I'm going to this one and really looking forward to it! The recorder already set for the R3 broadcast.
Bruckner 8 Berlin Staatskapelle/Barenboim April 17
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostLet us know! Have you heard his new 7 yet?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostFrom the schedule page, "(vers. composite, ed. Haas)". That does seem a more apposite description of the Haas edition than we normally get, but does the "ed." include composition of linking material in this case? As I understand it, the jury is still out on this question.
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A wonderful Bruckner 8 from Barenboim and The Berlin Staatskapelle - greatly played, greatly relayed.
(HDs AAC via iTunes).
Sibelius said that his 4th Symphony had "nothing of the circus about it." Tonight's Bruckner was, I feel, in the same vein. If there is such a thing as the sound of old Berlin, I think we heard it tonight.
A minor interpretative cavil or two, perhaps - but I feel too grateful to mention them now.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostNo, he didn't compose it - he restored some short passages from the 1887 score that Bruckner, influenced by Hermann levi and others, had cut in the revision. That's what is meant by "composite". Robert Simpson discusses it at length in Chapter 10 of The Essence of Bruckner. He makes the point that the 1955 Nowak edition "removes the passages restored by Haas, on the unassailable gound that mixing of sources is not permissible"; but then continues "we cannot be sure how much of what he wrote himself (or in this case excised himself) is the result of external pressure. There are times when artistic judgment must supersede strict musicology."
By the way, I though tonight's performance a bit of a let-down. To my ears it lacked integration.
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A beautiful performance I thought.
On the never-ending questions of Bruckner editions, I've found Korstvedt (Cambridge Music Handbooks - Bruckner Symphony 8) very interesting. He's a Nowak man and sees Simpson, Cooke etc as offering dubious arguments for Haas. I must say, listening to Haas this evening with my Nowak score, I'm not sure the differences are worth a war, interesting though they are.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post...
(HDs AAC via iTunes).
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Yes, I know what you mean Bryn.
I hear Bruckner performances (this is far from an original thought) along a continuum of non-interventionist (like late Celibidache) to interventionist (like Skrowaczewski). This was certainly towards the interventionist (episodic if you like) end but I like to hear performances from anywhere on the continuum - as long as they're by good musicians. All good performances help me work with the music in my own mind. I know I'm asking for trouble using 'good' here with the problem of introducing circularity - but it's approaching Horlicks time so it's the best I can do!
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAh, but did Haas not compose some links in the 'restoration' process?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostA wonderful Bruckner 8 from Barenboim and The Berlin Staatskapelle - greatly played, greatly relayed.
(HDs AAC via iTunes).
Sibelius said that his 4th Symphony had "nothing of the circus about it." Tonight's Bruckner was, I feel, in the same vein. If there is such a thing as the sound of old Berlin, I think we heard it tonight.
A minor interpretative cavil or two, perhaps - but I feel too grateful to mention them now.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI started with Freeview (from my Panasonic Blu-ray recorders tuner) but could not get on with the sound quality and switched to FM, which was a least a little more mellow. I will try via the iPlayer in HD Sound later. I have had too many drop-out experiences listening live in HD Sound here.Last edited by Dave2002; 17-04-12, 23:08.
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