There are a large number of Bruckner recordings clamouring for your attention and you may well not have come across this early 1957 recording of Bruckner's 8th Symphony which was possibly Karajan's first recording of a Bruckner symphony in stereo.
Stewart Crowe has written very interestingly here about the recording process.
although he starts off with the enigmatic phrase: "This 1957 recorded symphony is an historic recording in so many ways, though happily not in sound quality". My version is on a World Record Club double album with the stereo "S" stamped in red in front of the record number T 772/3 bought £34 !!!, I must have been flush, from Harold Moore's Emporium. I have found the sound quality to be quite raw at times, a result of the very dry acoustic which is unusual for a church. It has the effect of removing any possible sentimentality from the performance but allows some very fine detail to be audible. If you want "sheer beauty of sound and opulence of texture" there is this conductor's last version with the VPO but are these qualities really what Bruckner is about?
is the link.
Stewart Crowe has written very interestingly here about the recording process.
although he starts off with the enigmatic phrase: "This 1957 recorded symphony is an historic recording in so many ways, though happily not in sound quality". My version is on a World Record Club double album with the stereo "S" stamped in red in front of the record number T 772/3 bought £34 !!!, I must have been flush, from Harold Moore's Emporium. I have found the sound quality to be quite raw at times, a result of the very dry acoustic which is unusual for a church. It has the effect of removing any possible sentimentality from the performance but allows some very fine detail to be audible. If you want "sheer beauty of sound and opulence of texture" there is this conductor's last version with the VPO but are these qualities really what Bruckner is about?
is the link.
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