  | 
            | 
         
         
          |     
            
 
               
                Support 
                    us financially by purchasing this disc from:  | 
               
               
                 | 
                 | 
               
               
                 | 
                 | 
               
             
            
           | 
            Anton BRUCKNER 
              (1824-1896) 
              Symphony No.4 in E flat major, WAB104 Romantic (1874, rev 
              1878-80, 1886) [59:10] ¹ 
              Symphony No.9 in D, WAB109 [Orel edition amended Bruno Walter] (1891-96) 
              [50:50] ² 
              Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) 
              Symphony No.35 in D, K385 Haffner (1782) [16:50] ³ 
                
              NBC Symphony Orchestra/Bruno Walter¹ 
              Philadelphia Orchestra/ Bruno Walter² 
              New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra/ Bruno Walter³ 
              rec. 10 February 1940, Studio 8-H, live broadcast (No.4): 6 February 
              1944, Carnegie Hall, live broadcast (Mozart) and 28 February 1948, 
              Academy of Music, Philadelphia, live broadcast (No.9) 
                
              MUSIC & ARTS CD-1262 [59:10 + 68:20] 
             
           | 
         
         
          |  
            
           | 
         
         
           
             
               
                 
                   
                   
                    
                  This largely all-Bruckner 2-CD release conjoins two live performances 
                  given in the 1940s by Bruno Walter. The Fourth Symphony, which 
                  was released on Pearl a good long while ago, was taped in Studio 
                  9-H and derives from an NBC Symphony broadcast given on 10 February 
                  1940. The previous season the orchestra had played the symphony 
                  under Toscanini's assistant, William Steinberg, so they 
                  were not wholly unfamiliar with it, although it was hardly a 
                  repertoire piece and Toscanini was not attracted by the composer's 
                  music. As Mark W. Kluge's notes suggest, the studio acoustic 
                  wasn't as constricted or as unkind to Bruckner's 
                  monumental architecture as one might have supposed or feared, 
                  or maybe Aaron Z. Snyder's 2012 restorations helped in 
                  that respect, though I've not had access to the Pearl 
                  to make comparison. 
                    
                  The climaxes certainly expand sufficiently to allow a good body 
                  of weight to sound and the sweetly dolce string phrasing 
                  at 9:32 in the opening movement is not limited in any way by 
                  the acoustic; nor does it turn acidic. At this period in his 
                  life Walter could be, and often was, especially exciting. His 
                  almost contemporaneous performances at the Met saw performances 
                  that were invariably exciting albeit sometimes erratic (notably 
                  his Mozart operas). This Bruckner performance enshrines the 
                  drive without any associated faults, either of phrasal over-emphasis 
                  or indulged rubati. His later 1960 performance, where he used 
                  the Robert Haas edition - in New York he used the Loewe/Gutmann 
                  - is considerably slower, around 8 minutes or so in fact, so 
                  if you want an example of Walter at his most involved in this 
                  symphony, notwithstanding the more primitive sonics, it's 
                  to this performance that you should turn. 
                    
                  The Ninth Symphony was recorded in a live broadcast from the 
                  Academy of Music in Philadelphia in February 1948. The score 
                  is the Orel but amended by Walter in some places. Ormandy's 
                  orchestra plays with typical warmth for its guest. Tonally it's 
                  richer and more rounded than the NBC's more acerbic corporate 
                  tone: the richer brass tone is also more rounded than its NY 
                  counterparts. As regards the later Columbia Symphony stereo 
                  recording, the same question applies as to the Fourth. This 
                  Philadelphia performance is a good 8 minutes faster as well. 
                  The performance is alive with drama and some almost startling 
                  changes of tempo - much more extreme in this performance than 
                  in the case of the Fourth where he's much more structurally 
                  sound. Nevertheless it's a driving, and also exciting 
                  performance and it sounds excellent in this transfer. Whether 
                  you'll prefer it to the Columbia Symphony recording of 
                  1958 will depend on your attitude to the Philadelphia's 
                  corporate tonal qualities and as to whether you prefer this 
                  leaner and more dramatic performance or not. 
                    
                  The filler is the 1944 Carnegie Hall Haffner Symphony, 
                  a beefy, bass-up, and rather clod- bound - though not inexpressive 
                  - performance. It will hardly impinge on the Bruckner when it 
                  comes to selection but it does add a worthwhile performance. 
                    
                  Jonathan Woolf
                
 
                   
                    Support 
                        us financially by purchasing this disc from:  | 
                   
                   
                     | 
                     | 
                   
                   
                     | 
                     | 
                   
                 
                 
                   
                  
                
   
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                       
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
             
           | 
         
       
     
     |