Leaving Bruckner aside, I have a blind spot for German Lieder.![]()
Leaving Bruckner aside, I have a blind spot for German Lieder.![]()
I'm generally with Jayne on this matter, though I would go for Norrington's two recordings of the 3rd. The 1st was my introduction to Bruckner in my youth and next just happened to come the 3rd, though not in the original 'Wagner' version. I dearly yearned to hear that for some years and was not in the least disappointed when I finally did get to hear it. For me the 4th remains the weak link.
When it comes to the 9th, do yourself a favour, start with one of the completed versions. I have not heard the CD version of the Rattle yet (though I have watched/listened to the Berliner Philharmoniker Digital Concert Hall's offering several times), but that might be a good way in.
Don't worry too much about the various editions of the scores to start with. Plenty of time for that once you have got the taste and feel of Bruckner.
Well, I am only just beginning in some respects. I should really be finding my way around the bigger names but prefer to choose what I choose. Last year it was Kodaly because of the Proms. I sense that this year it could be Villa-Lobos and Ireland.
However, I did read a post on another thread from salymap, I think, which has led to Alan Bush. All the initial signs there seem good. I have a long-standing commitment to discover more of Rutland Boughton who I believe was a former Michael Eavis. Whitacre and Respighi are also saying something to me currently and hopefully will say more.
As for the more substantial, there is the Brahms to follow up on - again related to the last Proms and my main serious challenge to myself for greater understanding - plus Liszt for which I have more of a natural feel and possibly Mahler in the "prepare yourself to be surprised" box. I have found that I very much like Chris's choice by DFD.
Good to hear this advice! It will be interesting at last to note a generation of listeners coming to Bruckner's final symphony for the first time in the four-movement form that the composer always intended it to be; indeed, I've listened to this magnificent symphony less than any of the others (except the pre-no. 1 ones) until recently because I simply couldn't stand the sheer frustration of knowing that there's a long journey on which to embark following the close of the Adagio but no one will sell me a ticket for it.
Last edited by ahinton; 29-05-12 at 11:46.
My advice would be to go to a live performance of - well whatever you can find that's on. My first was 3 by Haitink/LPO, and was knocked sideways.
My Bruckner epiphany came at university when I got back early from the library to my digs one afternoon. My landlord in whose house I lived for 2 years (himself a don of central European extraction) called me into the living room and without preamble said "I think we listen to some Bruckner" and played the Klemperer 7 on LP (obviously, this was 1968). I was hooked from then on, there was no going back. He'd heard the 7th conducted by Furtwangler in Vienna.
I'd go for 4,7,8 and 9, for what it's worth. I have to admit it was some years before I heard 0,1 and 2. Many years ago a great post from Roehre listed all the symphonies, versions and revisions in order, the equivalent if memory serves of 27 symphonies![]()
Personally, I would go with Beef's advice and start with no.4, then 7, 8 and 9. And the ninth is magnificent in its 3 movement form. I always have a problem with "completed" symphonies, or Requiems, because I know I'm not hearing the composer's final thoughts.
If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough..
Mario Andretti