Vänskä Osmo Mahler

Osmo Vänskä, Minnesota Orchestra - Mahler: Symphony No.4 (2019)

Osmo Vänskä, Minnesota Orchestra - Mahler: Symphony No.4 (2019)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 215 Mb | Total time: 58:55 | Scans included
Classical | Label: BIS Records | # BIS-SACD-2356 | Recorded: 2018

In Gustav Mahler's first four symphonies many of the themes originate in his own settings of folk poems from the collection Des Knaben Wunderhorn (The Boy's Magic Horn). A case in point, Symphony No. 4 is built around a single song, Das himmlische Leben (The Heavenly Life) which Mahler had composed some eight years earlier, in 1892. The song presents a child's vision of Heaven and is hinted at throughout the first three movements. In the fourth, marked ‘Sehr behaglich’ (Very comfortably), the song is heard in full from a solo soprano instructed by Mahler to sing: ‘with serene, childlike expression; completely without parody!’
Osmo Vänskä, Minnesota Orchestra - Mahler: Symphony No.7 (2020)

Osmo Vänskä, Minnesota Orchestra - Mahler: Symphony No.7 (2020)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 317 Mb | Total time: 77:30 | Scans included
Classical | Label: BIS ‎| BIS-SACD-2386 | Recorded: 2018

In an effort to arrange the first performance of his Seventh Symphony, Gustav Mahler declared it to be his best work, preponderantly cheerful in character. His younger colleague Schoenberg expressed his admiration for the work, and Webern considered it his favorite Mahler symphony. Nevertheless, it remains the least performed and least written-about symphony of the entire cycle, and has come to be regarded as enigmatic and less successful than its siblings.
Osmo Vänskä, Minnesota Orchestra - Gustav Mahler: Symphony No.2 (2018)

Osmo Vänskä, Minnesota Orchestra - Gustav Mahler: Symphony No.2 (2018)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 292 Mb | Total time: 84:08 | Scans included
Classical | Label: BIS | BIS-SACD-2296 | Recorded: 2017

Gustav Mahler's Second Symphony started life as a single-movement tone poem called Todtenfeier ('Funeral Rites'). Completed in 1888 one year before Richard Strauss' Death and Transfiguration it echoed the composer's vision of seeing himself lying dead in a funeral bier surrounded by flowers. Deciding to use it as his opening movement, Mahler didn't finish the complete five-movement symphony until more than six years later, the longest time he spent on any work.
Osmo Vänskä, Minnesota Orchestra - Mahler: Symphony No.1 (2019)

Osmo Vänskä, Minnesota Orchestra - Mahler: Symphony No.1 (2019)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 208 Mb | Total time: 56:45 | Scans included
Classical | Label: BIS | BIS-SACD-2346 | Recorded: 2018

The shimmering string harmonics at the opening of Gustav Mahlers First Symphony bring to mind the suspended breath of spring, and will have signaled even to the very first audiences that a new symphonic era was being ushered in. Soon enough the composer introduces some of the elements that would become key components of his musical language: sounds of nature (here cuckoo calls) are combined with quasi-militaristic fanfares and high-art chromatic wanderings in cellos, as if to illustrate Mahlers view of the symphony as an all-embracing art form. The symphony, which the composer originally gave the subtitle Titan, borrows extensively from the song cycle Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen.
Minnesota Orchestra & Osmo Vänskä - Mahler: Symphony No. 9 (2023) [Official Digital Download 24/96]

Minnesota Orchestra & Osmo Vänskä - Mahler: Symphony No. 9 (2023)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Front Cover & Digital Booklet | Time - 81:32 minutes | 1,34 GB
Classical | Label: BIS, Official Digital Download

For the latest instalment in their Mahler series, the Minnesota Orchestra under the direction of Osmo Vänskä presents what many consider to be the pinnacle of the Austrian composer’s entire work, the Ninth Symphony, his last completed symphony.
Minnesota Orchestra & Osmo Vänskä - Mahler: Symphony No. 9 (2023)

Minnesota Orchestra & Osmo Vänskä - Mahler: Symphony No. 9 (2023)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 313 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 194 Mb | Digital booklet | 01:21:32
Classical | Label: BIS

For the latest instalment in their Mahler series, the Minnesota Orchestra under the direction of Osmo Vänskä presents what many consider to be the pinnacle of the Austrian composer’s entire work, the Ninth Symphony, his last completed symphony.
Jennifer Johnston, Minnesota Orchestra & Osmo Vänskä - Mahler: Symphony No. 3 in D Minor (2024) [Digital Download 24/96]

Jennifer Johnston, Minnesota Chorale, Minnesota Boychoir, Minnesota Orchestra & Osmo Vänskä - Mahler: Symphony No. 3 in D Minor (2024)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 104:03 minutes | 1,63 GB
Classical | Label: BIS, Official Digital Download

The Minnesota Orchestra and Osmo Vänskä bring us Gustav Mahler’s Third Symphony, an extraordinary work by any standards. Scored for extended Wagnerian woodwind and brass sections, posthorn, a large array of percussion, women’s chorus, alto soloist and boys’ choir, the symphony has a duration of over 100 minutes and is filled with extreme emotion, revealing what the composer wanted to say about his own connection with nature and humanity’s place in it: ‘My symphony will be something the world has never heard before! The whole of nature will have a voice in it…’ he wrote about this mammoth work.
Minnesota Orchestra, Osmo Vänskä - Mahler: Symphony No. 8 in E-Flat Major "Symphony of a Thousand" (2023) [24/96]

Minnesota Orchestra, Osmo Vänskä, Carolyn Sampson, Jacquelyn Wagner, Sasha Cooke, Jess Dandy, Barry Banks, Julian Orlishausen, Christian Immler, Minnesota Chorale, National Lutheran Choir, Minnesota Boychoir & Angelica Cantanti Youth Choir - Mahler: Symphony No. 8 in E-Flat Major "Symphony of a Thousand" (2023)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 83:13 minutes | 1,44 GB
Classical, Choral | Label: BIS, Official Digital Download

For its final concert of the 2021–22 season and Osmo Vänskä’s last as artistic director, the Minnesota Orchestra chose to present Mahler’s mammoth Eighth Symphony, which calls for one of the largest complement of performers in the history of music, a symbol of the communitarian spirit of collective cultural, social and religious-philosophical endeavour in what has been referred to as a ‘Mass for the Masses’.
Minnesota Orchestra, Osmo Vänskä - Mahler: Symphony No. 8 in E-Flat Major "Symphony of a Thousand" (2023)

Minnesota Orchestra, Osmo Vänskä, Carolyn Sampson, Jacquelyn Wagner, Sasha Cooke, Jess Dandy, Barry Banks, Julian Orlishausen, Christian Immler, Minnesota Chorale, National Lutheran Choir, Minnesota Boychoir & Angelica Cantanti Youth Choir - Mahler: Symphony No. 8 in E-Flat Major "Symphony of a Thousand" (2023)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 358 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 195 Mb | 01:23:13
Classical, Choral | Label: BIS

For its final concert of the 2021–22 season and Osmo Vänskä’s last as artistic director, the Minnesota Orchestra chose to present Mahler’s mammoth Eighth Symphony, which calls for one of the largest complement of performers in the history of music, a symbol of the communitarian spirit of collective cultural, social and religious-philosophical endeavour in what has been referred to as a ‘Mass for the Masses’.
Osmo Vänskä, Minnesota Orchestra - Gustav Mahler: Symphony No.9 (2023)

Osmo Vänskä, Minnesota Orchestra - Gustav Mahler: Symphony No.9 (2023)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 328 Mb | Total time: 81:32 | Scans included
Classical | Label: BIS | # BIS-2476 SACD | Recorded: 2022

After a vast and emotionally intense first movement that shows an astonishing fluidity of form, theme, texture and tonality, ‘the most glorious thing Mahler has written’ according to Alban Berg, the second movement brings joy and playfulness and seems to evoke both an urban Straussian world and folk music cultures. To the bitter irony and anger of the third movement the last movement, a mystical Adagio, seems to respond with ineffable tenderness. Often regarded as the composer’s monumental – both in terms of scale and emotional scope – leave-taking of the world, the Ninth Symphony can also be understood as a requiem for his daughter who died a few years before, an acknowledgment of the transience of life, a memorial to Vienna, an evocation of fading Austrian and Bohemian landscapes, a homage to a vanishing European cultural world.