Anton BRUCKNER (1824-1896)
  	  Symphony No. 6 in A, WAB 106 [54:35]
  Philharmonie Festiva/Gerd Schaller
  rec. info not provided
  	  Reviewed as lossless download 
  HÄNSSLER PROFIL PH14021 [57:29]
  
  Anton BRUCKNER (1824-1896)
  Symphony No. 6 in A, WAB 106 [53:08]
  	  Symphony No. 7 in E, WAB [63:14]
  Royal Concertgebouw/Mariss Jansons
  rec. live, 7-9 March 2012 (No. 6), 23-25 December 2012 (No. 7), Concertgebouw, Amsterdam
  	  Reviewed as lossless download 
  RCO LIVE RCO14005 [53:08 + 63:14]
	     Three new Bruckner Sixth Symphony recordings in two months. 
          I just finished covering Simone Young’s account with the Hamburg 
          Philharmonic, which was fast and competent but not as emotionally hard-hitting 
          as it could be (review). 
          Now on to Gerd Schaller and the Philharmonie Festiva and Mariss Jansons 
          with the Concertgebouw.
          
          Surprisingly, Jansons is the lightweight. I mean this literally: his 
          performance is the fastest and most balletic. The first movement, dispatched 
          in under 15 minutes, is weirdly quiet and calm, the second subject emphasized 
          at the expense of the first. The whole symphony, in fact, seems less 
          dramatic than usual, with Jansons seeing it as a bouncy homage to the 
          classical era. The slow movement flows nicely and is only lacking a 
          little punch. This however is definitely not an account you should track 
          down if you like your Bruckner to be big, monumental, and full of emphatic 
          brass.
          
          Gerd Schaller, meanwhile, contributes the slowest and most profound 
          of the three interpretations. His first movement is flawlessly paced 
          at a sort of middle-ground between, say, Young/Jansons and Celibidache. 
          His adagio is deeply emotional, and expansively paced at 18 minutes, 
          with surprisingly good playing from the Philharmonie Festiva. I’m 
          not totally sure what the Philharmonie Festiva even is, but they are 
          really excellent, and have a fuller, more richly developed Bruckner 
          sound than Simone Young’s Hamburg orchestra. They rise to every 
          challenge.
          
          Of the three new recordings, only Gerd Schaller’s can be recommended 
          without reservations. Schaller also benefits from a true Brucknerian 
          acoustic: a good three seconds of reverb after the loud codas, but the 
          instruments never wash each other out. Simone Young’s orchestra 
          isn’t as good, and her interpretation a little plain; Mariss Jansons 
          completely misfires, unless his eccentric, light reading is to your 
          taste.
          
          The Jansons CD does come with a bonus, in the form of the Seventh Symphony, 
          which is excellent. “Eccentric, light” readings have a way 
          of working in the Seventh, which after all is a far more lyrical and 
          far less bombastic symphony than No. 6. The first two movements are 
          unusually songlike and free-flowing. The adagio has a timpani and cymbal 
          crash. You can however save yourself some cash by skipping Jansons and 
          instead opting for the slightly older, slightly better Seventh by Nikolaus 
          Harnoncourt performed with the same philosophy. By the way, the Jansons 
          Seventh was recorded, in part, on Christmas Day.
          
          Jansons’ Sixth is skippable, but his Seventh is good. Gerd Schaller’s 
          Sixth is outstanding, one of the best recordings of the symphony in 
          years. Not what you expected, is it? Me neither.
          
          Brian Reinhart