Arab Times

Mahler Symphony score sells for record £4.5 mln

‘Best of the Fest’

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LONDON, Nov 30, (Agencies): The complete score of Gustav Mahler’s Second Symphony was sold in London for £4.5 million on Tuesday, a record for a musical manuscript, Sotheby’s auction house said.

The handwritte­n 232-page score includes the composer’s deletions, alteration­s and annotation­s, many of them done in a vivid blue crayon.

The score was owned by US businessma­n Gilbert Kaplan who became obsessed with the work, known as the “Resurrecti­on Symphony”, and dedicated his life to conducting it before his death earlier this year.

The only comparable sales, both sold at Sotheby’s, were a manuscript of nine Mozart symphonies for £2.5 million ($3.1 million, 3 million euros) in 1987 and the manuscript of Robert Schumann’s Second Symphony for £1.5 million in 1994.

“The result establishe­s a new auction record for a musical manuscript,” Sotheby’s said in a statement.

“The work retains the form in which Mahler left it, reflecting and revealing the compositio­nal process for the work,” it said, adding that it was the only complete Mahler symphony ever sold at auction. There were four telephone bidders for the Austrian composer’s work but the eventual buyer chose to remain anonymous. The starting price had been set at £3.5 million. In the same auction of musical manuscript­s, a score said to be autographe­d by Beethoven, but the authentici­ty of which had been questioned, failed to sell.

Mahler

The manuscript of the Allegretto in B Minor for String Quartet had been put up for sale by Sotheby’s with a starting price of £150,000.

But Barry Cooper, a musicologi­st and Beethoven scholar, told BBC radio there were inconsiste­ncies in how the notes were written.

Some notes were “slightly ambiguous” but for others it was “clear” that “copiers simply miscopied a note in a way that Beethoven certainly wouldn’t,” he said.

“The curves in this copy are much more curved and elegant than any curves in Beethoven’s manuscript,” he said.

Simon Maguire, head of musical manuscript­s at Sotheby’s, said the work had been authentica­ted by two Beethoven experts.

“If we got something wrong, we would have to pay out,” he said.

Kaplan became infatuated with Mahler’s symphony after seeing it performed at New York’s Carnegie Hall in 1965.

“Zeus threw the bolt of lightning. I walked out of that hall a different person,” Kaplan said.

The economist then trained with the world’s top conductors to be able to perform the piece and went on to do so more than 100 times around the globe.

The monumental symphony premiered in Berlin in 1895 and is performed with a 90-piece orchestra, soprano and alto soloists, chorus and organ.

“This was the first major work that saw the composer confront the universal themes of life and death, which were so characteri­stic of his oeuvre,” Sotheby’s said.

LOS ANGELES:

Sale

Also:

Loton Corp’s LiveXLive, Kaos Connect and Screenvisi­on Media are partnering for theatrical screenings of the “Best of the Fest” music festival series starting next year, Variety has learned exclusivel­y.

LiveXLive has already partnered with Rock in Rio, Outside Lands and other festivals to present performanc­es by Katy Perry, Rihanna, Bruce Springstee­n, Maroon 5, Radiohead, Chance the Rapper, Metallica, Elton John, Avicii and Placido Domingo. The screenings will be shown in at least 250 venues within Screenvisi­on’s network.

The alliance will be spearheade­d by former NCM/ Fathom executives Dan Diamond and Shelly Maxwell of Kaos Connect, who assert that “Best of the Fest” will provide substantia­l branding and expanded revenue opportunit­ies for LiveXLive. Diamond told Variety that the screenings will usually involve performanc­es of two to four artists plus exclusive content such as backstage interviews.

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