There are 13 Bruckner performances in the back catalog of the Berlin Philharmonic's Digital Concert Hall, including an excellent Bruckner 8 from Zubin Mehta recorded on 13 March 2012. This is a welcome addition to Mehta's slender Bruckner discography. He has a deep understanding of Bruckner and this performance has both momentum and structure. Here is a short sampler. The full performance requires a ticket. I recommend a season pass, which gives access to the coming season as well as to a large and ever-expanding back list
Monday, July 22, 2013
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Benjamin Britten: Chamber and Instrumental Works
This enjoyable set (available here from Archivmusik at a very reasonable price) is dominated by the three string quartets and three cello suites, as one might expect – with fine performances from the Endellion Quartet and Truls Mørk respectively. But there are also less familiar pieces that are well worth listening to - particularly the phantasy for string trio and oboe, the op. 65 cello sonata written for Rostropovich, and the six metamorphoses after Ovid for solo oboe. Britten's piano works on disc 5 are not a high point, despite the best efforts of Stephen Hough, but in general Britten's harmonic language and musical persona is ideal for the more intimate chamber music setting.
Saturday, July 13, 2013
Furtwängler's Vienna Concerts: 1944 - 1954
Wilhelm Furtwängler, Wiener Konzerte 1944 – 1954 (Orfeo C834 118Y - 18 CDs)
The 18 CDs in this new collection from Orfeo d'Oro include every identifiable recording of Furtwängler's live performances with the Vienna Philharmonic, but no studio recordings. The earliest performances date back to the last year of the Second World War, including a breathtaking recording of Bruckner's 8th Symphony (17th October, 1944, using his own edition). The latest date to Furtwängler's final months.

Monday, July 1, 2013
1953 Krauss Ring Cycle at Archivmusik

The reissue by Opera d'Oro includes a full libretto with a new translation and has been remastered to yield a warm vocal sound (although the orchestral sound is rather muddy on occasion, as might be expected in a live recording from 60 years ago).
If you can think of a better use for $50 please let me know.
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Klemperer: Bruckner 4 – 9
Otto Klemperer: Bruckner Symphonies 4 – 9
EMI (6 CDs: 50999 4 04296 2)
Otto Klemperer is much better known for his Mahler recordings
than as a Bruckner conductor. That reflects the vicissitudes of recording
rather than his work in the concert hall. Klemperer regularly conducted
Bruckner to great acclaim throughout his career, but Walter Legge was
apparently not convinced that Bruckner would sell on LP and so kept Klemperer
on a fairly tight leash. The six symphonies in this excellent box set were all
recorded between 1960 and 1970 and reveal Legge’s caution to have been a mistake.
The set includes a truly outstanding recording of the 4th, together
with thought-provoking and insightful performances of the other five
symphonies.

All of the great pre- and post-war conductors made
recordings that were flawed by corrupt editions. Furtwängler and Knappersbusch are
cases in point. The problems should have disappeared with the emergence of the
Bruckner Critical Edition, which drew a veil over the emendations of
well-meaning but misguided Brucknerians. But Klemperer made things worse for
himself by making some outrageous cuts in the 8th synmphony for his
1970 recording – adding up to 141 bars from the finale. The first three
movements of this recording are wonderfully deliberate and monumental, which
makes the mutilation of the finale ever more devastating.
Klemperer is a wonderful Bruckner conductor, and there is no
danger of confusing him with anyone else. Klemperer’s characteristically sinewy
and granite-like approach works as well with Bruckner as it does with Brahms or
Beethoven. This very reasonably priced set ($20 or so for 6 discs) is an
excellent compilation. All of the performances (with the exception of the 8th)
are reference performances and are recommended both to those new to Bruckner
and to dedicated Brucknerians.
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Abbado's Bruckner 5 from the 2011 Lucerne Festival
Bruckner,
Symphony No. 5
Lucerne
Festival Orchestra, conduced by Claudio Abbado
Accentus DVD
ACC 20243
This DVD of
a live performance from the 2011 Lucerne Festival is truly a gem. Claudio
Abbado’s conducting style is minimal, shaping the music with great economy of
gesture, but he is clearly in tune with his hand-picked and carefully nurtured
summer orchestra and their collective understanding of Bruckner’s complex 5th
symphony is deep indeed.
Abbado
presents a highly articulated performance, bringing out the overall
architecture with great clarity. The clarity extends, moreover, to the musical
texture. Even in the tutti the different voices emerge distinctly – no small
feat in the highly contrapuntal last movement, particularly in the coda where
key themes and motifs and superimposed upon each other.
There is a
real sense of a taut musical argument running through the symphony, with a
running dialogs in each movement between the themes and motifs, and between the
different voices and instrumental groups. In fact, Abbado brings out a feature
of the 5th symphony that emerges in relatively few performances. In
many ways the symphony is an argument of moods – challenge in the fanfares,
grandeur in the chorales, intermittent hesitation (in the short woodwind motifs,
for example), and lilting dances, all juxtaposed with the extraordinary
lyricism that emerges in the Adagio and elsewhere.
The sound
quality is very good and the videography brings out the structure of the
symphony and the details of the interpretation, rather than detracting from
them and breaking the flow (as sometimes occurs). My only minor quibble is the rather breathless program notes. But this is a deeply satisfying
DVD, highly recommended.
Monday, January 14, 2013
Celibidache Conducts Bruckner
Bruckner, Symphony No. 6, 7, 8
Sony 88691952709-01/2/3 (3 DVD)
Bruckner, Symphony No. 4
Sergiu Celibidache
Münchner Philharmoniker
Sony 88691952709-04 (2 CDs)
This handsome set contains 3 DVDs of live TV broadcasts (2
from Suntory Hall in Tokyo and 1 from the Philharmonie am Gasteig), together
with a CD recording of a concert at the Grosser Saal des Musikvereins. The DVDs
are of the 6th, 7th, and 8th symphonies, and
have previously been released on VHS and Laserdisc. The performance of the 4th
on CD is a new addition to the catalog. The sound quality is good in all four
symphonies. The picture on the DVDs leaves something to be desired, but it is
hard to imagine that anybody will be buying this set for the quality of the
picture.
These recordings are from late in Celibidache’s career,
recorded between 1989 and 1991 (he died in 1996 at the age of 84). They are
representative of the expansive and mystical approach to Bruckner that he
developed during his tenure with the Munich Philharmonic. The timings tell the
tale. The 4th, for example, is over 1 hour 20 minutes long, compared
say with 63 minutes for Haitink’s Philips recording with the Concertgebouw. No
major conductor whom I can find has recorded a 4th that is less than
10 minutes shorter than this one. Interestingly, the expansiveness is not
uniform. The major stretch occurs in the finale (30”13’ for Celi, vs. 19”49’
for Haitink).
Sergiu Celibidache
Münchner PhilharmonikerSony 88691952709-01/2/3 (3 DVD)
Bruckner, Symphony No. 4
Sergiu Celibidache
Münchner Philharmoniker
Sony 88691952709-04 (2 CDs)
The DVDs reveal a compelling podium presence, able to
extract gradations of sound with tiny movements of the baton. The Munich Philharmonic
is incredibly responsive, and clearly well attuned to their principal
conductor’s way with Bruckner. Celibidache conducts from memory and appears to
be in a state of mystical communion with the music. He is visibly pained at how
quickly the applause begins at the end of the 8th.
Celibidache’s late style has rapturous proponents and
violent detractors. This is exactly to be expected, given the extreme nature of
his interpretation. And in a sense both groups are correct. It is quite right
that nobody conducts Bruckner like Celibidache, and that his interpretation
opens up aspects of each symphony that are either hidden or backgrounded with
other conductors. The speed at which he moves allows the complex layers of
Bruckner’s orchestration to emerge in all their richness, and Celibidache’s
ability to shape a melodic contour is really quite extraordinary.
At the same time, however, there are definite losses. At
times the musical line is so elongated that momentum is almost lost and it
becomes hard to see the wood for the (admittedly wonderful) trees. It is also
difficult for Celibidache to bring out some of the rhythmic and tempo contrasts
that give structure to Bruckner’s symphonies. The Scherzo in the 8th,
for example, lacks the bite and edge that most conductors give it (and that, in
my view, it needs to have for the symphony to work). And, more generally, one
of the reasons Bruckner’s Adagios are so powerful is that they open up a sense
of musical space not present in the other movements. This differentiation can
be lost in Celibidache’s interpretations.
To my ear the 8th is the least successful of
these concerts, precisely because of this loss of contrast and tension in the
outer movements (the Adagio, as might be expected, is very powerful indeed). I
had similar problems with the 4th, at least until the last movement.
The 7th lends itself more to Celibidache’s ultra-measured approach,
but the most successful performance is definitely the 6th.
Acoustically and visually this set is a testament to the
vision of a great Bruckner conductor. These will never be reference recordings,
but I think that every Brucknerian will want to listen to these recordings, and
many will treasure them.
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