; No. 10, in F
sharp (Adagio only).”
124
“Mahler symphony highlight of 1976 Festival series,” Santa Barbara News-Press, 10 July 1976,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.
125
Edward R. Reilly, “Mahler in America,” in The Mahler Companion, edited by Donald Mitchell and
Andrew Nicholson (Oxford University Press, 2002), 434.
126 Program Book, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Season 1981–82, Week 19, p. 7,
http://worldcat.org/digitalarchive/content/server15982.contentdm.oclc.org/BSYMO/PROG/TRUSVolume9
/Pub411_1981-1982_BSO_Subscription_Wk19.pdf, accessed 22 December 2015.

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Not much else detail could be found about this award, especially because the society

dissolved more than 30 years ago.

Abravanel’s reading of the Sixth was “conscientious” but could not compete with

Bernstein’s 1967 rendition with the New York Philharmonic.127 The drive in the

recording is evident, which accentuates the hysterical nature of the symphony, but the

mishaps of the orchestra in the Sixth are more distracting than in the Fifth and therefore

the recording as a whole is not as satisfying. Santa Barbara music critic Bert Willard

complimented this “awesome and magnificent” recording and considered it as “equal to

that of the Chicago Symphony and Georg Solti.”128 The skipping of the repeat was again

criticized by Chipman,129 who, although applauded the “good over-all shape and

momentum” of the first movement, the balance of the cowbells, and the “usually

excellent woodwinds” in the Scherzo, was unsatisfied with the finale that did not sustain

enough momentum.130 Pencil markings in Abravanel’s score might explain why the

conductor did not take the repeat between rehearsals 1 and 14 (mm. 6–127). As in his

other scores, Abravanel meticulously recorded the timings of several recordings as well

as Mahler’s own. As shown in Figure 5.2, Abravanel wrote down the composer’s

suggested timings for the four movements: “Mahler: 22 (con), 11, 14, 30 = 77 (73 senza

repeat 1. Satz).”131 Although these four numbers were given in the first version of the

127 Hall, “Gustav Mahler, Symphonist, in Utah.”


128
Bert Willard, “Mahler’s Symphony No. 6 is just as good as the 5th,” Santa Barbara News-Press, 2
August 1975, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.
129 Most other versions, including Haitink’s, Bernstein’s, Kubelik’s, and Solti’s did take the repeat.
130Chipman, “Mahler: Symphonies: No. 1 in D; No. 5, in C sharp minor; No. 6, in A minor; No. 10, in F
sharp (Adagio only).”
131In Abravanel’s conducting scores, he often recorded timings of individual movements. On the page after
the title page, Abravanel recorded the timings of all four movements of Mahler, Abravanel himself, George

172
first edition, the duration “73 minutes without repeat in the first movement” was likely

calculated by the maestro himself, considering that the versions skipping the repeat were

about three to four minutes shorter than those taking the repeat. On page 24 of the score,

Abravanel crossed out the first ending (mm. 123–127) and wrote “No Boston, G.S.” on

the top of the page,132 indicating that two other recordings, Erich Leinsdorf’s 1965

recording with the Boston Symphony Orchestra and George Szell’s 1967 recording with

the Cleveland Orchestra, did not take the repeat (see Figure 5.3).133

Szell, Rafael Kubelík, and Erich Leinsdorf. Gustav Mahler, 1860–1911, “Symphony No. 6, III: Andante,”
McKay Music Library: Our Collections and Exhibits, http://mckaymusiclibrary.omeka.net/items/show/3,
accessed January 1, 2016.

Footnote 7 of David Matthews’s “The Sixth Symphony,” in The Mahler Companion, edited by
Donald Mitchell and Andrew Nicholson (Oxford University Press, 1999), 371–372 confirms the timings
were indeed in the first edition.
132The markings of “No Boston, G.S.” is on p. 24 of Abravanel’s score. Gustav Mahler, 1860–1911,
“Symphony No. 6, III: Andante,” McKay Music Library: Our Collections and Exhibits, accessed January 1,
2016, http://mckaymusiclibrary.omeka.net/items/show/3.
133 On page 24 of Mitropoulos’s score, he also crossed out the first ending. Gustav Mahler, “Symphony No.
6,” score marked by Dimitri Mitropoulos, New York Philharmonic Leon Levy Digital Archives,
http://archives.nyphil.org/index.php/artifact/da7e19b9-5d7f-4e7f-b5a2-b8e732bdfc1d, accessed 31
December 2015.

173
Figure 5.2: Abravanel’s score of Mahler’s Sixth Symphony, table of contents (Courtesy
of the Maurice Abravanel Studio, McKay Library, School of Music, University of Utah)

174
Figure 5.3: Abravanel’s score of Mahler’s Sixth Symphony, first movement, mm. 121–
127, p. 24 (Courtesy of the Maurice Abravanel Studio, McKay Library, School of Music,
University of Utah)

The maestro’s markings suggest that he carefully considered the options and

chose to skip the repeat. Although it is impossible to know Abravanel’s reasons for not

taking the repeats in the First and Sixth Symphonies, his habit of notating timings of

various recordings reveals his sense of time and awareness of his place in relation to

other conductors. As described by Ardean Watts, the maestro paid close attention to how

much time a certain movement took: “He (Abravanel) came back after the fourth

movement—after the conclusion of the symphony—and he said ‘Forty minutes. Forty-

two minutes, sixty or something seconds.’” Watts suspected that, since Abravanel

considered himself an autodidact, the numbers of minutes and seconds provided a way to

evaluate his own conducting.134

Abravanel’s recording of the Adagio movement of the Tenth Symphony was

“cool, clear, and beautifully recorded” but the “cumulative effect of the whole” was

134 “Mahler Memories: Ardean Watts,” The Musician’s Lounge: Official Blog of the Utah Symphony,
http://www.utahsymphony.org/blog/2015/10/mahler-memories-ardean-watts/, accessed 19 January 2016.

175
lacking, especially in “those climactic episodes of eerie dissonance that point the way

toward Alban Berg beyond.”135 Indeed, Abravanel’s typically straightforward

interpretation offers a clear presentation of the structure. The tempi in the climax starting

at rehearsal 26 (m. 194) and a high point after it (mm. 293–298) are too slow to fuel the

passages with energy, and therefore the sense of urgency is missing. The weak climax

thus fails to provide enough contrast to make the ending sound serene. Chipman

nevertheless praised the recording for “differentiating the main tempo from the brief

andante of the opening (and repeated) viola melody,” well-managed dynamics, and

“telling” woodwind detail.136

In sum, despite the superior sound, the last four recordings offered conservative

readings. The goal of these recordings seemed more to complete the cycle than to break

new interpretive ground. Sound quality alone, unfortunately, could not compensate for

the unexciting readings, especially because four-track sound soon faced its decline in the

late 1970s and the market did not lack Mahler recordings. The finished cycle nonetheless

demonstrates that, although Abravanel and the Utah Symphony started recording

Mahler’s music without the intention of completing a cycle, the enthusiasm and support

for the project ultimately resulted in the first Mahler cycle recorded by one single

American orchestra.

135 Hall, “Gustav Mahler, Symphonist, in Utah.”


136Chipman, “Mahler: Symphonies: No. 1 in D; No. 5, in C sharp minor; No. 6, in A minor; No. 10, in F
sharp (Adagio only).”

176
1975–1979: After the Mahler Cycle

Abravanel continued to program Mahler’s music in concerts (see Table 5.4) after

he had completed the cycle of recordings. The reviews of these concerts showed the local

community’s increased familiarity with the composer and confidence in Abravanel and

the Utah Symphony. Even though the more recent record reviews were not as fervent as

those in the mid-1960s, partly because the number of Mahler increased dramatically since

1960, the finished cycle was meaningful to the Utahn audience and the composer.137 On

the one hand, Abravanel’s deepening relationship with the community opened a door for

Mahler’s music; after all, the much-loved maestro admired this composer and had been

so relentlessly championed his music. On the other hand, the completed cycle and the

accompanying awards and recognitions motivated the local audience to appreciate

Mahler’s music. All in all, these last performances after the recordings sealed the Mahler

tradition in Utah.

Table 5.4: Performances of Mahler’s Music in Utah, 1975–1979

Date Mahler works Other works


March 29, 1975 Second Symphony Bach’s Concerto for Two
(concert) (Vocalists: JoAnn Ottley, soprano; Violins
Christina Krooskos, contralto; Utah
Chorale, directed by J. Marlowe
Nielson and Virgil Camp)
October 17, 19, 21, First Symphony (Abravanel conducted the
1975 Honolulu Symphony)
(guest conducting)
April 16, 1976 Seventh Symphony Mozart’s Eine Kleine
(concert) Nachtmusik

137Smoley’s Mahler discography listed 60 recordings of Mahler’s First to Ninth Symphonies in the 1970s
and 58 in the 1960s, as opposed to 27 in the 1950s and 5 in the 1930s and 1940s. Lewis M. Smoley, The
Symphonies of Gustav Mahler: A Critical Discography (New York: Greenwood Press, 1986).

177
Table 5.4. Continued

February 19, 1977 First Symphony


(concert) Fourth Symphony
(Soloist: JoAnn Ottley, soprano)
February 24, 1977 First Symphony
(West Coast tour) Fourth Symphony
(Soloist: JoAnn Ottley, soprano)
September 19, 22 First Symphony Beethoven’s Piano Concert
and October 8, 10, No. 3
14, 1977 (Encore: Adagietto of
(International tour) Mahler’s Fifth Symphony
for September 20)
September 21, Kindertotenlieder (Encore: Adagietto of
1977 (Soloists: Maureen Forrester, Mahler’s Fifth Symphony
(International tour) contralto) and Handel’s Water Music)
December 8, 9, Second Symphony
1977 (Vocalists: JoAnn Ottley, soprano;
Christina Krooskos, contralto; Utah
Chorale, directed by Newell B.
Weight)
Adagietto of the Fifth Symphony
April 15, 1978 Eighth Symphony
(concert) (Vocalists: JoAnn Ottley, soprano;
Jean Hieronymi, soprano; Mariana
Paunova, contralto; Nina Hinson,
contralto and mezzo-soprano; Louis
Welcher, tenor; Hervey Hicks,
baritone; John Trout, bass; the
University Chamber Chorus,
directed by Bernell Hales;
University A Capella Choir,
directed by Newell B. Weight;
University Masterworks Chorus,
directed by Luis Welcher; Utah
Boys Choir and South High Girls
Choir, directed by Richard
Torgerson)

178
Table 5.4. Continued

January 13, 1979 Third Symphony (Due to illness, the Boys’


(Vocalists: Mariana Paunova, Choir was replaced by
contralto; Ladies Ensemble from Women of the Utah
Utah Chorale; Utah Boys Choir) Masterworks Chorus. The
women choirs were
directed by Newell B.
Weight, Bonnie Winterton,
and Edgar Thompson.)

The 1975 performance of Mahler’s Second was warmly received.138 The Deseret

News critic Harold Lundstrom described Abravanel’s interpretation as “keenly and

intelligently felt, planned as a whole” and stated that the Utah Symphony “contributed

some fine tone.”139 The contralto Christina Krooskos “sang her role . . . with a beautiful

cool tone that was well controlled,”140 and the soprano JoAnn Ottley was “fine, as

usual.”141 The Utah Chorale was “a winner all the way.”142 Furthermore, the personal

connection between Mahler’s music and local musicians had been formed and recognized.

While Lundstrom described Abravanel’s interpretation as “obviously the outcome of a

shatteringly personal and positive conception of the work,”143 Beck stated that Abravanel

138 In the 1974–1975 season, Abravanel emphasized works that were less familiar, such as Liszt’s
Rhapsodie Espagnole and works by Schoenberg and Ives. When asked about the programming of the
season, Abravanel replied, “This year, we have the Bruckner Ninth, so we have no Mahler.” When the
interviewer mentioned the concert scheduled on March 29, which included Mahler’s Second, he said, “Oh,
that doesn’t count. That’s repertoire.” Abravanel’s words quoted in David L. Beck, “Symphony readies
28th season under Abravanel,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 6 October 1974.
139
Harold Lundstrom, “How should Mahler be handled?” Deseret News, 31 March 1975, Abravanel Papers,
Ms 517, Box 78.
140 Ibid.
141
David L. Beck, “Symphony Concert Fine Easter Gift,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 31 March 1975,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.
142 Lundstrom, “How should Mahler be handled?”
143 Ibid.

179
“simply cares more deeply for this music, and is able to communicate that commitment to

his musicians”144 and that the Utah Symphony played especially well when it played

Mahler. In October 1975, Abravanel brought an all-Mahler program, including the First

Symphony and the Adagio of the Tenth Symphony, to Honolulu, Hawaii; this time he

conducted the local orchestra, the Honolulu Symphony.145

On April 16, 1976, Mahler’s Seventh Symphony was performed for the second

and last time during Abravanel’s directorship. In his program notes, Lowell Durham

mentioned the completed “deluxe 14-record set” Mahler cycle, the 1975 “Best Mahler

Recording” award for the recording of the Fifth, Abravanel’s participation in the

“ascendance of Mahler’s works,” and the maestro’s plan to perform all of Mahler’s

symphonies. The performance of Mahler’s Seventh was welcomed but not a resounding

success like some other concerts. According to the Deseret News critic Lundstrom,

Abravanel’s reading was “sensible,” and the orchestra “played intently and well.”146 The

nature of the Seventh Symphony, however, remained hard to comprehend for the listeners;

Lundstrom wondered if the work was “an embarrassment to even the most devout

Mahlerite,” resulting in the infrequent performances of the work. The Salt Lake Tribune

critic David Beck similarly commended the concert but wrote that the performance was

144 Beck, “Symphony Concert Fine Easter Gift.”


145 Abravanel’s newly-completed Mahler cycle was mentioned in the press prior to the concert and
Abravanel was called “one of the foremost American Mahler specialists.” (Janos Gereben, “Abravanel
Here to …,” Honolulu Star-Bulletin, 15 October 1975, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.) Overall the
orchestra displayed great control, which, according to one critic, seemed to be due to Abravanel’s
conducting “one-handed technique”—“both tempo and cues are signaled by the baton, with the left hand
called into play only in those rare instances when ‘everything has to get going.’” Howard Driver,
“Symphony at its best: Mahler under control,” Honolulu Advertiser, 20 October 1975, Abravanel Papers,
Ms 517, Box 78.
146
Harold Lundstrom, “The problem of Mahler’s ‘Symphony No. 7,’” Deseret News, 17 April 1976,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.

180
“disjointed.” Although Beck suggested that the traits of the work—“nightmare,” “ugly,”

“not pretty,” and “not even satisfying”—were what Mahler intended, the concert was not

as successful as he had hoped, hinted by Beck’s lukewarm praise—“it was rarely boring

and frequently disturbing, and perhaps that is not a bad way to end a season.”147

This concert opened the planned Mahler concert cycle, which would extend in the

following two years and with five works chosen for the 1976–1977 season.148

Unfortunately, Abravanel’s health and triple bypass heart surgery in November 1976

changed the plan. Several Mahler concerts had to be canceled and rescheduled. Ardean

Watts filled in for Abravanel but did not conduct Mahler’s works. Despite his illness,

between March 1975 and his retirement in April 1979, Abravanel managed to perform

most of Mahler’s symphonies, including the First, Second, Third, Fourth, the Adagietto

of the Fifth, Seventh, Eighth, and Adagio of the Tenth Symphony (See Table 5.4).

Three months after his heart surgery, Abravanel returned to the podium with yet

another all-Mahler program, featuring the First and Fourth Symphonies on February 19,

147David L. Beck, “Utah Symphony Ends Season With Night Music,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 17 April
1976.
148 Lowell Durham, Program Notes, 16 April 1976, 494, 496. Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 37.

The five works were scheduled to perform in three concerts: the Fifth Symphony and the Adagio
of the Tenth Symphony on January 10, 1977; the First and Fourth Symphonies on January 21, 1977; and
the Sixth Symphony on February 19, 1977. (“Local favorites, new artists highlight Symphony 1976–77,”
The Salt Lake Tribune, 4 April 1976.) The only program that was performed was the one originally
scheduled for January 21, and the First and Fourth Symphonies were moved to February 19. Mahler’s Sixth
Symphony, due to this change, was never performed during Abravanel’s directorship.

For other concerts, associate conductor Ardean Watts filled in but Mahler’s works were always
replaced by other works. For example, on January 21, 1977, Watts conducted a concert with a program of
“everybody’s favorites,” including Benjamin Britten’s Variation and Fugue on a Theme by Purcell,
Respighi’s The Fountains of Rome, Grieg’s Symphonic Dances Nos. 1 and 4, and Shostakovich’s
Symphony No. 1. “This week, symphony to play ‘everybody’s favorites,’” The Salt Lake Tribune, 16
January 1977.

181
1977. Abravanel returned “heroically and triumphantly.”149 He received two standing

ovations—once when he walked on the stage and once after the performance.150 The

orchestra’s performance was “superb” in the First Symphony, and the only minor

weakness of the Fourth Symphony was Ottley’s singing, which was, according to

Lundstrom, too “mature” to “rise and fall with child-like effortless ease in the child’s

description of heaven.”151 In his concert review, David Beck reported his regret for the

loss of Mahler performances that were originally planned and recounted the past

performances of Mahler, revealing his liking for and familiarity with Mahler’s works.

Similar to Lundstrom’s view, Beck thought that Ottley’s singing in the Fourth was “with

perhaps more restraint than would have liked.”152 Following this concert, the Utah

Symphony went on tour to southern California and Las Vegas.153 Mahler’s First and

Fourth Symphonies were performed at the Ambassador College auditorium in Pasadena,

California. The Utah Symphony succeeded in portraying “the intricate subtleties of mood

and mechanics of the Fourth.”154 Ottley’s singing had “a fine Mahlerian quality for the

149
Harold Lundstrom, “Maurice Abravanel returns ‘heroically,’” Deseret News, 21 February 1977,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.
150
David L. Beck, “Abravanel Returns for a Night of Mahler,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 21 February 1977,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.
151 Lundstrom, “Maurice Abravanel returns ‘heroically.’”
152 Beck, “Abravanel Returns for a Night of Mahler.”
153Originally Abravanel was scheduled to conduct a “three-concert Mahler Festival” on this tour, but his
previous surgery and health again disrupted the plan for performing Mahler’s works. (Richard Stiles, “Utah
Symphony maestro going strong,” Pasadena Star-News, 27 February 1977.) Abravanel ended up
conducting three concerts and Watts conducted six in this ten-day tour. “Symphony tours Mahler,” The Salt
Lake Tribune, 20 February 1977.
154Fred Pleibel, “Utah Symphony at Ambassador,” Los Angeles Times, 26 February 1977, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 76.

182
haunting, joyful ‘Himmlische Leben.’”155 The orchestra’s performance in the First

Symphony had some “ragged entrances, muffed cutoffs, some fluffs by the winds and

even more just plain noise than Mahler wrote into his youthful collection of agonies and

blisses,”156 but overall it “came through more splendidly.”157 After his first and only

leave of absence in his thirty years in Utah, the well-respected, well-loved conductor

resumed his central role in the musical life of Salt Lake City with his favorite composer

and was passionately welcomed.

Despite his recent health problems, Abravanel led the Utah Symphony on the

fourth international tour after the end of the 1976–1977 season. On this one-month tour

from September 16 to October 15, the Utah Symphony traveled to Greece, Austria,

Germany, and Spain.158 Mahler’s First Symphony was performed in Greece and Spain,

and Kindertotenlieder performed in Athens. When Mahler’s First Symphony was played

on September 19 in Athens, the orchestra received “lavish applause.”159 On September 21,

the acclaimed Mahler singer, Maureen Forrester, sang Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder with

the Utah Symphony. Forrester was particularly praised: “mothers wept, spectators burst

into applause and even the orchestra members themselves were moved to cheer.”160 In

155 Richard Stiles, “Utah Symphony maestro going strong,” Pasadena Star-News, 27 February 1977.
156 Pleibel, “Utah Symphony at Ambassador.”
157 Stiles, “Utah Symphony maestro going strong.”
158Besides the performance on September 19, described below, Mahler’s First Symphony was also
performed in Salonika, Greece, Abravanel’s birthplace, on September 22; in Madrid, Spain on October 8;
in Valencia, Spain on October 10; and in Barcelona, Spain on October 14. Booklet, 4th International Tour,
Europe, 1977, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 26.
159Some orchestra members thought the applause was for the pianist, Vasso Devetzi, performing
Beethoven’s Piano Concert No. 3 in the same concert. David L. Beck, “Concerts Over, More to Come,”
The Salt Lake Tribune, 23 September 1977.
160David L. Beck, “With Utah Symphony: A Big Night for Canadian,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 23
September 1977.

183
response to the enthusiastic audience’s request, Abravanel chose the Adagietto of

Mahler’s Fifth Symphony as encore on both nights.161

When the new season opened in Utah, two concerts featured Mahler’s works,

starting with an all-Mahler program in December, 1977. Prior to the concerts, the press

recounted numerous achievements of the orchestra, including the completed Mahler cycle,

recent Europe tour, and the prosperous recording career, portraying a blooming orchestra

established in multiple media worldwide.162 The concert in Salt Lake City was

enthusiastically received, with only one complaint about the placement of an intermission

between the second and third movements of the Second Symphony. The Deseret News

critic William Goodfellow reminisced about the Utah Symphony’s 1960 performance of

Mahler’s Second Symphony and Bernard Jacobson’s review of Abravanel’s recording of

the same work in High Fidelity, reaffirming that Mahler had been one of the local

favorites and the Utah Symphony had been accepted by outside critics. According to

Goodfellow, the concert, with the “better integrated” tempo and the better “instrumental

textures,” was even better than the highly praised recording. Abravanel was hailed as the

“real hero,” who “somehow managed to maintain concentration and intensity throughout

the grueling 90-minute length of this symphony.”163 The Salt Lake Tribune critic Ernest

Ford similarly embraced the performance, except for the difficulty to hear the soloists in

161One encore was played on September 19, and two encores, together with Handel’s Water Music, were
played on September 21.
162The Ogden concert was “warmly received.” The success was attributed to the “compassion and splendid
voice” of Krooskos, the “clear, fluent voice” of Ottley, the “crisp” direction of Abravanel, and the orchestra
and chorale that deserved to be “heard more often in this area.” The “glowing triumphant” ending, “a
majestic conclusion,” should have “made several more converts to the growing group which is coming to
recognize that Mahler is one of the great masters.” Ray Wight, “Mahler Program Warmly Received,”
Ogden Standard Examiner, 9 December 1977.
163William S. Goodfellow, “A glorious ‘Resurrection,’” Deseret News, 10 December 1977, Abravanel
Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.

184
the Second Symphony, the “missed entrances and poor phrasing” in the Adagietto

movement of the Fifth Symphony, and again the timing of the intermission. The orchestra

performed well in Mahler’s Second, in particular the trombone, trumpet, and French horn

principals. Ford complimented the overall performance of the evening as well as

recognized Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s establishment in interpreting Mahler’s

music: “The Utah Symphony, thanks to the perceptive leadership by Maestro Abravanel,

interprets the German’s works as well as any group in the world.”164

Mahler’s Eighth Symphony closed the 1977–1978 season. As was the case for the

Seventh Symphony, this was the second and last performance of the work. The total

number of performers employed was only close to 500, with 375 in the choruses and 100

in the orchestra, plus the eight soloists and one conductor. Even though the number of

performers was much smaller than the 1963 performance (500 versus 900), the concert

was again a community event; a critic reported that “[a]bout 47% [of the local] musicians

will join forces” with the Utah Symphony.165 Different from the symphony’s 1963

performance, in which only one soloist (Blanche Christensen) was from Utah, this time

four soloists were affiliated with the community. The Salt Laker Ottley had been a

familiar face for the local audience, Hieronymi was musically trained in Salt Lake City

and sang with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir as a soloist, and Welcher and Hicks were

teaching at the University of Utah.

Conducting this challenging and massive work was not easy; during the

intermission, Abravanel was “seating in his dressing room, soaking wet, bare-chested,

164
Ernest Ford, “Utah Symphony at Tabernacle: Fine interpretation of Mahler,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 11
December 1977, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.
165 Paul Wetzel, “Mahler 8th,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 9 April 1978, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 124.

185
drying himself with a towel.” Yet, after the intermission, he was “completely revived as

he ran the obstacle course to the podium” for the second half.166 The concert was met

with a burst of cheering at the end; some in the audience were “in tears” and again Salt

Lake City was turned into a “Mahler center.”167 As the audience and performers called

the conductor back to the podium for more applause, he “held the score high over his

head and faced the audience” to share the honor with the composer. The performance was

by no means perfect; there were a minor disconnected moment between two choruses and

an error in the trumpet part,168 and the pacing of the second movement seemed “stretched”

and “without concomitant tension.”169 Nonetheless, the orchestra made Mahler’s music

“sometimes ethereal, sometimes bizarre, but withal endearing instrumental effects.”170

The children’s choirs were “particularly moving both for the lyrical quality of the music

and the overall tone of the voices”; the adult choruses were well prepared, and the

orchestra was “effective at both ends of the tremendous dynamic range demanded by the

composer”; and the soloists, in particular Ottley, sang well.171 Although Abravanel’s

interpretation was not specifically discussed in these reviews, it was clear that the

audience attended Mahler concerts with familiarity and excitement.

166 Lowell M Durham, Abravanel! (Salt Lake City: University of Utah, 1989), 179.
167
John Schow, “Abravanel’s Mahler Miracle,” Utah Holiday (June 1978): 71, Abravanel Papers, Ms 517,
Box 78.
168
Paul Wetzel, “Massive Mahler Eighth Concert Succeeds,” The Salt Lake Tribune, 17 April 1978,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.
169
William S. Goodfellow, “Mahler 8th ends Symphony season with joy,” Deseret News, 17 April 1978,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 78.
170 Ibid.
171 Wetzel, “Massive Mahler Eighth Concert Succeeds.”

186
On January 13, 1979, Abravanel conducted Mahler’s Third Symphony; although

the symphony was recorded and released in 1969, this was the local premiere of the work.

The contralto, Mariana Paunova, sang at the 1978 performance of Mahler’s Eighth

Symphony and would return to sing in the maestro’s final concert. Although some minor

mistakes were heard in the orchestra—“muddled attacks, discrepancies in the unity of the

ensemble, missed notes”—they did not affect the “sometimes brilliant execution

elsewhere” and the conductor’s “uncommon affinity for and understanding” of Mahler’s

music.172 Paunova’s singing created “a rich, well-sustained vocal line punctuated by

clean German diction” in the fourth movement that characterized “[a] feeling of austerity

and isolation.”173 Replacing the boys’ choir with a women’s ensemble was the best option

but not ideal, because the contrast between the voices of women and boys was lost.174

Both critics from the Deseret News and The Salt Lake Tribune agreed that the Adagio in

the finale, which “emerged here as the musical embodiment of the divine peace the

composer privately sought,” was the most successful and moving part of the

performance.175 This concert would become the last of Abravanel’s Mahler performances.

Because of experiencing fatigue more and more often, Abravanel decided that it was time

to retire. On April 4, Abravanel told the assistant conductor Ardean Watts his decision of

stepping down; two days later he made the formal resignation announcement at a press

172Paul Wetzel, “Despite Flaws, Mahler 3rd Makes a Distinguished Utah Debut,” The Salt Lake Tribune,
n.d., Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 79.
173 Ibid.
174 Ibid.
175
William S. Goodfellow, “Sublimity caps overdue Mahler 3rd,” Deseret News, 15 January 1979,
Abravanel Papers, Ms 517, Box 79.

187
conference.176 Watts’s resignation soon followed.177 Abravanel ended his conducting

career on April 21, 1979, with yet another choral-symphonic work: Verdi’s Requiem.

Had Abravanel known that he would retire after the season, he might have programmed

another work by Mahler to close the season and his conducting career.

Conclusion

After the exciting reception of Abravanel’s first two Mahler recordings, he

continued recording Mahler’s symphonies between 1967 and 1974. Each of these

recordings told different aspects of the Utah story and its context. The recordings of the

Second and Fourth showed the orchestra’s connection with vocalists and the rising status

of the composer. Those of the Third and Ninth highlighted the technical superiority in

this series of recordings. The use of a new technology, quadraphonic sound, again

demonstrated Vanguard’s willingness to take a risk, as it had done with blacklisted folk

musicians and underperformed works.

After the completion of the cycle, Abravanel continued programming Mahler in

Utah and on tour. These last performances again showed the maestro’s passion for and

commitment to Mahler’s music. The local audience and critics became familiar with the

composer. They compared current performances to past ones or recordings; they now had

a Mahler history which they could recount. Even though the Utah Symphony’s concerts

were not always perfect, the reviews showed that the community was proud of the

176 Durham, Abravanel!, 177.


177 Watts’s relationship with Abravanel went beyond professional; he drove Abravanel to and from
rehearsals for twenty-one years. He resigned from the Utah Symphony one month after Abravanel’s
resignation and returned to teaching full time at the University of Utah. See more details in Lowell M.
Durham, “Right Arm,” in Abravanel!, 153–162.

188
orchestra’s achievement, embraced the maestro’s accomplishments, and recognized

Mahler as a local favorite.

Abravanel and the Utah Symphony’s Mahler journey also revealed the reception

of Mahler in America. When they set out to record Mahler’s symphonies in the 1960s,

the recordings were embraced by the Mahler community and part of the first waves that

invited more conductors and orchestras to enter Mahler’s musical world. As time passed,

the ardent reception of the first two recordings was replaced with the sometimes

welcoming and sometimes tepid reception of the later recordings, indirectly

demonstrating Mahler’s firmly established status and thus the quickly increasing number

of Mahler recordings. When Abravanel’s Mahler recording project was completed, it

served as an alternative to the “mainstream” recordings from, for example, Bernstein,

with competitive price and sound. Although the Utah Symphony’s Mahler adventure lost

its initial importance to the Mahler circle, it gained significance to the Utah community

and documented the orchestra’s growth. Furthermore, the journey turned the composer

into a local favorite in Utah, to which concert announcements, program notes, and

reviews attested.

189
CHAPTER 6. CONCLUSION

“I think of Maurice as a kind of high priest. And Mahler’s the Bible. You know
he knew how Mahler’s genius was the genius of transforming the angst, the misery of
national, international and personal into a kind of redemptive sound. The sounds can
growl and suggest horror and cataclysm and everything, which is all there, but when it
comes out, it doesn’t come out that way. It comes out. You want to be there. You want to
experience it because there is some redemption in it, and maybe that’s what the musical
experience is about.”
— Ardean Watts, Abravanel’s associate conductor and close friend1

The invocation of “high priest” here is telling. In the Mormon Church, a high priest is

“appointed to lead the church” and “to teach the commandments of God.”2 By using this

term, Watts portrayed Abravanel’s interpretation of Mahler’s music as something sacred.

In a different interview, Watts also stated that hearing Abravanel’s Mahler made him feel

that he had been to church.3

Watts was not the only one who experienced an almost religious experience

playing Mahler’s music under Abravanel. Lynette Stewart, violin player for 46 years at

the Utah Symphony, described a soulful, all-consuming experience:

In Mahler’s 2nd Symphony, there are moments where Abravanel would


just go into the spheres. It was hardly conducting; he’d close his eyes, and his face
would go to the ceiling. It was so descriptive.
He brought all the love he had for that music, and all the tradition, and
great soulfulness. You don’t always hear that in other recordings and
performances. He was so passionate that he would get wrapped up in what
everyone was doing. He wasn’t technically telling you what to do, but he just got
everyone wrapped up in this Mahler experience. It was remarkable. It was
exhausting for me at first, because I didn’t understand everything he was trying to

1“Mahler Memories: Ardean Watts,” The Musician’s Lounge: Official Blog of the Utah Symphony,
http://www.utahsymphony.org/blog/2015/10/mahler-memories-ardean-watts/, accessed 19 January 2016.
2“High Priest,” The Joseph Smith Papers, http://josephsmithpapers.org/topic/high-priest, accessed 22 April
2016.
3 Phone interview with author, 18 January 2016.

190
do or how he was trying to do it or what it was all about. But looking back on it I
realize how tremendous that experience was. I have never recovered from that, it
doesn’t go away after all these years. I don’t forget that experience with him.4

Seymour Solomon similarly admired the maestro. Years after working with Abravanel,

Solomon gave Watts and his wife concert tickets, when they visited him in New York, to

the New York Philharmonic but did not go along, because, according to Solomon, the

musicians sounded pale compared to Abravanel.5 Previous chapters have shown the

warm reception from local newspapers. The two Utah music critics, Lowell Durham and

Conrad Harrison, remained champions of the orchestra and each produced a book-length

publication on the maestro and the orchestra in 1989 and 1986, respectively. These

memories and events demonstrate how the shared experience of playing Mahler’s music

touched the musicians and formed a strong network around Abravanel and Mahler.

The story of Abravanel’s complete Mahler recordings did not end with the

maestro’s retirement. They have been reissued onto different formats, which continued to

reflect technological advancement and kept the recordings in circulation. In 1986,

Vanguard Records was sold to the Welk Record Group in California, but Seymour

Solomon bought back the classical department in 1992.6 Solomon then started reissuing

old recordings with his other company, Omega, “using the original analogue tapes as

4“Mahler Memories: Lynette Stewart,” The Musician’s Lounge: Official Blog of the Utah Symphony,
http://www.utahsymphony.org/blog/2015/10/mahler-memories-lynette-stewart/, accessed 19 January 2016.
5 Phone interview with author, 18 January 2016.
6 Jerome F. Weber, “Vanguard,” Oxford Music Online, www.oxfordmusiconline.com, accessed 22
December 2014. However, the years were different in an obituary of Seymour Solomon: “In 1985 Mr.
Solomon and his brother sold Vanguard to the Welk Record Group. Three years later, Seymour Solomon
opened a new company, Omega Classics, and in 1990 he bought back from Welk Vanguard’s old classical
catalog. He reissued Vanguard's original catalog on compact discs under the Omega and Vanguard Classics
labels.” Ari L. Goldman, “Seymour Solomon, 80, Record Label Founder,” The New York Times, 19 July
2002.

191
masters,” and his plan was to “go back to his first releases, from 1950, and would reissue

recordings carrying such names as Leopold Stokowski, Sir Adrian Boult, Willi

Boskovsky and Maurice Abravanel, whose Mahler with the Utah Symphony will be high

on the list of releases, with the complete cycle scheduled for release in the fall.”7

Abravanel’s complete Mahler cycle was indeed reissued as an 11-CD boxed set in the

1990s.

In 2004 and 2005, Silverline Classics reissued the Utah Symphony’s recordings of

Mahler’s symphonies onto yet another format—DVD-Audio, providing options for

stereophonic and surround sound; the dual-disc version is playable on both sides—one

side is a CD and the other side a DVD. An announcement about these reissues revisited

the glory of Abravanel’s Mahler recordings: “The Vanguard catalogue, carefully nurtured

in the Sixties and Seventies by the label’s founder-directors, the brothers Maynard and

Seymour Solomon, contains the important legacy of discs made with the Utah Symphony

under its chief conductor Maurice Abravanel.”8 The announcement also quoted Jeff Dean,

president of Silverline Records, explaining that Solomon and the engineers “did some

great work recording in four channels, for example, and were always pushing the

boundaries . . . We can deliver the same sound quality on DVD-A that the engineers

heard when these recordings were made.”9

7Gerald Gold, “For Vanguard: To the Rear, March!: The Label’s Founder Has Bought Back the Classical
Catalogue; Reissues Will Include Mahler,” The New York Times, 27 May 1990.
8 “Silverline Rolls Out DVD-As,” Music Week, 10 July 2004.

Although the announcement suggested that the original plan was to release all symphonies, only
the first six symphonies are currently available.
9 Dean’s words quoted in “Silverline Rolls Out DVD-As.”

192
Reviews of these reissues recognized their significance and pointed out the lack of

attention to the recordings. Gerald Fox’s 1996 review in American Record Guide

affirmed Abravanel’s interpretation and described his style as “restrained,” similar to

reviews from the 1960s:

Abravanel, though lesser-known as a Mahler conductor than Bernstein, Walter,


Horenstein, Solti, Tennstedt, and many others, was no less a Mahler crusader and
deserves a place in the sun. His way with Mahler is more restrained than the
others, and I do prefer the more emotional approach, but Abravanel's musicality,
taste, and sympathy for the symphonies is beyond reproach; and he had honed the
Utah Symphony into a remarkable ensemble.10

The view that Abravanel’s interpretation of Mahler’s works was valuable but lacked

excitement continued into later reviews of the DVD-As. Christopher Abbot, music critic

in the Fanfare magazine, explained that other conductors such as Haitink, Kubelik, Solti,

and Tennstedt, had “joined the fray” by the time Abravanel recorded the First Symphony.

The “relative neglect of Abravanel,” Abbot explained, was “a pity, because his Mahler is

characterized by insight, audio fidelity, and a distinct lack of hysteria (which, it must be

said, can make some of his interpretations somewhat bland by comparison to his more

demonstrative peers).”11 In yet another review, Abbot admitted that he did not prefer

Abravanel’s versions: “In general, though I appreciate Maestro Abravanel’s efforts to

present a Mahler shorn of neuroses, I think he often misses a chance to inject a bit of

dramatic tension into the proceedings.”12 Abbot’s description of Abravanel’s

interpretation of Mahler recalled the maestro’s view that he did not need to make Mahler

10 Gerald Fox, “Guide to Records,” American Record Guide (January 1996), 136–137.
11 Christopher Abbot, “Mahler: Symphony No. 1,” Fanfare 28/1 (September 2004), 154.
12Christopher Abbot, “Mahler: Symphony No. 2, ‘Resurrection’ &; Symphony No. 4 &,” Fanfare 28/6
(July 2005), 161.

193
more Mahler and the phenomenon that Bernstein’s interpretation exercised strong

influence on the conductors after him.

Technologically the DVD-A versions were received with enthusiasm, especially

because of the multiple options of sound quality. Although these reissued were not by

Seymour Solomon, his choice of using advanced recording technology allowed later

engineers to extract the sound for newer media. The DVD-As, including extra documents

such as “archive photographs, letters and filmed interviews with musicians who worked

with Abravanel,” aimed to attract both audiophiles, researchers like myself, and

“straightforward classical consumers.”13 Furthermore, the new format made Abravanel’s

Mahler accessible to modern listeners across the globe. On the whole, the reception of the

reissues echoed that of the originals. While these recordings were welcomed for their

technological merits and low prices, the maestro’s relative musical restraint disappointed

some critics.

The ongoing two-season Mahler cycle (2014–2016) at the Utah Symphony once

again reflects Abravanel’s lasting impact. Besides the concerts in Salt Lake City, the

Utah Symphony recorded Mahler’s First Symphony under Thierry Fischer, and that of

the Eighth is scheduled to come out in 2017. The recording of the First, released by an

audiophile label (Reference Recordings), received reviews reminiscent of those for

Abravanel—although the recording could not “erase memories of Berlin, Vienna or the

Concertgebouw,” the orchestra “sounds good in all departments, with some soloists

highlighted to outstanding effect.” The sound is again a strong selling point: “[f]ans of

the work can purchase with confidence, especially if you want to hear inner details and a

13 “Silverline Rolls Out DVD-As.”

194
more reflective version than many.”14 The McKay Music Library has been digitizing the

maestro’s Mahler scores and interviewing musicians to document their memories about

performing Mahler’s works under the baton of Abravanel. At the time of this writing, the

Ninth is awaiting performance and more materials are being uploaded onto the music

library’s and the Utah Symphony’s websites. These invaluable primary sources preserve

Utah’s oral history and enrich the understanding of Abravanel and the Utah Symphony.

While the dissertation has focused on Abravanel’s Mahler performances and

recording, the Mahler cycle was only part of Abravanel’s contributions to the Utah

Symphony. He also fought for the musicians’ salaries, opportunities to tour abroad, and

making many other recordings with the musicians. Abravanel expanded the orchestra’s

season from 20 weeks to 52 weeks and took the orchestra onto four international tours.

He helped establish the Utah ballet and opera (which Ardean Watts later took over), so

the orchestra musicians could have more work. In Watts’s words, “Abravanel spent a lot

of time inventing work for them to do.”15 Through the maestro’s efforts, the funding for

the orchestra’s hall was tied in a bond election and passed with 58 percent of support.16

The hall was completed in 1979, after Abravanel retired, and later renamed “Abravanel

Hall” in 1993, although the maestro never conducted there.17

14 Anthony Kershaw, “Thierry Fischer conducts the Utah Symphony in Mahler 1 on Reference Recordings,”
Audiophilia, http://www.audiophilia.com/reviews/2016/2/16/thierry-fischer-conducts-the-utah-symphony-
in-mahler-1-on-reference-recordings?rq=mahler, accessed 27 February 2016.
15 Phone interview with author, 18 January 2016.
16Major Figures in American Music: Maurice Abravanel, Oral History of American Music, Yale
University, Interviewer: Deborah Bookspan Margol, and Martin Bookspan 219 ff–oo, pp. 124–125.
17“About Maurice Abravanel Hall,” Utah Symphony, http://www.utahsymphony.org/the-orchestra/80-
about-abravanel-hall, accessed 27 January 2016.

195
Mahler nonetheless occupied a unique place in Abravanel’s lifetime achievement.

His obituary in The New York Times, written by Alex Ross in 1993, highlighted several

key aspects addressed of his career: his leadership of the Utah Symphony, his promoting

underrepresented works, and their Mahler cycle. The long excerpt from Ross fittingly

summarized Abravanel’s career in Utah:

In 1947, he took up the appointment at the Utah Symphony and began


building a minor orchestra into a widely respected ensemble. Concert music was
not an active feature of the state's musical life at that time, but Mr. Abravanel
made it so, reaching out to rural communities and eventually making the orchestra
so popular that Utah achieved the highest per-capita attendance at symphony
concerts of any state.
Tellingly, he accomplished this with a repertory liberally stocked with
20th-century works, by Weill, Bloch, Honegger, Varese and his close friend
Milhaud. Once he began his long and active recording career with Vanguard, he
continued this emphasis, making the first recordings of Honegger’s “Judith” and
“King David.” He also conducted ballet and opera, winning a Tony Award for his
work in Marc Blitzstein’s “Regina.”
His Mahler cycle gave him the broadest fame of his career, perhaps owing
to a psychedelic marketing strategy at Vanguard that once used the slogan
“Mahler Is Heavy.” But his interpretations were serious and well disciplined,
somewhat too speedy for many listeners’ tastes but a welcome contrast to the
more flamboyant readings of Leonard Bernstein. This cycle is still the only one
recorded entirely with an American orchestra.18

Even at the time of his death, then, Abravanel’s Mahler endeavors provided a significant

angle from which to view his legacy and the intricate connections between music

reception and local history.

18 Alex Ross, “Maurice Abravanel, 90, Utah Symphony Leader,” The New York Times, 23 September 1993,
http://www.nytimes.com/1993/09/23/obituaries/maurice-abravanel-90-utah-symphony-leader.html,
accessed 17 January 2016.

196
Future Directions

As Mahler continued to gain popularity in America and abroad, more conductors

gravitated towards his music in concert and recordings, including Benjamin Zander, Seiji

Ozawa, Simon Rattle, and Michael Tilson Thomas. However, the public and scholarly

attention is often given to famed conductors as listed above and prestigious orchestras

like those in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston. These cities are perhaps more of

exceptions than representations of America. Without the help of the most privileged

musicians, conductors, and recording companies, cities like Salt Lake City have to turn to

any resource possible and consider a combination of factors, including the local

community’s musical resources, the demand or opening of the market, the orchestra’s

desire to demonstrate musical achievement, etc. To emphasize the influence in the

extramusical context is not to diminish the importance of musical content but rather to

explicate the close relationship between music and the society in which music resides.

Through examining cities alike or other regional orchestras, we can broaden the

discussion of the reception history of Mahler in America and better comprehend the

connections among music, social, technological, and cultural history.

This dissertation opens up new possibilities for understanding the strategic

programming and recording by American orchestras. Through recording Mahler, the

Utah Symphony established an international presence. As discussed in Chapter 3, the

Louisville Orchestra’s recording-based new music project also drew national publicity.

At a time when more orchestras are facing financial difficulties, such models of

innovation are increasingly valuable. Through recording Mahler’s symphonies Abravanel

secured more income for his musicians, developing out-of-state audiences for a regional

197
orchestra. Abravanel’s timing proved crucial; Mahlerites and audiophiles welcomed these

recordings. As the recording market is transforming, streaming offers new alternatives

and challenges for orchestras; the Utah Symphony’s 2015 recording of Mahler’s First

Symphony, for example, is available to a wide audience on Naxos and Spotify. Four

decades after the completion of the Utah Symphony’s Mahler cycle, its story is still worth

consideration as other symphony orchestras are looking for creative ways to survive and

thrive.

198
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