RN Documentary: Raising Cain(e) with Mahler
Series: RN Documentaries
From: Radio Netherlands Worldwide
Length: 00:29:31
Eclectic is a good word to describe the work of jazz pianist and composer Uri Caine. His recent projects include a Mozart Remix and improvising on laptops with a trio. On a recent trip to Amsterdam, he talks with David Swatling about his interpretations of work by the early 20th century Viennese composer Gustav Mahler ? not the most likely material for a jazz artist to tackle!
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Piece Description
Eclectic is a good word to describe the work of jazz pianist and composer Uri Caine. His recent projects include a Mozart Remix and improvising on laptops with a trio. On a recent trip to Amsterdam, he talks with David Swatling about his interpretations of work by the early 20th century Viennese composer Gustav Mahler ? not the most likely material for a jazz artist to tackle!
Transcript
?Raising Cain(e) with Mahler?
American jazz pianist and composer Uri Caine on his jazz interpretations of work by Viennese composer Gustav Mahler.
Music: Urlicht/Primal Light; Dark Flame; Toblach; Bernstein ?Das Lied von der Erde?
SCRIPT
VOX ID
Ambience 1
DAVID: Summer is festival season ? especially for music. Whether your taste is classical or modern, jazz or pop, you usually know what to expect when you buy your ticket. But sometimes there are surprises. Imagine traveling to Toblach, tucked in the heart of the Italian Dolomites, for the annual International Gustav Mahler Festival. You?re ready for an evening of solemn symphonic fare. And then the Uri Caine Ensemble takes the stage.
MUSIC1: ?I went out this morning over the countryside? ? Primal Light
URI ? FW: ?A lot of people are surprised?
LW: ?as a basis for improvisation.? (23?)
FW: ?The...
Read the full transcript
Musical Works
| Title | Artist | Album | Label | Year | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I went out this morning | U.Caine/Mahler | Primal Light Winter&Winter | 03:00 | ||
| Symphony 1 titans | u.Caine/ Mahler | Primal Light Winter&Winter | 02:00 | ||
| das lied von der erde | Wiener Phil. | DECCA452-301 | 01:00 | ||
| Labor Lost | U.Caine/Mahler | Dark Flame Winter&Winter | 03:15 | ||
| Lonely One in Autumn | U.Caine/Mahler | Dark Flame Winter&Winter | 03:00 | ||
| Farewell | U.Caine/Mahler | Live in Toblach Winter&Winter | 02:45 |
James Reiss
Posted on April 24, 2007 at 01:11 PM | Permalink
Review of RN Documentary: Raising Cain(e) with Mahler
Anyone acquainted with the "three B's," -- Bach, Beethoven, and Brahms -- knows that the "three M's" include Mozart, Mendelssohn, and Mahler (let's ditch Mussorgsky and Massenet for now). Of these three magisterial M's, Gustav Mahler was the most strenuous in his transformation of middle European folk tunes, as well as klezmer and Jewish liturgical material, into orchestral and vocal music of supernal beauty. His nine completed symphonies are as out-and-out glorious as are the best works by the greatest late nineteenth century classical composers, including "The Two Richards," Wagner and Strauss. Quirky originals that they are, however, Mahler's compositions lapsed into obscurity after he died in 1911, only to be resurrected -- a perfect verb, considering his Second Symphony -- by Leonard Bernstein in the 1960s.
Uri Caine, a self-described jazz musician, has, for years, reveled in "raising cain(e)" with Mahler. I'm certainly no purist when it comes to fiddling around with "The Great Gus," as I privately refer to Mahler. I was riveted, near the outset of this piece, when Caine's jazz ensemble riffed on the famous folk tune in the first movement of Mahler's "Titan" Symphony. "Please, Uri," I whispered to myself, "give me more jazzified Mahler!"
Well, Uri didn't comply with my wish. Interviewed by David Swatling, he went on to discuss the history of "Das Lied von der Erde"; how it has been performed by Chinese musicians; how Mahler was so distressed by his adulterous wife, Alma, that he consulted Freud; how some of Mahler's vocal music has been set to verses by Uri's poet friend.
For all its inside info about the Maestro in Toblach, Amsterdam, and New York City; for all Uri's devotion to "The Great Gus," except for one other leap into syncopation and improv, Caine fell short of jazzing up a storm. Public radio listeners less hard-core about Mahler than I may find this piece edifying. I only wish it were more of a hotwired, blue-note musical experience, merging Mahler with Mingus and Monk.