Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Notebook It may be no coincidence that both Yannick Nézet-Séguin and Gustavo Dudamel programmed Bruckner for their recent New York ...
When it comes to symphonies, very few composers have all of their symphonic utterances consistently performed. Of course, Beethoven sits atop the heap even if his First, Second, Fourth, and Eighth ...
As the Cleveland Orchestra and music director Franz Welser-Möst prepare to perform and record Bruckner's Symphony No. 8 in C Minor this month at Severance Hall, it's worth taking a moment to explore ...
RCA Red Seal has released the first two volumes in a new Bruckner symphony cycle, led by the Estonian conductor Paavo Järvi. Currently acting as Music Director for the Frankfurt Radio Symphony ...
There is a considerable tradition of – if not outright derision so at least tut-tutting of the Zeroth Symphony. Not the least by the great and sympathetic Bruckner scholar and expert Robert Simpson ...
This Blu-ray box contains the international acclaimed Bruckner cycle of Christian Thielemann, a “magician of the Bruckner sound”(Kurier on Symphony No. 5) and the Staatskapelle Dresden, whose own ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Jakub Hrusa and the Bamberg Symphony have released a new recording of them all. By J.S. Marcus The Austrian composer Anton Bruckner died in 1896, but ...
Daniel Barenboim ’s exploration of the work of Anton Bruckner is set to be released as a 10CD box set on January 23 via Deutsche Grammophon. The performances were recorded with the Chicago Symphony ...
Gerhard Markson, principal conductor of the NSO, talks to Michael Dervan about launching his players into the daunting challenge of Bruckner's symphonies, which he is presenting in some unlikely ...
As a legacy in Amsterdam after 11 years with the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Mariss Jansons leaves behind an impressive series of live recordings. On this most recent disc his Bruckner is as ...
Here’s a parlor game of sorts: Pick your Bruckner First Eleven. How does that work? Easy enough - there are only a few rules to follow (lest you make some up of your own). Take every one of Bruckner’s ...