Originally posted by mathias broucek
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Favourite Bruckner symphony recordings?
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"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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9 for me has to be BPO / Rattle, despite him not being especially widely regarded as a Bruckner conductor; at least he conducts the whole symphony in what must at least for the time being be the best version thereof in existence. For all that there are some fabulous recorded accounts of the truncated version over the years, I've always found it near impossible to listen to the work in that format and I've threfore largely avoided doing so because the sheer sense of frustration once that disturbing but ultimately sublime third movement concludes is quite simply too much to bear...
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Two recordings stand out in what is an extensive collection on my shelves. These are recordings of the 5th and the 9th, both with Gunter Wand and the BPO. Some of his live performances with the BBC SO were incredible, but sadly have not appeared on cd.
After the final minutes of the third movement of no. 9 I have no desire for another movement, and have never obtained a "completion"
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post9 for me has to be BPO / Rattle, despite him not being especially widely regarded as a Bruckner conductor; at least he conducts the whole symphony in what must at least for the time being be the best version thereof in existence. For all that there are some fabulous recorded accounts of the truncated version over the years, I've always found it near impossible to listen to the work in that format and I've threfore largely avoided doing so because the sheer sense of frustration once that disturbing but ultimately sublime third movement concludes is quite simply too much to bear...
I don't have a sense of 'frustration' at the end of the unfinished Ninth, simply one of moved acceptance and "what if?"! The SPCM 'completion' provides a possible answer to the latter but one is still left wondering whether the composer, if fit both mentally and physically, would have imagined a coda even more impressive and grand.
Still, Rattle's recording does give us a choice ... we can always switch off before the Finale? ... so it would be a good selection if one were forced to select a single disc!
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I'll sort-of pass on this, too. Bruckner's too great a composer to single out an individual recording of the Symphonies: I'd have about a dozen nominees for almost each one. EXCEPT, of course, my "first love" - the 1969 Karajan/BPO Ninth: the first Bruckner recording I ever owned, and still one of the very best versions (although I agree that the Live VPO recording achieves the impossible and "betters" it. There's also a video from the same period - IIRC, a performance the following evening?)
Completions? Last year I spent a few weeks with two recordings of the Finale - on its own (to get used to the structure and materials) and in context. To my surprise, it was the NAXOS recording with Johannes Wildner and the New Philharmonic Orchestra of Westphalia that I found more convincing than the Rattle/BPO. I know it's an earlier edition of the completion, and I understand Rattle includes subsequent discovered material - but I felt much closer to (my idea of) Bruckner than I did with Rattle.
The James Bond Symphony sounds closer to Bruch than later Bruckner - but it has a lovely slow movement and is well worth hearing: Tintner's NAXOS recording is an excellent bargain. The "Nullte", for all Bruckner's own rejection of it, is a superb work - written after the First (and I prefer it to the Fourth , Barenboim and the Chicago SO is one of his best Bruckner recordings (which is saying something).[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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These are the first recordings of each work I would reach for:
00. Schaller, Philharmonie Festiva- Profil
0. Schaller, Philharmonie Festiva- Profil
1. Wand, WDR Sinfonieorchester - RCA
2. Wand, WDR Sinfonieorchester - RCA
3. Wand, NDR Sinfonieorchester - Profil
4. Wand, Berlin Philharmonic - RCA
5. Wand, DSO Berlin - Profil
6. Wand, Berlin Philharmonic - RCA
7. Wand, Berlin Philharmonic - RCA
8. Wand, Berlin Philharmonic - RCA
9. Abbado, Lucerne Festival Orchestra - DG
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostI don't have a sense of 'frustration' at the end of the unfinished Ninth, simply one of moved acceptance and "what if?"! The SPCM 'completion' provides a possible answer to the latter but one is still left wondering whether the composer, if fit both mentally and physically, would have imagined a coda even more impressive and grand.
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostStill, Rattle's recording does give us a choice ... we can always switch off before the Finale? ... so it would be a good selection if one were forced to select a single disc!
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I guess that my favourite Bruckner recording is Klemperer's sixth, far and away superior to any more recent version of this symphony (which deserves far more outings than it gets). However, I only have the LP version, which is marred by a side-break in the slow movement. It has been reissued opn CD but currently only appears to be available in large boxes of Klemperer recordings. It is a pity that Klemperer chose to conduct a heavily-cut version of the eigth.
From the same generatioin I also rate Bruno Walter's ninth highly.
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