This isn't a particularly good performance, though it's not for lack 
          of trying. Simone Young doesn't get all of Bruckner wrong: she draws 
          an epic quality from the first movement exposition, and launches the 
          
Scherzo with driving vigour. She just doesn't get nearly enough 
          of him right. 
            
          Young brings off the lighter textures with a keen sense of colour. The 
          broad string melodies have a vibrant glow. High woodwinds are transparent, 
          and she isn't afraid to underline their varied timbres in midrange chords, 
          as in the 
Scherzo. The quiet, open textures at 6:15 of the first 
          movement are evocative but she's less attentive in the fuller passages. 
          The very first 
tutti blazes brightly but subsequent ones sound 
          rather indiscriminate, nor do moving parts always stay quite lined up 
          with the brass themes. The recap of the 
Scherzo sounds more brash, 
          in a banging-you-over-the-head kind of way, than did the first go-round. 
          The 
Trio, on the other hand, sounds "too busy" at first; the 
          repeated section is more carefully layered the second time. 
            
          Young sounds similarly indifferent to contrasts between sections, beating 
          poker-faced through full-scale register shifts, Bruckner's analogue 
          to stop-changes on the organ. In the first movement, for example, the 
          eruption at 7:11 isn't sufficiently prepared; neither is the lighter 
          passage that follows at 7:29. It's no surprise, then, that the arrival 
          of the recapitulation, at 8:16, is practically a non-event -- it passes 
          almost unnoticed -- and the second theme's return at 9:38 sounds unimportant. 
          Similarly, the 
Finale is a dead loss: its musical episodes minimally 
          acknowledged. There are plodding syncopations in the second theme to 
          boot and the movement’s finish brings more relief than culmination. 
          
            
          Finally, and fatally, Young misjudges the lyric themes: they flow and 
          sing easily, but want more space around the notes. The first movement's 
          second theme
sounds pretty, but the string tone doesn't have time 
          to bloom. The slow movement, more 
Andante than the indicated 
          
Adagio, lacks repose, and basically just elapses. 
            
          I've not heard this decoded for Super Audio. In normal stereo, the sound 
          is reasonable, with clean, focused basses. A perceived lack of depth 
          and richness is more likely a function of the playing than of the engineering. 
          
            
          
Stephen Francis Vasta 
          Stephen Francis Vasta is a New York-based conductor, coach, and journalist. 
          
          
          Masterwork Index: 
Bruckner 
          1