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Anton BRUCKNER (1824-1896)
Symphony no. 9 in D minor (Nowak edition) [76:50]
Rehearsal extracts[32:59]
Munich Philharmonic
Orchestra/Sergiu Celibidache
rec. live 10 September 1995 (performance), 4-7 September
1995 (rehearsals), Philharmonie am Gasteig, Munich
Photocopied complete
original booklet includes English translation of
rehearsal extracts but no transcription of the original German EMI CLASSICS
5566992 [47:39
+ 65:40]
Quite like old times, having
to get up in the middle of Bruckner 9 to change discs. An
obvious criticism of the production is that the symphony
could perfectly well have been accommodated on one CD, leaving
the rehearsals as a supplementary bonus on their own.
As I pointed out when reviewing Celibidache’s Bruckner 5, this
composer seems to have reached a primary position in his repertoire
only gradually. He mentions during the rehearsal sequence
that he had already conducted Bruckner in his Berlin days – the
late 1940s. Nonetheless, the 1969 Turin performance of the
Ninth which is now
available on video (OpusArte OA0976D - see review) must
come somewhere near the start of a pilgrimage which would
gradually
cover
almost
the complete
cycle of this composer’s symphonies. In 1958, however, he
conducted a performance of the F minor Mass in Rome with
a notable quartet of soloists: Suzanne Danco, Marga Höffgen,
Waldemar Kmennt and Frederick Guthrie.
The 1969 Ninth was already extremely fine, with tempi pretty
well within the norm. The table below gives timings of two subsequent
performances in Turin, a definitely valedictory-sounding
reading under Ferdinand Leitner, a conductor whose Bruckner
was much appreciated, and a late performance from Giulini,
another specialist in slow tempi. I also give the timings
of another
individualist, Vladimir Delman (Aura AUR4252 - see review),
and approximate timings of the Carl Schuricht LP which was
one
of the joys
of my
university days.
I
II
III
Total
Celibidache (RAI Turin 02.05.1969)
23:17
11:03
22:18
56:41
Leitner (RAI Turin 29.10.1987)
24:05
11:12
24:08
59:28
Giulini (RAI Turin 15.02.1996)
23:18
9:53
22:32
55:43
Delman (Emilia Romagna 04.1994)
27:23
11:04
21:33
60:00
Schuricht (VPO, EMI)
c.25
c.10:30
c.20
c.55:30
Celibidache (Munich 1995)
32:26
13:47
30:37
76:50
It may be surprising to find Giulini quite
swift in this company and the only one to offer at least a hint
of the real Allegro
Scherzo favoured by Furtwängler and Karajan. Some listeners
find Schuricht’s Adagio a little on the fast side. Delman’s
first movement takes several steps in the late-Celibidache
direction, but his Adagio definitely does not. In the last
resort, however, these timings just show that late Celibidache
cannot be usefully compared with anybody, even his earlier
self. It is curious to think that, if Bruckner had completed
this work, a late Celibidache performance might have lasted
almost two hours.
When reviewing the 1993 Fifth I waxed lyrical about the steadiness
and inevitability with which the vast structure was unfolded.
I felt that in spite of the slow tempi the effect was actually
terse and concise, a definitive presentation.
I am sure the present Ninth must have been a deeply moving
occasion for all those who had been attending Celibidache’s concerts
since his arrival in Munich. Performing for what was predictably
the last time a work very dear to him, he took a deliberately
valedictory approach, almost groping his way through the
music as if reluctant to reach the end. He does not present
that sense of structural cogency, of inevitability, that
he created in the 1993 Fifth and I get the idea he does not
wish to. All the same, the music risks stasis at too many
points. Maybe when my own sands are running out, hopefully
some decades hence, I shall listen to this performance with
tears running down my face. I’m not sure that I’ll get it
out much in the meantime, though. Yet again, we have proof
that Celibidache was right in his belief that his performances
could not be fully appreciated away from the occasion that
created them – and especially not when heard at home on CD.
And yet … as I write, parts of the music are running through my head,
and they insist on going at Celibidache’s tempi. I can’t
help wondering, though, if this was really the performance
to choose for issue, since I am sure this symphony appeared
quite regularly during Celibidache’s Munich years. Instead
of the rehearsal extracts, it might have been more imaginative
to issue the first and last Munich performances in a double-CD
pack. I am pretty sure that somewhere, locked away in the
vaults, a Celibidache Ninth as powerfully argued as that
Fifth must exist. That would be my desert island Ninth.
In the meantime, the Turin DVD is recommendable and would
be worth an audio issue since the television soundtrack is
in mono and a stereo tape exists. I also note that DG have
issued a Stuttgart performance from the 1970s which takes
only fractionally longer than the Turin one.
The rehearsal extracts are interesting but, as so often with such
things, they yield little hints of just what the Celibidache
alchemy was. He is heard patiently yet firmly correcting
balance, phrasing, dynamics. He addresses players by their
Christian names and explains just why he is asking for certain
things. A string crescendo, for example, must not be so steep
as to obscure the woodwind, who have the leading material
and cannot make such a big crescendo. But in the last resort
these are all things that any competent conductor can pick
out. The genius of Celibidache lay in what he could inspire
the orchestra to do during the concert, and no one can explain
that.
Since this is the last of my present batch of Celibidache
CDs – as
well as Bruckner 5 I found his Tchaikovsky 5 quite extraordinary – I
should like to conclude with a reference to the Celibidache
recording paradox. Despite his opposition to the record-making
process, most of his conducting appointments were with radio
orchestras or other institutions that automatically recorded
all their concerts. In reality he must have known perfectly
well that he was effectively one of the most completely recorded
conductors of all time. Almost his entire career is held
in one radio archive or another, from the early Berlin period
through the RAI years, Stuttgart, Sweden and then Munich.
The question is, will we ever hear more than a handful of
these? The original EMI release of which the present disc
was a part has been deleted – though I believe the boxed
set is still available – and licensed out to ArkivMusic.
This hardly suggests an overwhelming public response. In
all truth, these are not recordings for the uninitiated public
and most reviews have suggested as much. On the other hand,
even when one rejects the Celibidache approach, our perceptions
and responses to the music are challenged and broadened.
This was a challenge which the Berlin Philharmonic ducked
in 1954 when it chose the more commercially viable Wunderkind Karajan
as successor to Furtwängler, in spite of the latter’s well-known
wishes on the matter. In a way the entire history of music-making
in the last half-century – hardly a happy period – is encapsulated
in that decision. For all Karajan’s well-groomed excellence,
it is doubtful whether anyone’s perceptions of the music
he conducted were ever challenged or broadened. But in view
of the wide sales he achieved and the limited interest aroused
by the Celibidache recordings when they finally started to
be released, that’s probably how the public wanted it.
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