Given recent discussions of Brucknerian editions, it seems a good idea to give this link to an excellent summarising guide to them by David Griegel, updated as recently as 2009.
(You can also link to it via abruckner.com's individual symphony discographies.)
I was soon intrigued by the comment on the 2nd Symphony, that the 1877 Nowak edition is based on Haas 1877, so "retains the passages from 1872 added by Haas" in his edition, which in effect combines 1877 with 1872 - a similar situation to the Haas 1890 8th. I'd thought that performances and recordings of the 1877 Nowak edition always make the cuts, which Bruckner himself made for the 1877 version following suggestions by his friend Johann Herbeck. So - spot-check required! The VSO/Giulini, described as 1877 Nowak, makes the cuts to the 1st and 4th movement codas, as does Jochum in his Dresden State version, listed simply as "1877 version" (though admittedly I was almost too shocked at his sheer speed to concentrate...). But Dausgaard with the Swedish CO on BIS, also described as Nowak 1877, restores those passages. All these are under the same Nowak heading at abruckner.com
(Gunter Wand in Cologne restores the passages, but this version is described as "Unabridged Final Version 1877 ed.Haas". Venzago - simply "1877" in the booklet - makes the cuts and explains why, but is listed by Berky under "ed. Carragan - removes remaining Haas anomalies").
It's fascinating to discover that Nowak maintained the Haas emendations (or "anomalies") in an edition published in 1965, yet not every conductor plays them. Does the Nowak edition indicate the restorations, offering a choice?
Simplest, then, to stick to Carraghan - especially 1872, longest and loveliest Bruckner Second of all...
(You can also link to it via abruckner.com's individual symphony discographies.)
I was soon intrigued by the comment on the 2nd Symphony, that the 1877 Nowak edition is based on Haas 1877, so "retains the passages from 1872 added by Haas" in his edition, which in effect combines 1877 with 1872 - a similar situation to the Haas 1890 8th. I'd thought that performances and recordings of the 1877 Nowak edition always make the cuts, which Bruckner himself made for the 1877 version following suggestions by his friend Johann Herbeck. So - spot-check required! The VSO/Giulini, described as 1877 Nowak, makes the cuts to the 1st and 4th movement codas, as does Jochum in his Dresden State version, listed simply as "1877 version" (though admittedly I was almost too shocked at his sheer speed to concentrate...). But Dausgaard with the Swedish CO on BIS, also described as Nowak 1877, restores those passages. All these are under the same Nowak heading at abruckner.com
(Gunter Wand in Cologne restores the passages, but this version is described as "Unabridged Final Version 1877 ed.Haas". Venzago - simply "1877" in the booklet - makes the cuts and explains why, but is listed by Berky under "ed. Carragan - removes remaining Haas anomalies").
It's fascinating to discover that Nowak maintained the Haas emendations (or "anomalies") in an edition published in 1965, yet not every conductor plays them. Does the Nowak edition indicate the restorations, offering a choice?
Simplest, then, to stick to Carraghan - especially 1872, longest and loveliest Bruckner Second of all...
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