Anton Bruckner, Symphony no. 9 with the documentation of the
finale fragment
Vienna Philharmonic, conducted by Nikolaus Harnoncourt
RCA Red Seal 2CD 82876 54331 2
There are two CDs on this release. The 1st CD features 2
versions (in German and English respectively) of a workshop concert in which
Harnoncourt introduces and conducts John A. Philipps’s edition of the finale of
Bruckner’s 9th Symphony. The 2nd CD features a live
recording of the “standard” 9th symphony from August 2002.
By the time of Bruckner’s death, we learn from Harnoncourt
and from the detailed liner notes, he had completed composing the finale, but
was unable to complete the instrumentation. Some portions exist in their
entirety, in particular the whole of the exposition. In some the final
instrumentation remains incomplete. And, although there appears to have existed
a fully paginated autograph score, a number of pages have disappeared.
The lengthy fragment that remains (around 18 minutes of
music) is tantalizing. It contains some of Bruckner’s most dissonant and
forward-looking music (as Harnoncourt puts it, Bruckner dropped into the
musical world like a stone from the moon), as well as another of his wonderful
fugues. Tragically nothing remains of the coda in which Bruckner recapitulated
key themes from the 5th, 7th, and 8th
movements. But there is enough preserved to make clear that Bruckner envisaged
the finale as the summa of his
symphonic odyssey.
So now Bruckner-lovers and performers have a real puzzle. On
the one hand, the remains of the finale are too fragmented to be performed
after the 3 movements that have been preserved in their entirety. On the other,
the standard picture of the Adagio being Bruckner’s apotheosis and farewell to
life seems demonstrably mistaken.
This has performance implications, most obviously for how
the Adagio is approached. Comparing them side by side reveals Harnoncourt to be
much more understated than, say, Gunter Wand. Harnoncourt approaches the
opening bars with much weaker dynamical contrast, for example. And the Adagio’s
massively discordant climax is less monumental for Harnoncourt than it is for
Wand (and many others).
Of course that’s exacting what one would expect when the
Adagio is viewed as the 3rd of 4 movements, rather than as a cathartic finale. But
the downside is that the 4th movement doesn’t really exist, and so to
structure the Adagio in the light of it may be to compromise its greatness
without adding audible benefits.
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