Paul Büttner was born in Dresden on 10 December 
          1870. Information on him is not easy to come by. I have not checked 
          the current or even the 1980 Grove but Grove V had nothing on him at 
          all. The extensive notes compiled for this release by the redoubtable 
          Per Skans (usually associated with Olympia, especially their incomparable 
          Miaskovsky series, and Bis) function as a very generous alternative 
          reference. 
        
 
        
Checking my old and admirable ‘A Dictionary of Modern 
          Music and Musicians’ (J.M. Dent 1924) I can supplement what Mr Skans 
          has written. Büttner was a pupil of Draeseke in Dresden. He taught 
          there between 1896 and 1907. He was also active as a music critic in 
          Dresden. The Munich-based, Alfred Einstein’s entry in the dictionary 
          says: ‘as a symphonist, has been somewhat influenced by Anton Bruckner.’ 
          The entry lists four symphonies but does not give dates for them. They 
          are No. 1 in F (1899); No. 2 in G; No. 3 in D flat major (said by Herr 
          Einstein to his best-known work … at least in 1924) and No. 4 in B minor. 
          There are various symphonic phantasies, an overture to Napoleon’s 
          Tomb, Saturnalia for drums and wind instruments, a violin 
          sonata, a string quartet in G minor, male choruses and two operas: Anka 
          and Das Wunder der Isis. 
        
 
        
As a staunchly anti-Nazi Social Democrat he was driven 
          from his post of artistic director of the Dresden Conservatoire in 1933 
          and survived giving private music tuition and taking refuge in composition. 
          After the end of the war his name was given fitful life by the conductors 
          Joseph Keilberth, Heinz Bongartz and Kurt Masur. His works are published 
          by Edition Peters in Leipzig. 
        
 
        
The present recordings despite being declared on the 
          insert as DDD date from 1974 and 1965 and must accordingly be ADD. They 
          sound perfectly respectable, not especially refined. They have a rugged 
          ferocity that complements both pieces. The Heroic Overture (premiered 
          in 1927) is not short of gallopingly energetic music redolent at one 
          moment of Brahms’ Fourth Symphony, at another of Schumann and at another 
          of Mendelssohn though always rather brooding. Its peroration - a grand 
          gesture, half groan, half blare, impresses. It does not convince structurally 
          tending to ramble but its incidents are often of commanding dramatic 
          moment and the soloistic use of the brass is cleverly brought off. 
        
 
        
The Fourth Symphony (a work largely written during 
          the Great War) is in four movements. This is no time-serving performance. 
          Although the grip does slacken in the last two movements overall this 
          is a recording that has me wondering whether this was just a good day 
          for Pflüger or whether we have a seriously neglected conductor 
          here. The playing and sense of engagement is palpable, fiery with the 
          sort of torrential conviction we find in Carlos Kleiber’s Beethoven 
          5 or Mravinsky’s Sibelius 7. The orchestra was in much superior form 
          in 1965 than in 1974. As one illustration try the final fine satin tone 
          of the violins from 12.00 to the close of the first movement, the Straussian 
          yearning of the second movement. Hiss is thankfully left intact is a 
          minuscule and forgettable ‘price’ to pay. 
        
 
        
The four movements run the gamut: flourishing confidence 
          and panache (3.18 I), Elgarian sweep (9.02 I), bubbling, brooding, deep 
          Brucknerian string-writing, dense sombre hymnal rising to raucous brassy 
          climaxes decaying away into nobility (III), sweetly mysterious harp 
          writing (8.22 III) and ending with Brucknerian storm-clouds and a joyous 
          desperation. The second movement is like a cross between Beethoven 7 
          and Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique: a witches Sabbat. 
        
 
        
Büttner was, on this evidence, a composer in the 
          Bruckner-Schumann vein rather like Wetz but with a fantastic tendency 
          fuelled by Berlioz and Richard Strauss. He would I am sure have been 
          delighted with these recordings. I doubt that he heard a more passionate 
          performance of the Fourth Symphony during his lifetime. Recommended 
          to pursuers of the late-romantic trend as it made its way into the twentieth 
          century.
 
          Rob Barnett  
          
          EARLIER VOLUMES IN THE STERLING DEUTSCHER ROMANTIKER SERIES  
          Richard WETZ Symphony No. 3 
          Berlin SO/Erich Peter 
          STERLING CDS-1041-2 
          Norbert BURGMÜLLER Symphony No. 1 
          Hugo STAEHLE Symphony No. 1 
          Orchester der Staatstheater Kassel/Marc Piollet 
          STERLING CDS-1046-2 
          Full details: www.sterlingcd.com