About Volkov, see my second post above, I do indeed admire his musical intelligence, and have bought several of his recordings.
I think you are stretching a point, makropulos, to call Haas's work "re-composition". He made choices from various manuscripts about what to include or leave out. Even Dr. Simpson, strong supporter of Haas, recommends against one of his choices in the adagio of the 8th; absolutely, this will always be controversial... all one can do is listen and reflect; maybe not ever decide!
Personally, I feel that Haas understood what Bruckner was getting at, the blending of discursive musical paragraphs with large-scale architectural thinking, and this led him (Haas) to restore rather more passages than a strict acceptance of the manuscripts would entail. And we must never forget the pressure Bruckner was under from his uncomprehending, well-meaning friends. It is largely thanks to Haas's awareness of those factors that we have the music in its present form.
But yes, it's a vexed question.
I think you are stretching a point, makropulos, to call Haas's work "re-composition". He made choices from various manuscripts about what to include or leave out. Even Dr. Simpson, strong supporter of Haas, recommends against one of his choices in the adagio of the 8th; absolutely, this will always be controversial... all one can do is listen and reflect; maybe not ever decide!
Personally, I feel that Haas understood what Bruckner was getting at, the blending of discursive musical paragraphs with large-scale architectural thinking, and this led him (Haas) to restore rather more passages than a strict acceptance of the manuscripts would entail. And we must never forget the pressure Bruckner was under from his uncomprehending, well-meaning friends. It is largely thanks to Haas's awareness of those factors that we have the music in its present form.
But yes, it's a vexed question.
Originally posted by makropulos
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