SCHUBERT SYMPHONY NO.7 d.759. 4-movement version compl. Samale/Cohrs (2015).
Concentus Musicus Wien/Stefan Gottfried. Aparte 24/96. Qobuz Studio Stream.
Utterly stunning Finished-Unfinished, with light, wide-open water-colourful textures, singing string-and-wind lines of doomed poignant innocence, the baleful brassy climaxes penetratingly sharp. Which emblazoning is at times relentless, yet lends an inescapable sense of overwhelming tragic destiny to the work; the 4-movement 7th (legendarily 8th - will I ever get used to this pedantic renumbering...?) here played in the most fierily dramatic and tightly structured performance I’ve yet heard - and, at least within the almost-40 minutes it took to navigate its cloud-capped palaces and abysmal depths…(Doré’s visions of Dante’s Inferno came repeatedly and forcibly to mind) utterly convincing as a complete, intensely tragic symphonic work.
What a record; what a game-changer!
The first post-Harnoncourt recording from the Concentus, in sound of riveting, sharp-cut immediacy and visceral dynamic impact. It couldn’t be a finer, more aptly exploratory tribute - but also a new beginning, opening up all sorts of possible new adventures…. might we yet have some early Bruckner from them? On present evidence, Stefan Gottfried should be a sure and worthy leader into that far-flung kingdom….
SCHUBERT SYMPHONY NO.7 d.759. 4-movement version compl. Samale/Cohrs (2015).
Concentus Musicus Wien/Stefan Gottfried. Aparte 24/96. Qobuz Studio Stream.
Utterly stunning Finished-Unfinished, with light, wide-open water-colourful textures, singing string-and-wind lines of doomed poignant innocence, the baleful brassy climaxes penetratingly sharp. Which emblazoning is at times relentless, yet lends an inescapable sense of overwhelming tragic destiny to the work; the 4-movement 7th (legendarily 8th - will I ever get used to this pedantic renumbering...?) here played in the most fierily dramatic and tightly structured performance I’ve yet heard - and, at least within the almost-40 minutes it took to navigate its cloud-capped palaces and abysmal depths…(Doré’s visions of Dante’s Inferno came repeatedly and forcibly to mind) utterly convincing as a complete, intensely tragic symphonic work.
What a record; what a game-changer!
The first post-Harnoncourt recording from the Concentus, in sound of riveting, sharp-cut immediacy and visceral dynamic impact. It couldn’t be a finer, more aptly exploratory tribute - but also a new beginning, opening up all sorts of possible new adventures…. might we yet have some early Bruckner from them? On present evidence, Stefan Gottfried should be a sure and worthy leader into that far-flung kingdom….
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