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             Anton BRUCKNER (1824-1896) 
               
              Symphony No. 8 in C minor (1887 version, ed. Leopold Nowak) [95:00] 
               
                
              The Cleveland Orchestra/Franz Welser-Möst  
              rec. live, August 2010, Severance Hall, Cleveland, USA  
              Bonus: pre-concert talk - Dee Perry, William Cosel and Franz Welser-Möst 
              [17:00]  
              Picture: NTSC/16:9, 1080i Full HD  
              Sound: PCM Stereo, dts-HD Master Audio 5.1  
              Region: 0 (worldwide)  
                
              ARTHAUS MUSIK 108 069   
              [112:00] 
             
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                Bruckner’s Eighth is the composer’s most Olympian symphony, so 
                  it requires heroic interpeters to stride its vast, open spaces 
                  and scale its mighty peaks. Among its finest exponents are conducting 
                  gods and demi-gods of the past and present, among them Hans 
                  Knappertsbusch, Wilhelm Furtwängler, Herbert von Karajan, 
                  Eugen Jochum, Sergiu Celibidache, Carlo Maria Giulini, Pierre 
                  Boulez and Günter Wand. The latter’s final recording 
                  for RCA is glorious, and the Berliners respond to the ageing 
                  maestro’s lofty vision with playing of incandescent reach 
                  and power.  
                     
                  Sadly that performance is on CD only, although it was also issued 
                  on SACD as part of a box that now fetches silly money on the 
                  Internet. On DVD, I’ve seen Boulez’s fine account 
                  with the Wiener Philharmoniker, but for all its felicities - 
                  and there are many - it’s surprisingly short on the epiphanies 
                  the work demands. Celibidache’s famous Munich performance 
                  - which I caught on a television arts channel some years ago 
                  - is another matter entirely; it may be rather long - even though 
                  he uses the shorter 1890 Nowak edition - but it never seems 
                  ponderous or self-defeating. His detractors will say otherwise, 
                  but for me Celi has a peerless control of the work’s daunting 
                  structure. I’m delighted to see these videos appearing 
                  on Blu-ray - his Berlin Bruckner 7 is on my desk as I write 
                  - and I’ll be particularly pleased to revisit that extraordinary 
                  Eighth when it appears.  
                     
                  So where does Franz Welser-Möst fit into this pantheon 
                  of Bruckner greats? I’ve not heard him in this repertoire; 
                  indeed, his troubled tenure with the London Philharmonic - which 
                  lasted from 1990 to 1996 - and several of his EMI recordings 
                  made very little impression on me. That said, he seems to have 
                  been much more successful since then, as musical director of 
                  both the Cleveland Orchestra and the Vienna State Opera. His 
                  Zurich opera DVDs - some of them controversial - have done well 
                  too.  
                     
                  Back to Bruckner’s Eighth, and we have the perennial problem 
                  about which version is used. I tend to prefer Haas, but I have 
                  absolutely no problem with Leopold Nowak’s edition of 
                  the 1887 score, first published in 1972. The pros and cons of 
                  both are well rehearsed, and I won’t repeat them here. 
                  Suffice to say, it’s up to the conductor to convince us 
                  of the rightness of their choice, as all great Brucknerians 
                  invariably do. Having a top-flight orchestra at their fingertips 
                  helps - the Cleveland band are in that august group - but as 
                  Celi’s Munich Philharmonic so powerfully demonstrates 
                  that’s not necessarily a prerequisite in this work.  
                     
                  I’ll start with the pre-concert talk, if only to discover 
                  the cut of this maestro’s jib. It’s more of an informal 
                  chat, chaired by Dee Perry, a producer with Cleveland-based 
                  public media company ideastream. Also on stage is video director 
                  Bill Cosel, who introduces the audience to the various cameramen 
                  in the hall and talks a little about the challenges of filming 
                  large orchestral concerts. Perry’s questions to Welser-Möst 
                  aren’t terribly illuminating, and his self-conscious replies 
                  are rather awkward. It doesn’t make for comfortable viewing, 
                  and reminds me why I usually give these bonus tracks a wide 
                  berth. That said, I wholeheartedly agree with Welser-Möst 
                  that restless and inattentive audiences - all too often signalled 
                  by unguarded coughs and sundry interruptions - can change the 
                  dynamics of a performance quite dramatically. Anyone listening 
                  to this year’s BBC Proms - plagued with tubercular barks 
                  and loud throat clearing - will know whereof he speaks.  
                     
                  The primordial start of this symphony suggests that Welser-Möst’s 
                  reading will major on lucidity rather than loftiness, an impression 
                  confirmed by the forensic clarity of the work’s inner 
                  voices. Also, this performance isn’t as seamless as some, 
                  and it lacks the inexorable quality of Wand and the BP or the 
                  nobility and breadth of Celibidache and his Munich band. That 
                  worrying lack of cohesion makes the triumphal coda - one of 
                  the more controversial elements in this edition - seem much 
                  more arbitrary than usual.  
                     
                  At this point it’s an efficient performance rather than 
                  a great one. The Clevelanders produce a shiny, chromium-plated 
                  sound, but the brass are much too prominent in the mix. Instrumental 
                  balance and blend are just as crucial in these symphonies as 
                  tempi and phrasing; really, this presentation is just too bright, 
                  and it lacks essential warmth and weight. Otherwise the sonics 
                  - in PCM stereo at least - are adequate, but they fall far short 
                  of the best Blu-ray can offer. That said, visuals are sharp 
                  and colours are true. The camerawork is generally unobtrusive, 
                  although the use of split screens is distracting.  
                     
                  The Scherzo is much more problematic; for a start the very first 
                  appearance of that big, vaulting tune is marred by fractional 
                  hesitations - agogic pauses if you like - that snap the narrative 
                  thread. Also, phrasing is ungainly and articulation is less 
                  than crisp, which exposes the joints and seams that others so 
                  artfully conceal; deprived of all its coherence, Bruckner’s 
                  writing becomes little more than a series of rhetorical gestures. 
                  The strident brass doesn’t help, as it makes the big tuttis 
                  sound at once grandiose and gutless. Most damning is the complete 
                  lack of feeling here, the great journey - literal or metaphorical 
                  - without incident or epiphany.  
                     
                  If the Scherzo is disappointing the Adagio is dire. I’ve 
                  never heard the tread of this music drag so, or its grief transmuted 
                  into self-pity. Even allowing for the inevitable imprecisions 
                  of a live performance the playing is less than immaculate, the 
                  natural breath of this radiant music reduced to a series of 
                  ragged gasps. Brass intonation isn’t terribly good either, 
                  and those pounding timp figures sound remarkably like a steam 
                  train chuffing past at speed. Really, a more unlovely rendition 
                  of this glorious music would be hard to imagine; as for those 
                  majestic climaxes - and Nowak’s almost inaudible cymbals 
                  - they’re just a mélange of tangential textures. 
                  Even that most profound and beautiful genuflection at the close 
                  - usually so affecting - left me completely unmoved.  
                     
                  Bruckner’s symphonies, like Mahler’s, are deeply 
                  personal, so a performance that’s as distant and inscrutable 
                  as this is doomed to fail. And fail it does, spectacularly, 
                  in the last movement. Welser-Möst reduces the long spans 
                  to a string of non sequiturs, the mighty perorations 
                  - each meant to be more uplifting than the last - made to sound 
                  unbearably loud and vulgar. Even more distressing than this 
                  hideous performance is the frankly second-rate playing of what 
                  used to be one of America’s finest orchestras. And to 
                  think Welser-Möst’s contract with them has been extended 
                  until 2018.  
                     
                  Atrocious; a gift to Bruckner’s army of detractors.  
                     
                  Dan Morgan 
                  http://twitter.com/mahlerei 
                     
                     
                  Masterwork Index: Bruckner 
                  8 
                  
                   
                 
             
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