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Our "A Golden Age of Music" video series continues with a focus on Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 2, "Resurrection," which Carnegie Hall's Director of Artistic Planning Jeremy Geffen calls "a miracle and a question mark at the same time" and "about as personal a statement as any composer could make."
The UC Davis Symphony Orchestra performs Gustav Mahler's Symphony No.1, Kraftig bewegt, in D Major.
The UC Davis Symphony Orchestra performs Gustav Mahler's Symphony No.1, Feierlich und gemessen, ohne zu schleppen, in D Major.
The UC Davis Symphony Orchestra performs Gustav Mahler's Symphony No.1, Sturmisch bewegt, in D Major.
The UC Davis Symphony Orchestra performs Gustav Mahler's Symphony No.1 in D Major - Langdam, Schleppend.
The choruses and symphony orchestra perform Gustav Mahler's Symphony No.2 in C Minor "Resurrection," directed by UC Davis Professor D. Kern Holoman.
The choruses and symphony orchestra perform Gustav Mahler's Symphony No.2 in C Minor "Resurrection," directed by UC Davis Professor D. Kern Holoman.
The choruses and symphony orchestra perform Gustav Mahler's Symphony No.2 in C Minor "Resurrection," directed by UC Davis Professor D. Kern Holoman.
The choruses and symphony orchestra perform Gustav Mahler's Symphony No.2 in C Minor "Resurrection," directed by UC Davis Professor D. Kern Holoman.
The choruses and symphony orchestra perform Gustav Mahler's Symphony No.2 in C Minor "Resurrection," directed by UC Davis Professor D. Kern Holoman.