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Bruckner: Symphony No. 9 in D minor - Wiener Philharmoniker; Leonard Bernstein

Posted By: waldstein
Bruckner: Symphony No. 9 in D minor - Wiener Philharmoniker; Leonard Bernstein

Anton Bruckner: Symphony No. 9 in D minor - Wiener Philharmoniker; Leonard Bernstein
Recorded at performances in the Grosser Saal of the Musikverein, Vienna during February and March 1990.
Classical | 1 CD | EAC Rip | 309 MB | FLAC+LOG+Cue | Covers | RS links
Publisher: DGG
Bruckner: Symphony No. 9 in D minor - Wiener Philharmoniker; Leonard Bernstein

Much as Furtwangler did with his agonized 1944 Berlin concert (on Music & Arts 730), Bernstein turned to this jagged, unfinished work as a vehicle for his own frustrations and pain. But while Furtwangler had organized his conception around slashing outbursts, Bernstein's passion is of a wholly different order, throbbing with repressed energy, as if an enormous force were struggling to break through a stifling blanket of surface sludge. And all the while, Bernstein does the composer the favor of adding a distinctively Viennese lilt to the lyrical passages, as if to belatedly accord Bruckner social status in the city which had cruelly snubbed him throughout his unhappy life, but of whose heritage he was such an integral part. Peter Gutmann
***
You might imagine from the symphony's opening sentence - from the first three minutes of this performance - that Bernstein is poised to conduct a memorable account of the work. The tempo seems judicious. Dynamic shadings are strikingly observed within the context of the larger line. The Vienna Philharmonic playing - above all, the brass playing - is organ-rich. The recording is superb.
Alas, it is not to be. At least, not in the first movement where Bernstein emerges as an uncertain keeper of the Bruckner Grail. What happens in the great concluding Adagio is another matter. Here inspiration descends. Amfortas, it seems, has been healed. And with that healing we experience music-making that from the first note to last is affecting and profound.
The troubles in the first movement start at a predictable place in the exposition: the Langsamer at fig. D. Or, more precisely, nine bars on (4'27") at the charged oscillations between F sharp major and D minor. Here Bernstein slackens the pulse, allowing the music to sink deeper and deeper into the mire. By fig. E it is more or less dead on its feet. Revivals follow. But the further we get into the movement, the more it is clear that there is no basic pulse underpinning the reading. Subjects come, go and reappear at a variety of often unrelated speeds. (Exacerbated, perhaps, by the editing together of takes from separate performances?) As a result, the first movement's great central plateau of development and recapitulation becomes a musical wilderness from which there seems to be no logical means of escape. You might argue that by conducting the music in this way, Bernstein is intuitively in touch with the existential bleakness of Bruckner's despairing spirit. Perhaps. In fact, I think Bernstein loves the music but doesn't know it - doesn't know it, that is, as a finished work of art in the way that (on record) conductors like von Hausseger, van Beinum, Walter, Karajan (DG, vintage 1975), Giulini (DG), Wand and Barenboim (Teldec) have all 40 demonstrably done. (The VPO knows it, of course, which is why, to the casual ear, the playing of the first movement might seem hunkydory.)
Predictably, Bernstein's reading of the Scherzo is thunderous and slow. It is not perhaps quite what Bruckner had in mind; but the music can stand it. You might even think it thrives on it. And then comes the Adagio. Interestingly, Bernstein doesn't overplay his hand here. In any case, problems of structure and pace are now rather less acute. (Barenboim is slower than Bernstein, Giulini slower still.) It is an eloquent reading in its own right. Coming to us as the posthumous offering of a great musician, it is doubly moving: Bruckner, in Bernstein's hands, seemingly anticipating what Mahler will do in the concluding movement of his Ninth Symphony. How the strings mourn. And how those great gloaming climaxes with their sad aftermaths tower and touch the heart. (The grinding C sharp minor climax has rarely sounded more cruel on record.)
It is, above all, a triumph for the Vienna Philharmonic: their second memorable live Bruckner Ninth in so many months. The first, part of DG's 12-CD VPO 150th anniversary edition, was a 1976 Salzburg Festival performance under Karajan's direction (2/92).
Given my reservations over Bernstein's handling of the first movement, this is obviously no front-line library recommendation. But, Bernstein being Bernstein, he can misdirect parts of the first movement and still go on to conduct an utterly memorable performance. As Schumann said of Chopin in a rather different context: "Hats off, gentlemen, a genius!".
Richard Osborne, The Gramophone
Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 4 from 23. January 2008

EAC extraction logfile from 30. April 2010, 16:27

Wiener Philharmoniker · Leonard Bernstein / Anton Bruckner: Symphonie Nr. 9 d-moll

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1 | 0:00.00 | 27:00.00 | 0 | 121499
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CD: Wiener Philharmoniker · Leonard Bernstein - Anton Bruckner: Symphonie Nr. 9 d-moll

01. Anton Bruckner / Symphonie Nr. 9 d-moll - I. Feierlich. Misterioso [0:27:00.00]
02. Anton Bruckner / Symphonie Nr. 9 d-moll - II. Scherzo. Bewegt, lebhaft - Trio. Schnell [0:12:10.62]
03. Anton Bruckner / Symphonie Nr. 9 d-moll - III. Adagio. Langsam, feierlich [0:26:54.45]

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