Originally posted by Heldenleben
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Bruckner: favourite symphony cycle/boxed set
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I think the OP is looking for a basic complete set, not worried about the minutiae of the Editions, and appears to be interested in a single conductor (I believe the Berlin and possibly VPO have issued multi Conductor sets). I second Petrushka recommendation of Haitink, but actually I haven’t heard 0-3 from that set. A set that I do own, also available on Blu Ray as the Haitink is, but much more affordable on CD, is Karajan/Berlin from the early seventies. I think that Karajan had a real affinity for Bruckner and the playing is superb. I think this should be the basic complete set for a “beginner “ collector. I also have the the Jochum/Dresden set, and that was my only Bruckner for a decade or so, but now whenever I spin it I get vertiginous from Jochum’s frequent gear shifts.
I also have the Gunter Wand set on Sony, and there are some good recordings in there, but the Berlin PO are the Concertgebou are in a different league altogether
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThey're not murky in the latest incarnation here where an impressive clean up job has been done
Regarding Karajan's 1970s recordings, I found them very exciting when they came out, especially no.9, but I haven't heard those for a long time. I think they might well be a good choice for the Bruckner newcomer.
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For a complete set in decent sound, I'd go for Jochum/DG or Haitink/Philips (now Decca). But there's a good case to be made for a self-assembly Bruckner cycle too, and there are magnificent performances that are sometimes overlooked because they weren't part of a complete set (e.g. Giulini's gloriously spacious versions of 7, 8 and 9 with the Vienna Phil, Böhm's 4, 7 and 8 with the same orchestra and so on –and on). After that, the choice is pretty much endless, and a wonderful voyage of discovery.
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Originally posted by makropulos View PostBut there's a good case to be made for a self-assembly Bruckner cycle too, and there are magnificent performances that are sometimes overlooked because they weren't part of a complete set (e.g. Giulini's gloriously spacious versions of 7, 8 and 9 with the Vienna Phil, Böhm's 4, 7 and 8 with the same orchestra and so on –and on). After that, the choice is pretty much endless, and a wonderful voyage of discovery.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostDodgy brass? The CSO? To omnipresent perhaps, but dodgy?
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI suspect, for Brucknerians (whoever they are ) the story of Anton being pushed this way and that by well-meaning friends and colleagues, not to mention hostility from reviewers et cetera et cetera is part of this question: What is the true version of this symphony from the composer's point of view?
But to revert to topic: I mostly listen to Jochum.
I now think Bruckner, who bequeathed his original scores to the Austrian National Library in Vienna, came to see at least some of his symphonies as co-existing happily in more than one version. The truly vexed question is of course the 3rd, but what you have there essentially is the remarkable, vast 1873 Original (with all the Wagner quotes) and the 1877/8 revision, later truncated further in 1889/90. But there isn't much substantial difference, certainly in the experience of listening, between 1877 and 1890.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 17-12-20, 14:05.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI note that there is no mention of re-mastering on the box-cover illustrations and that the first customer review complains about poor sound quality.
As for "dodgy" brass, you were never going to get Chicago-type precision in 1970s Dresden (I was going to say they took fewer prisoners, ahem...) but you could argue that there was a more idiomatic blend. I may have to do a comparison of AB symphonies played by those bands.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostDG - Jochum and Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra.
I also have Solti/Chicago.
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Originally posted by makropulos View PostGiulini's gloriously spacious versions of 7, 8 and 9 with the Vienna Phil
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Composite Cycles are a great idea, though it might take a while to put mine together....! Blomstedt in original 2 and 3, Venzago in revisions etc.....
But just one usually overlooked recommend...... Andreae (1953, VSO, Music&Arts) in No1......what an impact it has.... if you find can your way to it in any streaming or disc form, you'll never forget your encounter with that one! And it's the Sound of Old Vienna..... my word, those strings........Wiener Blut, indeed.....
OK, going a little further.... the mono remastering is excellent, and the really big moments in 5, 7 and 8 do not disappoint.... and you get to hear the 1892 8th, (the version preferred by Kna and Furtwangler)....as well....
See Gramophone, 10/2009 (RC).
"A major discovery for all discerning Brucknerians".
If you ever find the CD set, very rare now, the documentation is excellent - well beyond the call of duty.Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 17-12-20, 15:42.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostComposite Cycles are a great idea, though it might take a while to put mine together....! Blomstedt in original 2 and 3, Venzago in revisions etc.....
But just one usually overlooked recommend...... Andreae (1953, VSO, Music&Arts) in No1......what an impact it has.... if you find can your way to it in any streaming or disc form, you'll never forget your encounter with that one! And it's the Sound of Old Vienna as well....Wiener Blut, indeed....."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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