
BRUCKNER: Symphony No. 9 in d minor (ed. Nowak), with reconstructed
finale (ed. Samale, Phillips, Cohrs, Mazzuca, 1991 / rev. 1996).
New
Philharmonic Orchestra of Westphalia/Johannes Wildner, cond.
Naxos 8.555933 (B) {DDD} TT: 82:43
Wishful thinking. As you know, Bruckner died before completing his
ninth symphony. He had difficulty working on the final movement.
At one point,
he suggested that his Te Deum be played as the finale. I wonder if
anyone has recorded the symphony this way. I do know that Celibidache
included
both works in his multi-CD EMI Bruckner set. Bruckner left behind a
series of jigsaw-puzzle pieces for the last movement, sketches in
a far more
incomplete state than those for Mahler's Tenth, which at least existed
in short score. Bruckner had what's been called "bifolios," notebooks
in which passages were worked out and whose measures were numbered
according to a large score of blank measures, prepared by the composer's
secretary.
The problem is that Bruckner, like any other composer, had second or
third thoughts, which he dutifully recorded in later bifolios, and
that many of these later notebooks have gone missing. So not only do
we have
scraps, we're not even sure whether they're day-old scraps. A brace
of editors decided to try to complete the mosaic, I guess for fun.
I'll make my standard disclaimer: I'm no Brucknerian. I like the music,
but I don't seek it out. There are symphonies I haven't heard and probably
never will. I don't go into quasi-religious ecstasy while listening.
My favorite of his works, the obscure cantata Helgoland, is my favorite
probably because it doesn't sound particularly like Bruckner. Perhaps
I'm not the best person to review this CD.
All that said, I regard the Ninth as practically fool-proof. I've never
encountered a professional performance, recorded or live, that wasn't
at least decent. Wildner's account falls into that category. The Westphalians
haven't the gorgeous tone of the front-rank orchestras and treat the
symphony more roughly than most. I don't think it merely Wildner's
interpretation. Dohnányi and the Cleveland (Decca, deleted),
for example, put out a hair-raising scherzo, impeccably played. I'd
also say that Wildner
has trouble getting the Big Picture of the Adagio to come through.
The music tends to plod or squeeze out like little sausages, with moments
of singing, rather than sing all the way through. This has less to
do
with tempo per se than with Wildner's and the orchestra's ability to
sustain the tempo set.
So whether you want this performance comes down to how much you want
to hear the reconstructed finale. How does it compare to that touchstone
of reconstructions, Cooke's Mahler 10th? I really wouldn't call this
effort revelatory, however much insight it may have given the editors
into Bruckner's methods. Indeed, the whole thing feels disjointed and
fitful, a rag-and-bones Bruckner, as if the editors had pasted two halves
of a photograph together without lining up the edges very well. Metaphorically,
the right eye is noticeably higher than the left.
Recorded sound is okay, but you can get better performances in far superior
sound.
S.G.S. (July 2004)