Anton BRUCKNER
	  Symphony No. 1 in C Minor (1866) unrevised Linz version, prepared by
	  William Carragan
	  Adagio (1876) to Symphony No. 3 in D
	  Minor
	   Royal Scottish National Orchestra
	  - Georg Tintner
 Royal Scottish National Orchestra
	  - Georg Tintner
	  recorded 31st August and 1st September 1998 at Henry
	  Wood Hall, Glasgow,
	  Scotland.
	   Naxos 8.554430 [75.41]
	  DDD
 Naxos 8.554430 [75.41]
	  DDD
	  Amazon
	  US
	   Crotchet
	  
	  
	  
	   
	  
	  
	  
	  We are now gradually reaching the end of the complete Bruckner Symphonies
	  by Georg Tintner for Naxos. Recorded over the past few years, in various
	  locations this series has been consistently at the forefront of various versions
	  of the symphonies of Bruckner. In addition this series is absolutely complete
	  spanning as it does from the Study Symphony, (No. 00) through the entire
	  cycle up to and including No. 9. All the recordings were in the can before
	  Georg Tintner died, and more than any of his other limited recordings, this
	  series will be an appropriate epitaph to this enigmatic conductor who until
	  recently was almost unknown to the general record buying public.
	  
	  In addition, Naxos has put us in their debt by allowing Tintner to record
	  out of the norm versions of some of the symphonies, and adding, as with the
	  present issue another version of a slow movement to a symphony (No. 3) which
	  has been recorded separately and is also available. This gives us the opportunity
	  to contrast and compare versions, an activity which gives the collector the
	  excuse (if ever he or she needed it), of having more than one version of
	  a work.
	  
	  The current disc allows us to hear the version of Symphony No. 1 as Bruckner
	  originally wrote, and which first saw the light of day as the work originally
	  premiered in 1868, before it was tampered with and modified. How does it
	  compare with the Linz and Vienna versions which we all know and love. The
	  currently recorded work shares the same date (1868) with the Linz vesion,
	  but is in fact different than the more well known opus, in having quite a
	  few passages in the finale quite different than the other Linz version. These
	  have been reconstructed by Professor Carragan in 1998, and the first three
	  movements will not produce any startling changes.
	  
	  In the last movement however, substantial passages have been reinstated which
	  Bruckner had replaced with simpler less radical passages, and they will be
	  heard with much interest by the listener, provided they know the other versions
	  well.
	  
	  How does the new disc compare with others currently available. The Royal
	  Scottish National Orchestra does not perhaps have quite the sheen and power
	  of some more famous Continental and American ensembles, but it can hold its
	  own totally in terms of commitment to the conductor and in the providing
	  the listener with a genuine performance to hear.
	  
	  Naxos has been fortunate in terms of its venue in the Henry Wood Hall in
	  Glasgow, as the recording comes over as having power, clarity and just enough
	  resonance to make it sound like a performance in a concert hall.
	  
	  The adagio from Symphony No. 3, has been included as it is complementary
	  to the "proper" version supplied with the recording on 8.freer
	  
	  John Phillips 
	  
	   
	  
	  See discussion of other Naxos Bruckner
	  recordings