I have a lot of sympathy with the 'purists' who take the incomplete work as it is ... and I disagree with those who claim the symphony is somehow 'inferior' because it is incomplete ... even if by sheer luck, the peaceful ( and still suitably majestic) ending to the third movement surely crowns it as a towering masterpiece in its own right.
Yet, it is quite a shock (wonderful surprise) to hear those incredibly forward-looking sketches for the Finale, from the the pen of a sick, dying man ... these are just too powerful to ignore and some sort of 'completion' is the only way to bring them to the attention of concertgoers.
Let's have both 'complete' and incomplete versions as a regular choice!
Yet, it is quite a shock (wonderful surprise) to hear those incredibly forward-looking sketches for the Finale, from the the pen of a sick, dying man ... these are just too powerful to ignore and some sort of 'completion' is the only way to bring them to the attention of concertgoers.
Let's have both 'complete' and incomplete versions as a regular choice!
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