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Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast

Zemlinsky: The Mermaid

Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast

Joshua Weilerstein

Arts, Performing Arts, Music

4.92.5K Ratings

🗓️ 5 February 2026

⏱️ 62 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The story of Alexander von Zemlinsky's The Mermaid begins with a passionate love affair and ends in heartbreak of the most unabashedly big-R Romantic kind. In 1900, the young, fabulously talented, and famously beautiful Alma Schindler came to Zemlinsky's home to study composition. Wildly passionate feelings soon developed between them, and Alma wrote the following in her diary: "I would gladly be pregnant for him, gladly bear his children. His blood and mine, commingled: my beauty with his intellect. I would gladly serve him in his professional life, live for him and his kith and kin, breathe [for him], attend to his every happiness, serve him with a gentle hand. God give me the strength and the willpower to do so."

The relationship lasted a little over a year, until one night when Schindler attended a party that happened to be frequented by a brilliant conductor and composer twenty years her senior: Gustav Mahler. The rest is history.

Zemlinsky was devastated and poured his energies into a tone poem based on Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid. The source may seem surprising, but as we'll see later on, it proved to be the perfect vehicle for Zemlinsky to exorcise the tortured memories of this turbulent relationship. For a long time, however, the score was lost. It wasn't until the 1980s that the full work was reconstructed, and it has since become one of Zemlinsky's most frequently performed pieces.

And it's not hard to see why. The Mermaid is a forty-minute tone poem that, from start to finish, overflows with fin-de-siècle romanticism, very much in the vein of Schoenberg's Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night). It is a work of irresistible beauty and passion, and it is being played more and more as Zemlinsky's name begins to take its rightful place in the standard canon of composers.

Today on the show, I'll tell you a bit more about Zemlinsky in case you're not familiar with him, read more of the unbearably passionate letters and diary entries from both Zemlinsky and Alma Schindler, and, of course, walk you through the heartbreakingly beautiful music of The Mermaid, showing how Zemlinsky balances narrative and abstract form, and how he created this opulent, lush, and profoundly moving score. Join us!

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to Sticky Notes, the Classical Music Podcast.

0:09.9

My name is Joshua Weilerstein.

0:11.5

I'm a conductor, and I'm the music director of the Orchestra National de Lille,

0:15.1

and the chief conductor of the Allborg Symphony.

0:17.5

This podcast is for anyone who loves classical music, works in the field, or is just

0:22.1

getting ready to dive in to this amazing world of incredible music. Before we get started, I want

0:27.3

to thank my new Patreon sponsors, John, Stefan, Leni, Klimer, Robert, Chris, Paul, Shin, Alexander,

0:36.9

Milosh, Jerry, Woody, Paul, Sarah, Daniel, Janisle, Minidiva, Judy,

0:44.8

Celsius 1414, and Shy, and all of my other Patreon sponsors for making Season 11 possible.

0:52.5

If you'd like to support the show, please head over to patreon.com slash sticky notes podcast.

0:57.6

And if you are a fan of the show, please take a moment to give us a rating or review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

1:02.9

It is greatly appreciated.

1:05.3

Next week, I will be heading to Allborg to conduct the piece that I'm talking about today, Zemlinski's The Mermaid. And we are going to be doing a live podcast on Brahms' Second Symphony. So that will be going up in a couple of weeks. I'm really excited to do another one of these live shows with the orchestra. There's so much fun to do. And it's a different feeling, too, to have the audience in front of you while you're talking. It is, I have to say, one of the most exhausting kind of things that I do as a conductor,

1:31.8

going back and forth between the talking and the conducting, but it's really worth it,

1:35.8

and I'm really looking forward to sharing that episode with you.

1:39.8

For today, if you are not familiar with Zemlinsky's music, I really encourage you to stick around

1:45.8

and take a listen.

1:47.4

This is just a gorgeous piece, and it has a wonderful story behind it, and I really, really

1:52.7

think you'll enjoy it.

1:53.8

So, without further ado, Alexander von Zemlinski's The Mermaid begins with a passionate love affair and ends in heartbreak that couldn't be any more big R romantic in feeling.

2:31.5

In 1900, the young, fabulously talented and famously gorgeous Alma Schindler

2:36.8

came to Zemlinsky's home to study composition. Passionate feelings soon developed between the two

...

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