Is anyone else here collecting the Janowski/Suisse Romande Bruckner cycle on the Pentatone label? It's my first Bruckner recordings in a High Resolution format, and I am really do enjoy being able to appreciate a wealth of subtle detail in the Orchestration that I had previously missed.
Some critics have been hard of Janowski, complaining that he uses very little rubato, takes the scores to literally, and the Bruckner, in particular, tends to benefit from a conductor imposing his/her vision on his music, which, in their opinion, Janowski fails to do.
I didn't feel this was justifiable criticism in the first volumes that I had essayed (Symphonies 6, 7, 8, 9, &4) but now that I have acquired the 5th, after a couple of listenings I am wondering if in this case there is some merit to that complaint. I miss many of the interpretive choices of Horenstein or Jochum, my two other recordings or the work, and there does seem to be a bit of literalness here.
Some critics have been hard of Janowski, complaining that he uses very little rubato, takes the scores to literally, and the Bruckner, in particular, tends to benefit from a conductor imposing his/her vision on his music, which, in their opinion, Janowski fails to do.
I didn't feel this was justifiable criticism in the first volumes that I had essayed (Symphonies 6, 7, 8, 9, &4) but now that I have acquired the 5th, after a couple of listenings I am wondering if in this case there is some merit to that complaint. I miss many of the interpretive choices of Horenstein or Jochum, my two other recordings or the work, and there does seem to be a bit of literalness here.
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