Before listening to 
                this recording, I was relatively unfamiliar 
                with most of Bruckner’s symphonies save 
                the more famous numbers four, seven 
                and nine. In the past I had always thought 
                of this composer’s work as rather formulaic, 
                that all of the works rather sounded 
                alike, and that if you had heard one, 
                you had heard them all. I confess that 
                after listening to this recording, I 
                was half right. The music is formulaic. 
                There is the obligatory quasi-minimalist 
                opening movement, short on motifs, long 
                on repeats, with some wonderfully rich 
                string writing and some hellacious blasts 
                of glorious brass. Next there comes 
                the luscious slow movement that tries 
                too hard to sound like Wagner. Follow 
                that with the obligatory rollicking 
                scherzo in triple meter, and then wrap 
                it all up with a boisterous finale that 
                is almost an afterthought. 
              
 
              
What I was pleased 
                to discover however, is that although 
                there is a formula here, it is a splendid 
                one, and one that took me through a 
                wonderful adventure of repeated listening. 
                This is music of the grandest architecture, 
                and the soaring melodies and pugnacious 
                brass writing belies the simple, pious 
                man who was so beleaguered with self 
                doubt that he often damaged his own 
                works at the behest of seemingly well-meaning 
                friends. 
              
 
              
Bruckner’s sonorities 
                reflect his accomplishment as an organist. 
                As one listens, it is easy to imagine 
                this devout little man sitting at the 
                console pulling stop after stop, and 
                adding rank upon rank of magnificent 
                color to his scores. I think that I 
                enjoy this music as much for its wash 
                of overwhelming sound as I would enjoy 
                say a Mozart symphony for its developmental 
                perfection. 
              
 
              
Profil is a new label 
                on the scene, and from the issues that 
                I have thus received, is dedicated to 
                resurrecting valuable performances from 
                this past. This is one such performance, 
                and within the first few minutes of 
                the opening movement, I am reminded 
                of just how great a loss music suffered 
                at the passing of Klaus Tennstedt in 
                1998. Although duly celebrated during 
                his lifetime, he does not often come 
                up on the list of truly great conductors. 
                This is a situation in dire need of 
                correcting. 
              
 
              
This is profound music-making, 
                well paced and beautifully balanced. 
                The sound of the Bavarian Radio Orchestra 
                in this recording is divine. Tennstedt 
                gets such a fine response from his strings, 
                and the brass, although allowed to blaze 
                away at times, never overpower, and 
                never play out of tune. 
              
 
              
If this disc is a harbinger 
                of things to come, then I cannot wait 
                to see what Profil continue to bring 
                forth from the vaults. This is the kind 
                of recording that brings back my long 
                lost childhood excitement of putting 
                on a disc for the sole sake of discovery. 
                It restores some of my naïve trust 
                that if something was good enough to 
                be on a record, then it must be really 
                good. This recording is really good. 
              
 
              
Profil take great care 
                to produce excellent booklet essays, 
                and this is no exception. The typo on 
                the composer’s dates is pretty hysterical 
                however. (They have the composer passing 
                on at the ripe old age of twelve.) 
              
 
              
No lover of great orchestral 
                playing should be able to find any fault 
                in this recording. It is a winner through 
                and through and worthy of any collection. 
                Most highly recommended. 
              
 
              
Kevin Sutton