Just realised I too have the Karajan and also the Royal Scottish NO with Georg Tintner.
Forum BAL : Bruckner 9
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Anna
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Mandryka
A great, but somewhat overprogrammed symphony, I feel. There was a time, about ten years ago, when either it or 7 were the only Bruckner that you were likely to hear in London.
I'm going to go with Walter and the Columbia SO: I hate to agree with the Penguin Guide, but I think this one suited B.W.s natural temperament so well.
I was also at Gunter Wand's 2001 prom (was it his last ever performance?) and remember being spellbound; if a bit irritated by two Germans who were being very critical of the Schubert 8 opener.
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Originally posted by Karafan View PostThank you Petrushka - I had forgotten completely about that recording which is sitting, I know, neglected on my shelf. It is, incidentally, not the live HvK recording of the 9th which appeared on another highly recommendable set from Andante, which is bookeneded between an incandescent (and soundwise, revelatory) Furtwaengler 8 from 1954 and a fine live Boehm 7th from 1976. http://www.amazon.co.uk/Vienna-Philh...655804&sr=1-10
I must relisten to the Karajan 9th on the 150th anniversary disc - thanks again for the nudge!
Bws
Karafan
I have no truck with so-called 'completions' of the 9th. The three movements bequeathed to us by Bruckner are a satisfying emotional experience in their own right."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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I imprinted on this through the BBC Music Mag's covermount BBCPO/Klee. The vast Liverpool Cathedral echo is marvellous for some of those big silences (though it doesn't do much for the scherzo's clarity!). Isn't there a Wand recorded in Linz cathedral or somewhere similar - or am I thinking of 8? And the much admired Walter was the second version I bought - but I had to give it away. Partly because the acoustic is so much the opposite of Klee (hardly any atmosphere, any space). But mostly because I can't bear to listen to the flutes going wrong in the finale: it's the sort of mistake than once you've heard it, looms ever bigger on repeated listenings.
Since then, I've bought far too many versions (I seem to have 12 listed in my score). I love Giulini's opulence, Skrowaczewski's mix of clarity & richness. Kubelik (Bayerischer Rundfunk on Orfeo) is rather special. Jochum's Dresden brass is often crude, and the trumpet horribly wobbly, but I like his Berlin. I must listen again to Barenboim (Berlin) & Luisi, my 2 most recent purchases.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThe live Karajan that appears on that Andante set dates from 1978 and I believe it to be taken from the same, or same sequence of performances, as the DVD that appeared a couple or so years ago. I find the Andante performance to be in poorer sound than the incandescent 1976. Incidentally, the 1976 Bruckner 7 from Karl Bohm included on that set is superb, a truly great performance.
I have no truck with so-called 'completions' of the 9th. The three movements bequeathed to us by Bruckner are a satisfying emotional experience in their own right.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostThey might be to you (and there's no denying that they are utterly wonderful) but they're not to me; every time I've heard the work in the three-movement "version" I feel profoundly short-changed.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAgreed. Bruckner has made considerable progress with the finale. Over 85% of the most recent completion of the final movement by Samale/Mazzuca/Phillips/Cohrs was composed or directly derived from sketches for the finale by Bruckner himself. Far better that the general listener be able to hear Bruckners work on the finale in such a form than for only academe to have access to it via printed matter. Of course it is not the finale as Bruckner would have competed it. It does not pretend to be so, but he certainly did intend there to be a finale. I regard the anti-completion lobby in this case, as with Mahler's 10th, as exhibiting a particularly sniffy form of musical snobbery. I wonder if such lobbyists would also seek to deny followers of the Christian religion the right to read what has been cobbled together over the centuries, from a multritude of sources of varying provenance, into what is now know as The Bible?
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Originally posted by Bryn View Posta particularly sniffy form of musical snobbery. I wonder if such lobbyists would also seek to deny followers of the Christian religion the right to read what has been cobbled together over the centuries, from a multritude of sources of varying provenance, into what is now know as The Bible?
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amateur51
Is there a commercially-available performance including the 4th movement completion? Sounds a fascinating enterprise
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amateur51
Originally posted by Roehre View PostThe idea is not Haitink's but Van Beinum's originally. If you can put hand on Van Beinum's recording of Bruckner 9 you will find the same timpani accentuations (plus additions at the end of the slow movement btw too, a pure Van Beinum addition in that case!). But a brilliant idea it is.
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I don't think the completion question is so black and white that those who only want to hear works fully completed by the composer are to be dismissed as guilty of musical snobbery. That is surely a perfectly valid choice. The analogy with the Bible doesn't hold since the latter does not purport to be a single authorial voice and, in the New Testament, has multiple accounts by different individuals of the same events. Yet with a composer such as Mahler or Bruckner, a single authorial identity is all important to the character of the work, not only in the structure of the work but the detail (especially Mahler the detail of whose orchestration was so phenomenally precise). However dedicated and scholarly the work of the completers, their work inevitably diffuses the individual identity of the composition.
I think it is good that there are completed or performing versions of unfinished works such as Schubert's 7th symphony, the various completions of Mozart's Requiem and indeed the completions of Mahler 10 and Bruckner 9. At the very least they allow the musical ideas that were put down by the composer to be heard even though they were left in an unfinished state. But there is a risk that the completed version assumes the same status as other works of the composer that were completed by him - I think this has effectively happened with Mozart's Requiem in the Sussmayr completion, and has virtually happened with Mahler 10 in the Cooke performing version. I think it's reasonable at least to question whether this does justice to the composer or those who want to hear music that he alone has written.
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