Bruckner from the Archives Vol.6: Symphonies 8 & 9, Psalm 150
£21.80
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Label: Somm
Cat No: ARIADNE50342
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 2
Release Date: 17th January 2025
Contents
Works
Psalm 150 'Halleluja! Lobet den Herrn in seinem Heiligtum', WAB38Symphony no.8 in C minor (1890 version, ed. Nowak)
Symphony no.9 in D minor (ed. Nowak)
Artists
Hilde Ceska (soprano)Wiener Akademie Kammerchor
Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
Wiener Symphoniker
Conductors
Eugen JochumWolfgang Sawallisch
Henry Swoboda
Works
Psalm 150 'Halleluja! Lobet den Herrn in seinem Heiligtum', WAB38Symphony no.8 in C minor (1890 version, ed. Nowak)
Symphony no.9 in D minor (ed. Nowak)
Artists
Hilde Ceska (soprano)Wiener Akademie Kammerchor
Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
Wiener Symphoniker
Conductors
Eugen JochumWolfgang Sawallisch
Henry Swoboda
About
This archival series celebrating Anton Brucker’s bicentennial was conceived and designed by SOMM Executive Producer and Audio Restoration Engineer, Lani Spahr, with annotations from Professor Benjamin Korstvedt. Of Bruckner’s two final symphonies Korstvedt says, “[With] the Eighth and the Ninth, Bruckner reached the pinnacle of symphonic achievement. They both pose considerable challenges, musically, textually and emotionally. Above all, they are unquestionably two of the greatest works in the genre, by any composer before or after."
When Bruckner completed his Eighth Symphony in 1887, he asked his supporter, Hermann Levi, to conduct the premiere. When Levi responded, “I don't have the courage to perform it,” Bruckner was staggered by the rejection, but didn’t lose faith in his score. On 10 March 1890, he wrote “entirely finished” on a reworked version. His revisions, extensive as they were, stayed true to his original conception of the work’s dramatic course, and after the premiere in 1892, Hugo Wolf called the work “a complete victory of light over darkness.”
To honour Bruckner's bicentennial in this last Volume 6, the Bruckner Archive offers an exciting 1957 live performance, expertly re-mastered by Lani Spahr, featuring the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra led by their founding conductor Eugen Jochum. In 1949, Jochum made the first commercial recording of the Eighth, and this present recording offers a vivid example of his distinctive way with Bruckner in his approach to the dramatic possibilities of the score.
Lani Spahr’s previous SOMM releases include the lauded four-volume sets Vaughan Williams Live (ARIADNE5016, 5018-20) and Elgar Remastered (SOMMCD2614), as well as two Gramophone Editor’s Choice picks: Elgar from America Vol.3 (ARIADNE50152) for “superb audio restorations [bringing] performances fully to life” and Bruckner from the Archives Vol.1 (ARIADNE50252) for the “high standards achieved here, where expert audio restoration and remastering is by Lani Spahr.”
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