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Anton Bruckner the Lost, or the ultimate orchestral experience

2024-03-28T10:54:51.129Z

Highlights: The year 2024 marked the centenary of two major disappearances from the classical world: that of Gabriel Fauré and that of Giacomo Puccini. 2024 was also the 200th birthday of one of the greatest symphonists of Germanic culture: the Austrian Anton Bruckner. Long misunderstood, even despised by a part of the musical world, the man remains too often in the shadow of a Mahler who admired him. For Daniel Barenboïm, who did not hesitate to return to the profession, the complete symphonies which he had already recorded twice in the past, "there is an exalted and twilight"


PORTRAIT - Long misunderstood, even despised by part of the musical world, he is the one whose work we have continued to rediscover and evaluate over the last ten years.


The year 2024 marked the centenary of two major disappearances from the classical world: that of Gabriel Fauré and that of Giacomo Puccini. But 2024 was also the 200th birthday of one of the greatest symphonists of Germanic culture: the Austrian Anton Bruckner. Long misunderstood, even despised by a part of the musical world, the man whose work we have continued to rediscover and evaluate over the last ten years nevertheless remains too often in the shadow of a Mahler who admired him. , or a Beethoven whom he admired (to the point of defining him as

“the incarnation of all that is great and sublime in music”

).

Certainly, there are between Beethoven and Bruckner, beyond the number of symphonies (nine) which connect them, as many worlds as there can be between the transparent sound cathedrals of the "genius of Saint-Florian" and the landscapes abundant works of the father of the

Symphony of a Thousand

. But the composer nonetheless continues to fascinate conductors and performers, since the devotion of a certain Furtwängler for “Brucknerian theology”, that of

“a Gothic mystic lost by mistake in the 19th century”

, he said. For Daniel Barenboïm, who did not hesitate to return to the profession, a few years ago, the complete symphonies which he had already recorded twice in the past,

"there is an exalted and twilight, and a sense of dramatic twist that we do not sufficiently suspect, and which often remain misunderstood.”

The composer continues to fascinate conductors and performers, from the devotion of a certain Furtwängler for “Brucknerian theology”, that of “a Gothic mystic lost by mistake in the 19th century”

Quebec chef Yannick Nézet-Séguin experienced this incomprehension personally. The one who recalls that he hated the composer so much as a teenager that he ended up throwing away one of his discs containing the

Fourth Symphony

is today one of the most committed cantors of his generation in favor of the music of the Austrian master. To the point of having recorded the complete symphonies with his Orchester métropolitain de Montréal. And to have returned there regularly, whether with the Rotterdam Philharmonic or the Staatskapelle of Dresden, with whom he recorded his

Third Symphony

a few years ago , a true tribute to Wagner.

Also read: Lang Lang: “I would like to bring the piano back to all schools in France”

The sacred sense of the collective

He does not hesitate to describe the work of the symphonist Bruckner as

“the ultimate orchestral experience”.

Invoking the sense of the almost sacred collective that this music requires, unlike the immediate “individual gratification” on which Gustav Mahler relies. A sense of the collective that the composer did not hesitate to work on in the body and the heart, tirelessly returning to his scores of which he almost systematically proposed new versions, as if to better polish their inner fervor.

The sense of the collective, the composer did not hesitate to work with the body and the heart, tirelessly returning to his scores of which he almost systematically proposed new versions, as if to better polish their inner fervor

It is therefore no surprise that this season we will find Yannick Nézet-Séguin on the stage of Avenue Montaigne, as part of the vast symphonic cycle that the latter has rightly decided to dedicate to this bicentenary. The conductor will give the

Third Symphony

there in March (the 23rd) . But this time with the Rotterdam Orchestra, to bring its epic dimension into dialogue with the

Four Last Songs

of Strauss, carried by the American soprano Angel Blue. Before that, it is with the future musical director of the musicians of the Radio France Philharmonic, Jaap van Zweden, that their colleagues from the National de France will open the ball of tributes, bringing into dialogue the devotion of the

Seventh Symphony

(and its sublime adagio in the form of a theatrical coup) with the Mozartian lightness of his

Piano Concerto No. 21

, entrusted to David Fray (November 15).

They will give way, in January, to two other groups: the Paris Chamber Orchestra which, under the baton of its new musical director, Thomas Hengelbrock, will tackle (on January 16) the rare

Symphony No. 6

. While the return to the top of the Vienna Philharmonic (on the 17th) will be the scene of another monumental confrontation in every sense of the word: that of Zubin Mehta with his

Ninth Symphony

, a masterpiece of syncretism, at the same time only a distant echo of the

Ninth

of his idol Beethoven.

Source: lefigaro

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