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BRUCKNER
Symphonies - No.7 in E (Haas/Nowak), No.8 in C minor (1890 version edited Nowak) & No.9 in D minor;
SCHUBERT

Symphony No. 5
Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra/Sergiu Celibidache
DG 445 471-2 (4 CDs + bonus CD of rehearsals of Bruckner 7 & 8) [237'28" + 40'48" rehearsal]
Crotchet
 £49.95  Amazon UK   £55.99 Amazon USA $58.87

Even Celibidache's detractors acknowledge his greatness in Bruckner. These 1970s live performances (without applause) may have conventional timings - not though their counterparts in EMI's box - but there's nothing ordinary about them. The greatest performance here is the 1976 8th Symphony. This is in a league by itself, much preferable to Celi's "beached whale" from EMI (fascinating though that is). Celi's painstaking preparation reveals Bruckner's breathing expression, the conductor's fastidiousness regarding colour creating an extraordinary cathedral of sound (to re-use a description I coined for EMI's set and which seems particularly apt).

Frankly, when at his greatest, as here, no other conductor quite matches Celi's musical illumination (and not only in Bruckner). He understands and balances Bruckner's fervour and meditation while viewing Bruckner's vast design and expressive vision as an entity - and everything this great conductor achieves has a musical foundation. Quite how Celi suggests, in the violins, glints of light shining through stained-glass windows I don't know (but he does), but I do know how he obtains such a committed response from his musicians. He puts the responsibility of playing back on them, not by instruction, but by guiding each player to listen to colleagues and correlate parts, his guidance administered within the acoustical parameters of respective instruments and the space being played in - to make them even better musicians if you will. I'm not being fanciful; this is what orchestral musicians who played for him have told me. Listen in the slow movement between 12'24" -14'41" where the woodwind playing is so emotional: from 12'55" the clarinet player, then oboist, invest their solos with so much understanding of what and why they are playing; then the strings find an almost unbearable expressive dimension. This is sublime music-making combining the intimacy of chamber-music and an infinite world of declaration - musicians corporately bearing Bruckner's soul, inspired by Celi's strictures.

If you listen as I do, it's not just the final performance you'll hear, you'll also appreciate the painstaking preparation of many hours' work. Being alive to the science isn't mandatory (but it helps!) because ultimately Celi's Eighth is a miracle of sound and harmony - Bruckner's world as he expressed it in music. Although notorious (to those who don't understand) as a slow-tempo conductor, Celi's movement-timings in this Eighth of 16, 14, 27 and 26 minutes can be matched by other conductors. It's the all-encompassing involvement of the performers, and Celi's care over balance and the details of Bruckner's score, which compels and distinguishes. It's also the humanity with which Celi shapes episodes - but without indulging them: nothing is allowed to spoil the whole, yet everything is comprehensively stated and sounded. I could mention the perfect balance between horn and violins - equal voicing - from 1'49" in the Finale. Or, from 4'14", that the flute and clarinet arabesques are no mere decoration but an integral and vital part of the totality. I could single out the flute `heartbeats' at 22'56" that seem so significant here. If Celi, unfortunately, changes clarinet to bassoon a few bars into the first movement and closes same with a slight ritenuto (how telling the "death-clock " is if it stops in tempo) he compensates with a monumental Finale coda (from 23'14") in which, at 25'13", the violins are wonderfully clear against tumultuous brass. This is one of the greatest Bruckner 8s you will ever hear.

Coupled with it is an equally wonderful Schubert 5 from 1979. Schubert is not an essential composer for me (much as I love certain works) and I tend to find that if he's played too literally then his shortcomings - structural flaccidity and rhythmic repetitiveness - are underlined. Not though Celibidache who never reduces Schubert's outer movements to sewing-machine efficiency as some others have done. Although Celi keeps these movements moving (neither repeat observed), he fashions such a wealth of colour, subtle dynamics and buoyant rhythms, that a careful listener is fully absorbed. The slow movement really couldn't be more lyrical or sensitively phrased. If the proportions of the symphony as a whole are misaligned (12 ½ minutes for the Andante con moto against 15 ½ minutes for the other three together) it's Celi's variety of expression that wins the day.

I'm not so sure about Bruckner 7 and 9. Incidentally, anyone with an "Artists Live Recordings" CD, FED 011, has a Celi Bruckner 7 from 26 October 1971 (so claims the cover). It's the same performance as DG's who nominate 8 June 1971 - Celi's debut concert with the SRSO, which initiated their 10-year relationship. DG is probably correct, but was there a later performance in October that has been used here? Both CDs are missing the Finale's opening second-violins' tremolo - although do my ears detect some electronic faking of them on DG (not though the `clunk' of the tape starting a critical second too late!)? My reservations about No.7 concern not the lightness of sound or clarity of lines (both pre-requisites for the Seventh) but an ambiguity of the Symphony's scale. Celi added considerably to his overall timing when he got to Munich (EMI) but my view of both performances focuses on two interpretative discrepancies. The first is his opting for Haas's quieter dynamics while including Nowak's unnecessary cymbal clash at the Adagio's climax; the second is his creation of a transparent sound that doesn't always complement his spacious, sometimes majestic traversal of the whole. That said, the very opening doesn't so much start as we become conscious of its existence. We are drawn in by the subtlest of crescendos (from virtually inaudible to slightly less inaudible!) and an equally subtle intensification of tone. There are, of course, many other wonderful moments but I don't find this Seventh wholly convincing - though I wouldn't be without it.

Nor would I be without this Ninth. I haven't done any direct comparisons with the EMI performance - each Celi performance creates its own, non-transferrable, cosmos. My memory of Celi's 77-minute rendition (on DG he takes 58) was that it didn't seem a second too long. His 1974 Stuttgart reading has a wondrous balance but is a little circumspect about revealing Bruckner's inner angst. Celi teaches us so much about Bruckner's orchestration and his harmonic perception of the impending twentieth-century; also how a conductor can pertinently unfold the first movement's lengthy exposition without getting lost - but something personal to Bruckner is missing despite Celi often moving this movement forward to thrilling effect. The scherzo is certainly not a blaze of ill-digested noise (as this movement can be allowed to degenerate to) but it's not as violent as might be wished; I would have liked more devilish hobgoblins in the trio - Celi presents a slightly twitchy Mendelssohn! The concluding Adagio is both anticipatory of the next life and serene in its leave-taking; and although Celi builds the most painful of final climaxes, the dissonant breaking-point is a little too soft, and slightly lost by the recording.

Generally the sound is excellent, clean-textured and dynamically wide-ranging. Just occasionally it's a bit fierce and bass-occluded. Dedicated Brucknerians and Celibidachians won't (and shouldn't) hesitate. More general collectors should go straight for the fabulous Bruckner 8/Schubert 5 on 445 473-2 (2 CDs) Crotchet  which can be bought separately.

Reviewer

Colin Anderson

Bruckner 8, Schubert 5

Bruckner 7 & 9

Sound quality



Reviewer

Colin Anderson

Bruckner 8, Schubert 5

Bruckner 7 & 9

Sound quality


Reviews from previous months


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