Originally posted by Barbirollians
Our Summer BAL 12 - Bruckner's 4th Symphony
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So many recordings.... all of the same edition, 1878/80. Ever tried the 1874 Original, anyone?
I was sad to miss Jurowski's live relay of the (seminal!) 1873 3rd last week... ! Did anyone hear it? Still there on iPlayer & the press reviews were excellent...
(Jurowski's RFH 1872 2nd, broadcast early 2014, was very fine; he seems a natural Brucknerian, he knows his editions, and so far seems to have resisted rolling his own.... for which relief, etc.).
...starts just before 5th index point, around 1'26....
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Originally posted by silvestrioneWho were the Columbia Symphony Orchestra?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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And I think members of the NYPO if in New York . I imagine it was a special job to be asked to be a part of an orchestra for Walter .
Wasn't it the NYPO when a conductor struggling with a Mahler symphony asked for ideas from the orchestra and one member of the brass section shouted " send for Bruno Walter "
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Originally posted by silvestrioneWho were the Columbia Symphony Orchestra? Walter certainly got wonderful performances out of them: I used to have Bruckner 9 on LP, my introduction to Bruckner , in fact. Awe-inspiring.
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Originally posted by PJPJIf in California, the orchestra was mostly the Los Angeles PO but included local free-lance players some of whom undoubtedly played in the MGM ocrhestra, for example. If on the East Coast, largely the New York Philjarmonic, with additions from the New York Stadium (who weren't the NYPO in disguise) and again, free-lancers on Columbia's books.
While hardly a deception on the Hatto scale, it's still a deception, though in all fairness I doubt if anyone would notice any difference without being aware of it (or even if they are)."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilsonSo many recordings.... all of the same edition, 1878/80. Ever tried the 1874 Original, anyone?
I was sad to miss Jurowski's live relay of the (seminal!) 1873 3rd last week... ! Did anyone hear it? Still there on iPlayer & the press reviews were excellent...
(Jurowski's RFH 1872 2nd, broadcast early 2014, was very fine; he seems a natural Brucknerian, he knows his editions, and so far seems to have resisted rolling his own.... for which relief, etc.).
...starts just before 5th index point, around 1'26....
This is a stunning vindication of Bruckner's first thoughts. There is a sense of balance in the work compared to the later revisions especially the much-performed last 1889 version. So many fine passages needlessly discarded in those. Robert Simpson believed the coda of the Finale arrives far too quickly in the later versions and when you hear the 1873 first attempt, the composer seems to have got it right after all, at least to my ears. Too bad the conservative Viennese audience (and orchestra) didn't begin to comprehend the work but, to be fair, it must have seemed completely 'off the wall' in those days. In fact, to some these days, it still does, apparently!
I'll leave Simpson to sum it up better than I ever could:
'I would urge all conductors to learn the original (Third), to feel the essential majesty of its movement, its natural momentum and the purity of its character. It is as near as we shall ever get to Bruckner's true Third, and it should be repeatedly performed until the more fatal flaws of the other two versions become obvious to everyone'.
In my opinion, much the same applies to the various versions of the 4th.
PS ... just listen to those screaming flutes near the end of Jurowski's account of No 3 ... wonderful!
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilsonSo many recordings.... all of the same edition, 1878/80. Ever tried the 1874 Original, anyone?
I was sad to miss Jurowski's live relay of the (seminal!) 1873 3rd last week... ! Did anyone hear it? Still there on iPlayer & the press reviews were excellent...
(Jurowski's RFH 1872 2nd, broadcast early 2014, was very fine; he seems a natural Brucknerian, he knows his editions, and so far seems to have resisted rolling his own.... for which relief, etc.).
...starts just before 5th index point, around 1'26....
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I was at a concert on Friday evening in the (acoustically superlative) Suntory Hall when Sylvain Cambreling conducted the Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra in the Benjamin Korstvedt edition of the 1888 version of the fourth. I was so taken up with the music that I forgot to listen out for major differences but it all seemed to make musical sense to me. It was a fine performance from a conductor whom I don’t automatically associate with Bruckner but, given his credentials in big works by Messiaen et al, I shouldn’t really have been surprised.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostI was at a concert on Friday evening in the (acoustically superlative) Suntory Hall when Sylvain Cambreling conducted the Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra in the Benjamin Korstvedt edition of the 1888 version of the fourth. I was so taken up with the music that I forgot to listen out for major differences but it all seemed to make musical sense to me. It was a fine performance from a conductor whom I don’t automatically associate with Bruckner but, given his credentials in big works by Messiaen et al, I shouldn’t really have been surprised.
Lately I've been snacking on Nelsons' Gewandhausorchester Bruckner 4 and to say the least, it's growing on me.
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