While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of our listings, events may be postponed or cancelled without notice. Please confirm with the organizer before making any plans.
Thanks for helping us keep our content updated and accurate. Please let us know what is incorrect and be as specific as possible. We may reach out to you via email if we need more information.
Your Email*
* - Required Fields
Submit
Thanks!
Error report has been sent successfully.
We will review your submission and make any necessary updates.
Skip the Line!
Need to add or update events regularly?
If you're a band, promotor, venue, or artist representative,
Consider becoming one of our verified users!
- speed up the creation process
- Add multiple events and artist at once
- Skip the holding period and publish automatically
Complete our quick form to become a Verified User.
Gustav Mahler’s world collapsed in 1907. In June, he was forced to resign as general director of the Vienna Court Opera following an anti-Semitic smear campaign, on 12 July his five-year-old daughter Maria died, and five days later he himself was diagnosed with an incurable heart condition. After these three strokes of fate, he had to “learn to stand and walk again like a beginner,” as he confessed to conductor Bruno Walter. Mahler found solace in a volume of ancient Chinese poetry, which revolves around themes of love and beauty, nature, and transience. He selected six of the poems, set them to music, and published them as Das Lied von der Erde (“The Song of the Earth”): a symphony for alto, tenor, and orchestra, which marks the beginning of his late style featuring at times chamber music-like instrumentation and a tendency towards spirituality. Finnish conductor Susanna Mälkki will perform this moving piece in her debut with the Staatskapelle Berlin. She has also chosen to place the early symphonic movement Blumine, which Mahler originally composed for his First Symphony, at the beginning of the concert. An evening that promises to get under your skin.