Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro
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Let's all learn a new symphony !
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[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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In the Eighth I have always preferred Haas to Nowak - except when Giulini and Jochum are conducting the latter !
I love Jochum's BPO Eighth- all manner of things wrong with it I am sure especially accelerations and decelerations but it was the recording that made me fall for Bruckner after finding him all too long and turgid before.
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostIn the Eighth I have always preferred Haas to Nowak - except when Giulini and Jochum are conducting the latter !
I love Jochum's BPO Eighth- all manner of things wrong with it I am sure especially accelerations and decelerations but it was the recording that made me fall for Bruckner after finding him all too long and turgid before.
Haas, of course, is the only edition of the Eighth Symphony that Bruckner never saw; and the only one to include Music not written by Bruckner. It has had many superb recordings, (Wand, Karajan, Haitink - Furtwangler [who cuts out the Haas bars] and some, like Böhm, that make up their own conflation of Haas and Nowak) but I've come to prefer the two Nowaks (no - not "Leopold and Kim"!) to get the whole world of this astonishing Symphonies. (Or, "these astonishing Symphony".)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhat? Scherzo second? Oh, surely that will NEVER do! (sorry, but I think that you know what I'm referring to here!...)...
Yes - but this time it all goes in the opposite direction: once you've heard scherzo second, full 1872 text, nothing else will do!
(And you revisit Giulini or Karajan in the spirit of "the past is another country; they do things differently there...")
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostSo, could you say thyat these 'editions' and Bruckner's own are all hybrids?
Bruckner did two versions of his Eighth Symphony, each with their own strengths. Rather than this being a weakness, I think we're lucky to have two valid different ideas of how the composer's mind worked - and how Symphonic thought can take different routes. To come back to topic, there are worse ways of spending time than "learning" the two versions equally well - but it can be very disconcerting at first: familiar passages suddenly take different turns that can only seem "wrong" if you're used to the other version(s)! Completely different experience from that of learning a new work for the first time.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Isn't this more than enough of Bruckner for now?
Having collected recordings of about half of Haydn's symphonies, I decided that the best way to get to know the rest was to buy the Fischer set. After listening to all the ones I didn't previously know, I made a list of those I wanted to hear again.
Isn't it curious how nicknames promote the popularity of a piece? Take Haydn 21 and 22 (The Philosopher). The former is, to my mind, a finer piece yet it is the latter which is much better known.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI am, however, taking longer to get to grips with the 1873 original version of 3, having got too used to the 1878 version - and to follow all the twists and turns in the story.
Currently listening to the 1873 version, played by Inbal and the Frankfurt Radio Symphony; not without its longueurs but, boy!, do those climaxes have weight. One imagines that if the old boy had ever got round to it, he would have been a passionate believer in foreplay, and holding back to the last!
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Originally posted by Alison View PostCheers Sainty. I don't know any of his. In fact I don't even know how many he wrote!
suffolkcoastal is an expert and keen advocate. 2 is a very fine work IMO, prolly need to listen to more of his stuff,but Walter Piston is my top American just now.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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