My initiation into the music of Bruckner was when the 
    scherzo of the Seventh Symphony was used as the introductory music to a BBC 
    TV adventure series in the late 1960s. It was that work that I heard live 
    at The Proms in 2000. On record my introduction came in the shape of the Fourth 
    Symphony “The Romantic” conducted by Eugen Jochum and the Fifth 
    Symphony from a wartime concert under Furtwängler, both on Deutsche Grammophon.
    
    Bruckner is a composer whose music I initially found easier to respect than 
    to love. I at first felt that his musical ideas were sometimes stretched too 
    far. It is, however, difficult not to feel sorry for a composer who had so 
    much criticism and self-doubt and whose works have been the subject of so 
    many alterations and different editions. Over time exposure to his symphonies 
    has shown a composer of considerable merit and there are now a huge number 
    of recordings available. There are, for example, over one hundred of the Ninth 
    Symphony alone.
    
    The Ninth has, for the most part, been performed as a three movement torso. 
    There have also been suggestions that Bruckner, who was unable to complete 
    the Symphony with the intended fourth movement, would have substituted the 
    
Te Deum. There are at least two previous four-movement 'completions'. 
    There's Wildner on 
Naxos 
    and Rattle on 
EMI. 
    The latter’s finale is pretty impressive and sounds authentic Bruckner 
    to my ears. It obviously changes the whole structure of a work quite apart 
    from the obvious: increasing its length and not ending with an 
Adagio. 
    Both Rattle and Wildner use the reconstruction by Samale-Phillips-Cohrs-Mazzuca. 
    John Gibbons uses one by Nors S. Josephson. In the liner-notes, composer David 
    Matthews justifies the fourth movement and in doing so dissents from the views 
    of the late Robert Simpson.
    
    There seems to me a lot to say for having a four-movement work in the case 
    of this CD and the other two mentioned above. If you don’t want to hear 
    the 
Finale you can always switch the CD player off.
    
    The Gibbons/Danacord recording of the 'regular' three movements 
    is impressive in its structure, playing and sound. Compared to Jochum/DG from 
    1966 the sound is obviously much more lucid although I’d hesitate to 
    suggest that the Aarhus Symphony Orchestra is better than the Berlin Philharmonic. 
    The first movement develops in an organic fashion and - risking a cliché - 
    creates a cathedral of sound. Fortunately we live in a detached house and 
    my wife was out when I played this. The brass is particularly impressive at 
    the end of the movement. Playful strings introduce a formidable 
Scherzo 
    that has more than a hint of threat and dark undertones; surely Bruckner was 
    aware that this was to be his final symphony? It would be fair here to point 
    out that those detractors who say that Bruckner wrote the same symphony nine 
    times are unjustified: this movement, for example, shows progression from 
    the much-loved 
Scherzo in the Seventh Symphony. Here again the recording 
    picks up the excellent woodwind who bring a lighter touch between the dark 
    strings and the imperious brass. The 
Adagio is most impressive throughout 
    its 25 minutes with the themes effectively realized and the playing being 
    of the highest order. Its intensity is tangible and one senses the composer 
    wearing his heart on his sleeve.
    
    The finale (
Allegro) seems authentically Brucknerian if sunnier than 
    what has gone before. Naturally it is unfamiliar but it works. It feels cogent 
    and of a piece and is splendidly played. Scholars and Bruckner lovers more 
    knowledgeable than I will have their own views as to whether this is a valid 
    addition or if this four movement completion is anathema. It works convincingly 
    for me.
    
    This reading is a credit to the performers and above all to the sensitivity 
    of conductor John Gibbons. For those who want to hear the Finale in this version 
    this is well worth experiencing. If three movements is your ideal then there 
    is a decent pause to allow you to stop the disc playing. Personally I will 
    play all four when I return to this excellent disc.
    
    
David R Dunsmore
    
    Previous reviews: 
Dan 
    Morgan and 
John 
    France