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(Canceled) Mahler 5 with Dudamel

Sat / May 15, 2021 - 2:00PM

Gustavo leads Mahler’s monumental and memorable Fifth Symphony.

Canceled

Program

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About this Performance

Due to the continuing COVID-19 crisis, all LA Phil-presented concerts at Walt Disney Concert Hall have been canceled through June 9, 2021. 

This event has been canceled. 

  • We have moved all 2020/21 subscriptions into the 2021/22 season. This will enable subscribers to keep their seats when we return for a full season of music back at Walt Disney Concert Hall.
  • Subscriber Add-On tickets can be donated, returned for account credit, or refunded.
  • Create Your Own Package tickets can be donated, returned for account credit, or refunded.

Visit this page for the latest updates and to learn more.

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Julia Adolphe’s Underneath the Sheen was described as expertly crafting “grandeur as well as intimacy” (Alta magazine) when Gustavo Dudamel premiered at the LA Phil’s 2018 gala. The New York native and L.A.-based composer has received multiple commissions from top orchestras, and her new Violin Concerto will receive its world premiere with our Principal Concertmaster, Martin Chalifour. 

Days away from the premiere of his Fifth Symphony, Mahler wrote his wife, Alma Schindler, saying, “The public, oh heavens, what are they to make of … this foaming, roaring, raging sea of sound?” Mahler’s musical canvas and emotional scope in this work are simply huge. Each of its five movements contain numerous striking features that, as the composer wrote with concern to his wife, build wholly formed worlds that will fall away as the next idea grows from the ashes of the last. Mahler begins his symphony with one of the most famous, coveted, and nerve-racking trumpet solos in all of symphonic repertoire: a lone trumpet funeral fanfare, entirely exposed calling out in the dark, finally met with the swell of the orchestra. The most memorable moment in the symphony comes in the fourth movement, the famous Adagietto for strings and harp, said to be a love poem to Alma. That tender and passionate movement has become Mahler’s most frequently performed piece; Bernstein conducted it for Robert Kennedy’s funeral. It became especially widespread after it was used in the 1971 film Death in Venice. 

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