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Symphony No. 4 (Bruckner)

Anton Bruckner's Symphony No. 4 in E-flat major, WAB 104, is one of the composer's most popular works. It was written in 1874 and revised several times through 1888. It was dedicated to Prince Konstantin of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst. It was premiered in 1881 by Hans Richter in Vienna to great acclaim.

Symphony No. 4
Romantic
by Anton Bruckner
A portrait of Anton Bruckner, c. 1860
KeyE-flat major
CatalogueWAB 104
Composed
  • 1873 (1873)–1874
  • 1878 (1878)–1880
  • 1887 (1887)–1888
DedicationPrince Konstantin of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst
Published
1889 (1889)–1890
  • 1936 (1936) (ed. Robert Haas)
    (original version)
  • 1953 (1953) (ed. Leopold Nowak)
    (1878–1880 version)
  • 1975 (1975) (ed. Leopold Nowak)
    (1874 version)
  • 1981 (1981) (ed. Leopold Nowak)
    (1878 finale)
  • 2004 (2004) (ed. Benjamin Korstvedt [fr])
    (1899 version)
Movements4
Premiere
Date20 February 1881 (1881-02-20)
LocationVienna
ConductorHans Richter
PerformersVienna Philharmonic

The symphony's nickname of Romantic was used by the composer himself. This was at the height of the Romantic movement in the arts as depicted, amongst others, in the operas Lohengrin and Siegfried of Richard Wagner.[1]

According to Albert Speer, the symphony was performed before the fall of Berlin, in a concert on 12 April 1945. Speer chose the symphony as a signal that the Nazis were about to lose the war.[2]

Description edit

The symphony has four movements. Bruckner revised the symphony multiple times and it exists in three major versions. The initial version of 1874 differs in several respects from the other two, most importantly the entirely separate scherzo movement:

  1. Allegro (E major)
  2. Andante quasi allegretto (C minor)
  3. Sehr schnell (Very fast) (E major)
  4. (Allegro moderato) (E major)

Here are the tempo markings in the 1880 version:

  1. Bewegt, nicht zu schnell (With motion, not too fast) (E major)
  2. Andante, quasi allegretto (C minor)
  3. Scherzo: Bewegt (With motion) – Trio: Nicht zu schnell (Not too fast) (B major)
  4. Finale: Bewegt, doch nicht zu schnell (With motion, but not too fast) (E major)

The 1888 version edited by Benjamin Korstvedt [fr]in the Gesamtausgabe (Band IV Teil 3) has different tempo and metronome markings:

  1. Ruhig bewegt (nur nicht schnell) (Quiet motion (just not fast)) (Allegro molto moderato) (  = 72)
  2. Andante (  = 66)
  3. Bewegt (With motion) (  = 126)
  4. Mäßig bewegt (  = 72)

First movement edit

The movement opens, like many other Bruckner symphonies, with tremolo strings. A horn call opens the first theme group:

 

This leads into the second theme of the first group, an insistent statement of the Bruckner rhythm:

 

Like all Bruckner symphonies, the exposition contains three theme groups. The second group, called the "Gesangsperiode" by Bruckner, is in D major:

 

The third theme group differs between versions; in the 1874 original it opens with a variation on the opening horn call:

 

In the 1878 version and later it opens with a variation of the Bruckner rhythm theme from the first group:

 

The expansive development features a brass chorale based on the opening horn call:

 

There exists much evidence that Bruckner had a program in mind for the Fourth Symphony. In a letter to conductor Hermann Levi of 8 December 1884, Bruckner wrote: "In the first movement after a full night's sleep the day is announced by the horn, 2nd movement song, 3rd movement hunting trio, musical entertainment of the hunters in the wood."[3] There is a similar passage in a letter from the composer to Paul Heyse of 22 December 1890: "In the first movement of the 'Romantic' Fourth Symphony the intention is to depict the horn that proclaims the day from the town hall! Then life goes on; in the Gesangsperiode [the second subject] the theme is the song of the great tit Zizipe. 2nd movement: song, prayer, serenade. 3rd: hunt and in the Trio how a barrel-organ plays during the midday meal in the forest.[3]

In addition to these clues that come directly from Bruckner, the musicologist Theodor Helm communicated a more detailed account reported via the composer's associate Bernhard Deubler: "Mediaeval city—Daybreak—Morning calls sound from the city towers—the gates open—On proud horses the knights burst out into the open, the magic of nature envelops them—forest murmurs—bird song—and so the Romantic picture develops further..."[3]

Second movement edit

This movement, in C minor, begins with a melody on the cellos:

 

The accompaniment is significantly different in the original 1874 version. This movement, like most Bruckner slow movements, is in five-part ternary form (A–B–A–B–A–Coda). The second part (B) is slower than the first:

 

Third movement edit

Bruckner completely recomposed the Scherzo movement after his first version.

First version (1874) edit

This so-called "Alphorn Scherzo" is based mostly on a horn call that opens the movement:

 

This is followed by tremolo string figures and a slightly different version of the horn call. Eventually a climax is reached with the horn call sounded loudly and backed by the full orchestra, leading to the Trio:

 

Second version (1878) edit

The autograph of the so-called "Hunting Scherzo" of the 1878 version of the symphony contains markings such as Jagdthema (hunting theme) and Tanzweise während der Mahlzeit auf der Jagd (dance tune during the lunch break while hunting).[3] This is the more well known of the Scherzi. It opens with triadic hunting horn calls, that recalls the Military march, WAB 116:[4]

 

The more melodic Trio follows:

 

Fourth movement edit

This movement went through three major versions, but the third version of the Finale corresponds with the second major version of the symphony as a whole. There were further revisions for the 1888 version, but these amount to cuts and reorchestration; the underlying thematic material does not change after 1880. Much of the thematic material is shared between different versions, albeit with rhythmic simplification after 1874. The stark main theme, in E minor, is the same in all three versions:

 

First version (1874) edit

This version begins with cascading string figures and a reappearance of the horn call that opened the symphony, albeit first appearing on the oboe. This builds to a climax and the main theme is stated by the full orchestra. Pizzicato strings introduce the second theme group, built on two themes. This group is very polyrhythmic, with heavy usage of quintuplets. The first theme:

 

This group has several bars of five notes against eight, beginning in the second theme:

 

The third theme group is started by a descending B minor scale, which recalls Wotan's Spear leitmotif, given by the whole orchestra:

 

Towards the end, the horn call that opened the symphony returns, heralding the bright E major finish to the symphony.

Second version 'Volksfest' (1878) edit

The second version of the movement, whose nickname, meaning 'people's festival', comes from Bruckner's autograph,[3] is generally not played as part of the symphony as a whole. It is a simplified and shortened version of the finale. The movement's opening and first theme group are generally the same as the first version. The second group shows substantial differences in rhythm, with the difficult quintuplets replaced by simpler rhythmic patterns (Bruckner rhythm "2 + 3" or "3 + 2"). The actual notes, leaving aside transpositions and differences in accompaniment and articulation, are unchanged. The first theme:

 

The second theme:

 

The third theme group is again headed off by a descending scale, with the rhythm simplified:

 

Significant changes are made to the coda, bringing it closer to the third version.

Third version (1880) edit

This version has the most substantial changes. The cascading string figures are changed, and the overall mood is much more somber than in previous versions. After the first theme group comes the modified second group. Here Bruckner has inserted a new theme that precedes the two themes seen in the previous versions:[5]

 

Additionally, the third theme group has been recomposed:

 

In the coda, a quiet chorale is introduced at bar 489, and, before the peroration (at bar 517), an ascending scale[6] – a quote of that before the third climax in part 5 of the Adagio of the Fifth Symphony.[7]

In the 1888 version, the recapitulation begins with the second theme group, skipping over the first entirely.[6] There does not seem to be any clear hint of a program for this third version of the finale.[3]

Versions edit

Bruckner scholars recognise currently three versions of the Fourth Symphony:

  • Version I: 1874
  • Version II: 1878-1880
  • Version III: 1888

At least seven authentic versions and revisions of the Fourth Symphony have been identified.

The Fourth Symphony underwent the most prolonged, the most intricate, compositional process of any of the symphonies. Bruckner's work on it extended from 1874 until at least 1890. He recomposed much of the symphony during this process, entirely replacing the third movement and fundamentally reinventing the Finale. He prepared different versions for performance at least three times, and each time this led him to make changes, often substantial ones. And he finally saw the symphony through publication. Much of this story has either been unknown or significantly misunderstood, as have many of the larger issues raised by Bruckner's versions more generally. For these reasons, the Fourth Symphony, as the most extreme case of the "Bruckner problem," offers a uniquely advantageous platform from which to see key matters more critically and clearly than they have been previously.[8]

Version I (1874) edit

Bruckner's original version of the symphony was composed between 2 January and 22 November 1874. The edition by Leopold Nowak in 1975, based on manuscript Mus.Hs.6082, includes some revisions from 1875 that Bruckner made in the autograph score. This version was never performed or published during the composer's lifetime, though the Scherzo was played in Linz on 12 December 1909. The first complete performance was given in Linz more than a century after its composition on 20 September 1975 by the Munich Philharmonic conducted by Kurt Wöss. The first commercial recording was made in September 1982 by the Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by Eliahu Inbal (CD 2564 61371-2).

1876 variant edit

In 1876 Bruckner made some additional, mainly metrical adjustments, that he introduced in a copy of the autograph score (manuscript Mus.Hs.6032), when he prepared the score for a planned performance – which ultimately fell through.[9] The 1876 variant, that has been premiered in November 2020 by Jakub Hrůša with the Bamberger Symphoniker, has been issued by Benjamin Korstvedt [fr] in 2021.

Version IIA (1878) edit

When he had completed the original version of the symphony, Bruckner turned to the composition of his Fifth Symphony. When he had completed that piece he resumed work on the Fourth. Between 18 January and 30 September 1878 he thoroughly revised the first two movements and replaced the original finale with a new movement entitled Volksfest ("Popular Festival").

In December 1878 Bruckner replaced the original Scherzo with a completely new movement, which is sometimes called the "Hunt" Scherzo (Jagd-Scherzo). In a letter to the music critic Wilhelm Tappert (October 1878), Bruckner said that the new Scherzo "represents the hunt, whereas the Trio is a dance melody which is played to the hunters during their repast". The original title of the Trio reads: Tanzweise während der Mahlzeit auf der Jagd ("Dance melody during the hunters' meal").

The Volksfest finale was published as an appendix to Robert Haas's edition of 1936, and in a separate edition by Leopold Nowak in 1981. The complete 1878 version of the symphony has been first issued by William Carragan in 2014 for a foreseen performance by Gerd Schaller.

A critical edition of the 1878 version has been issued by Benjamin Korstvedt in 2022. In close contact with Korstvedt, MusicaNova Phoenix, Arizona, has performed a world premiere of the 1878 version of the Symphony on 1 May 2022.[10][11]

Version IIB (1880) edit

After the lapse of almost a year (during which he composed his String Quintet in F Major), Bruckner took up his Fourth Symphony once again. Between 19 November 1879 and 5 June 1880 he composed a new finale – the third, though it shares much of its thematic material with the first version[12] – and discarded the Volksfest finale.

This was the version performed at the work's premiere on 20 February 1881, which was the first premiere of a Bruckner symphony not to be conducted by Bruckner himself. Some changes made after the first performance of the latter – numerous changes in orchestration, a replacement of a 4-bar passage with a 12-bar passage in the Finale, and a 20-bar cut in the Andante.[13] Most of these changes are described in Carragan's "Red Book".[14]

Moreover, Bruckner reworked the passage that bridges the end of the development section of the Finale and the beginning of the reprise. Bars 351-430, i.e. the transition at the end of the development as well as the reprise of the first motif and the first part of the second motif, were removed and replaced by a few bars new transition. This abbreviated version was used for the first performance and Bruckner specifically requested that it was used when the Fourth was played for a second time.[15]

The 1880 version is available in an edition by Robert Haas, which was published in 1936, based on Bruckner's manuscript in the Austrian National Library.[16]
A critical edition of the 1880 version has been issued by Benjamin Korstvedt in 2019.[17]
Another edition has been issued by Benjamin-Gunnar Cohrs for the Anton Bruckner Urtext Gesamtausgabe in 2021 – with the abbreviated finale as it was performed by Felix Mottl on 10 December 1881 in Karlsruhe.

1886 variant edit

The 1886 version is largely the same as the 1880 version but has a number of changes – notably in the last few bars of the Finale, in which the third and fourth horns play the main theme of the first movement[13] – made by Bruckner while preparing a score of the symphony for Anton Seidl, who took it with him to New York City. This version was published in an edition by Nowak in 1953, based on the original copyist's score, which was rediscovered in 1952 and is now in the collection of Columbia University. In the title of Nowak's publication, it was confusingly described as the "1878–1880 version". It was performed in New York by Seidl on 4 April 1888.

Version III (1888) edit

With the assistance of Ferdinand Löwe and probably also Franz and Joseph Schalk, Bruckner thoroughly revised the symphony in 1887–88 with a view to having it published. Although Löwe and the Schalks made some changes to the score, these are now thought to have been authorized by Bruckner. This version was first performed, to acclaim, by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Hans Richter in Vienna on 20 January 1888.

The only surviving manuscript which records the compositional process of this version is the Stichvorlage, or engraver's copy of the score, which was prepared for the symphony's publisher Albert J. Gutmann of Vienna. The Stichvorlage was written down by three main copyists whose identities are unknown – but it is possible they were none other than Löwe and the two Schalks. One copyist copied out the 1st and 4th movements; the others each copied out one of the inner movements. Some tempi and expression marks were added in a fourth hand; these may have been inserted by Hans Richter during rehearsals, or even by Bruckner, who is known to have taken an interest in such matters. The Stichvorlage is now in an inaccessible private collection in Vienna; there is, however, a set of black-and-white photographs of the entire manuscript in the Wiener Stadtbibliothek (A-Wst M.H. 9098/c).[18]

In February 1888, Bruckner made extensive revisions to all four movements after having heard the premiere of the 1887 version the previous month. These changes were entered in Bruckner's own hand into the Stichvorlage, which he then dated. The Stichvorlage was sent to the Viennese firm of Albert J. Gutmann sometime between 15 May and 20 June 1888. In September 1889 the score was published by Gutmann. This was the first edition of the symphony to be published in the composer's lifetime. In 1890 Gutmann issued a corrected text of this edition, which rectified a number of misprints. A critical edition has been issued in 2004 by Benjamin Korstvedt.[19]

Mahler reorchestration edit

In 1895 Gustav Mahler made an arrangement of the 1888 version which is heavily cut and reorchestrated. It is available in recordings by Gennady Rozhdestvensky and Anton Nanut.

Details of the different versions edit

The following table summarises the details of the different versions.

Year Common designation Korstvedt Redlich Cooke Other designation Source Printed editions
1874–1876
I
I
I
Original Version
Urfassung
Nowak 1975
Korstvedt 2021 (1876 revision)
1878
II
IIa
II
Volksfest Version
Haas 1936 (Finale)
Haas 1944 (Finale)
Nowak 1981 (Finale)
Carragan 2014
Korstvedt 2022
1880
IIb
III
First Definitive Vienna Version
1878/80 Version
Unpublished
1881 Karlsruhe Version
Originalfassung
1878/80 Version
Autograph: A-Wn Mus. Hs. 19.476 Haas 1936
Haas 1944
Korstvedt 2019
Cohrs 2021
1886 Revised New York Version
1878/80 Version
Copyist's Score: Columbia Nowak 1953
1887
III
III
IV
Löwe/Schalk
Stichvorlage (private collection)
Photographs: A-Wst M.H. 9098/c
Unpublished
1888 Schalk & Löwe Version
Endfassung
Fassung letzter Hand
Stichvorlage (private collection)
Photographs: A-Wst M.H. 9098/c
Gutmann 1889
Wöss 1927
Redlich 1955
Korstvedt 2004

Bruckner's Fourth Symphony and the "Bruckner Problem" edit

Any critical appraisal of Bruckner's Fourth Symphony must take into account the so-called Bruckner Problem – that is, the controversy surrounding the degrees of authenticity and authorial status of the different versions of his symphonies. Between 1890 and 1935 there was no such controversy as far as the Fourth was concerned: Gutmann's print of the symphony, the 1888 version, was unchallenged. British musicologist Donald Tovey's analysis of the symphony mentioned no other version, nor does the Swiss theorist Ernst Kurth. Gutmann's version was the one performed by the leading conductors of the day: Mahler,[20] Weingartner, Richter and Fischer.

Haas edit

In 1936, Robert Haas, editor of the Gesamtausgabe (the critical edition of all of Bruckner's works), dismissed the version printed in 1889 as being without authenticity, saying that "the circumstances that accompanied its publication can no longer be verified"[16] and calling it "a murky source for the specialist".[16] In Haas's opinion the 1880 version was the Fassung letzter Hand (that is, the last version of the symphony to be transmitted in a manuscript in Bruckner's own hand). It later transpired that this assertion is not entirely true, but when Haas denied authorial status to the 1889 version he was unaware that the Stichvorlage from which that print was taken has extensive revisions in Bruckner's own hand, which Bruckner made in February 1888 after the premiere of the 1887 version of the symphony. To account for the fact that Bruckner had allowed the 1888 version to be printed, Haas created the now popular image of Bruckner as a composer with so little confidence in his own orchestral technique that he was easily persuaded to accept the revisions of others like Löwe and the Schalks.

Haas's 1936 edition contained the entire symphony based on Bruckner's 1881 autograph and included the Volksfest finale in an appendix: he described this edition as the "original version" (Originalfassung). He planned a second volume containing the earlier 1874 version of the symphony, but this was never completed.[21]

In 1940 Alfred Orel announced the rediscovery of the Stichvorlage from which the 1888 version had been printed. He noted that Bruckner had emended it himself and in 1948 declared it the true Fassung letzter Hand. Even Haas appears to have had second thoughts on the matter when he learned of the existence of the Stichvorlage. In 1944 he announced his intention to restore the 1888 version to the Bruckner Gesamtausgabe; but events overtook him.

Nowak edit

With the Anschluss of Austria to Hitler's Germany in 1938, the Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag Wien (MWV) and the Internationale Bruckner-Gesellschaft (IBG) in Vienna had been dissolved, and all efforts had been transferred to Leipzig. In 1945, late into a bomb attack on Leipzig, the publishing stock was destroyed. After the war, the IBG, the MWV, and Bruckner's documented output returned to Austria. In 1951 Leopold Nowak presented the first volume of the Neue Bruckner-Gesamtausgabe with a corrected reprint of Alfred Orel's edition of the Ninth Symphony. Nowak had already served in score-editing capacities before 1945, had worked on discovering new sources, and had corrected errors.[22]

About the Fourth Symphony, Nowak was not immediately convinced that the 1888 version was authentic. He rejected the evidence of the Stichvorlage on the grounds that Bruckner had not signed it. He also repeated, and revised, arguments Haas had invoked to cast doubt on Bruckner's involvement in the preparation of the 1887 version.

Throughout the second half of the twentieth century most commentators accepted Haas's and Nowak's arguments without taking the trouble to investigate the matter any further.[23] The rediscovery of the copyist's score of the 1886 version was the only significant change to the Gesamtausgabe during Nowak's long editorship (1951–1989). Nowak issued critical editions of the original 1874 version (1975), the 1886 version (1953) and the Volksfest finale of the 1878 version (1981), as well as a new edition of the 1881 version (1981). Gutmann's print of the 1888 version, however, remained beyond the pale as far as Nowak was concerned.

Critical appreciation of the symphony took an interesting turn in 1954, when Eulenburg issued a new edition of the 1888 version by the German-born British musicologist Hans F. Redlich. According to Redlich, the publication of the revised version in 1889 did not mark the end of the Fourth Symphony's long process of composition and revision, as most commentators had assumed, for on 18 January 1890 Bruckner supposedly began to indite yet another version of the symphony:

The strangest feature in this tangle of conflicting evidence is the fact that the so called Endfassung (final version) of the symphony which – according to R. Haas – combined versions II and III [i.e. essentially the same as the 1880 version] and is embodied in HS 19476 of the Nat. Bibl. Vienna Austrian National Library, seems to have been put on paper after the issue of the "revised version" (i.e [the published 1888 version]). This emerges clearly from the Facsimile of its first page [published as Plate IV in R. Haas, Anton Bruckner (Potsdam, 1934), p. 128], which bears the date of its commencement: Vienna January 18, 1890. It is possible to see in this MS score as well as in its date a silent protest of Bruckner's against the published score of 1889.[24]

Redlich buttressed this argument by questioning the authenticity of a number of emendations to the score which he considered alien to Bruckner's native style. Among these, the following may be noted: the introduction of piccolo and cymbals in bar 76 of the finale; the use of pp cymbals in bar 473 of the finale; and the use of muted horns in bar 147 of the finale, the aperto command for which is omitted in bar 155.[25]

In 1969 Deryck Cooke repeated these arguments in his influential series of articles The Bruckner Problem Simplified, going so far as to claim that Bruckner "withheld his ultimate sanction by refusing to sign the copy sent to the printer".[26] Cooke, who referred to the 1888 version as the "completely spurious… Löwe/Schalk score", concluded that the existence of the alleged manuscript of 1890 to which Redlich had first drawn attention effectively annulled all revisions made after 1881.

Korstvedt edit

In 1996, however, critical opinion of the Fourth Symphony was turned on its head by the American musicologist Benjamin Korstvedt [fr], who demonstrated that the manuscript referred to by Redlich and Cooke does not in fact exist: "Were it true that Bruckner made such a copy, Cooke's claim would merit consideration. But Bruckner never did. Redlich and Cooke were misled by a photograph in Haas's biography of Bruckner. This photograph, which shows the first page of Bruckner's autograph score of the second version, is cropped in such a way that the date 18. Jänner 1878 – which is mentioned by Haas – seems to read 18 Jänner 1890".[27][28]

Korstvedt has also refuted Haas's oft-repeated argument that Bruckner was a diffident composer who lacked faith in his own ability and was willing to make concessions that contravened his own artistic judgement. No evidence has been adduced in support of this assessment of the composer. On the contrary, there are first-hand accounts from Bruckner's own associates that it was impossible to persuade him to accept emendations against his own better judgement. It is Korstvedt's contention that while the preparation of the 1888 version was indeed a collaborative effort between Bruckner, Löwe, and probably also Franz and Joseph Schalk, this in no way undermines its authorial status; it still represents Bruckner's final thoughts on his Fourth Symphony and should be regarded as the true Endfassung or Fassung letzter Hand. There is no evidence that Bruckner "refused" to sign the Stichvorlage. He may have omitted to do so, but this is also true of other Bruckner manuscripts whose authenticity is not doubted. Furthermore, there is no real evidence that Bruckner was forced to accept revisions in order to get the work published, as Haas claimed. The only condition that Gutmann made prior to publication was that he be paid 1,000 fl. in advance to cover his costs. Once this money was delivered to him, he would have been quite happy, presumably, to print whatever version of the symphony Bruckner sent him.

In 2004 Korstvedt issued the first modern edition of the 1888 version of the symphony for the Gesamtausgabe.[29] In 2019 Korstvedt issued a modern edition of the 1881 version,[17] in 2021 an edition of the 1876 variant of the first version, and in 2022 the 1878 version.

Composition history edit

The following table summarizes the Fourth Symphony's complicated history of composition (or Wirkungsgeschichte, to use the critical term preferred by Bruckner scholars). The principal sources for these data are Korstvedt 1996 and Redlich 1954. (B = Bruckner; FS = Fourth Symphony; mvt = movement.)

1874
2 January
24 January
21 February
10 April
13 June
25 July
5 August
22 November
 
1875
passim
 
1876
August
September
 
12 October
 
 
1878
18 January
1 August
30 September
9 October
 
December
 
1879
19 November
 
1880
5 June
 
1881
20 February
??
10 December
 
1885
??
 
1886
??
4 June
??
Summer
August
1 October
October?
16 November
 
1887
3 January
Spring?
9 May
December?
14 December
 
1888
22 January
February
23 February
27 February
 
9 March
4 April
15 May
20 June
 
1889
September
 
1890
??
10 December
11 December
 
1891
18 April
??
 
1892
Spring
15 June
 
B sketches the 1st mvt of his FS
1st mvt: sketch of score is completed
1st mvt: full score and instrumentation are worked out
B begins to sketch 2nd mvt
B begins to sketch 3rd mvt
3rd mvt is completed
B begins to sketch 4th mvt
1st version (1874) of the FS is completed
 
 
Unsuccessful attempts by B to have his FS performed
 
 
B meets the progressive music critic Wilhelm Tappert at the inaugural Bayreuth Festival
Tappert persuades the conductor Benjamin Bilse to perform the FS in Berlin
B sends Bilse a score and a set of orchestral parts
B writes to Tappert, declaring his intention to thoroughly revise the FS before any performance
He engages Tappert's efforts to recover the score and parts from Bilse (without success)
 
 
B begins to revise the FS
B begins composition of the Volksfest finale
1st revision completed (1878 version)
B writes to Tappert; another unsuccessful attempt to recover score and parts from Bilse
B describes the revised version of his FS and announces his intention of replacing the Scherzo with a new "Hunt" Scherzo
"Hunt" Scherzo is composed
 
 
B begins to compose a 3rd version of the finale to replace the Volksfest finale
 
 
New finale is completed (1880 version)
 
 
1880 version premiered in Vienna by the VPO conducted by Richter; 1st premiere of a B symphony to be conducted by someone other than B
B makes some changes to the symphony after the first performance, resulting in the 1881 version
A performance of the 1881 version in Karlsruhe under Felix Mottl is a failure; 1st performance of a B symphony at which the composer is not present
 
 
B sends the score of the 1881 version to publishers Bote and Bock of Berlin with a view to publication, but it is rejected
 
 
B sends the score of the 1881 version to publishers Schott of Mainz with a view to publication, but it is again rejected
1st and 3rd movements of the 1881 version are performed at the Sondershausen Musikfest in Thuringia
B makes some further changes while preparing the score to be sent with Anton Seidl to New York City, resulting in the 1886 version
B sends a copy of the score of the 1886 version to Anton Seidl, who takes it to New York
2nd version (1878–1886) of the symphony set aside by B
Hermann Levi sends a postcard to Viennese publisher Albert Gutmann interesting him in the publication of the FS
Gutmann agrees to publish the FS, but demands an advance fee of 1,000 marks (1,000 fl.)
B writes to Levi rejecting Gutmann's terms as impossible for him to meet
 
 
B relents and agrees to Gutmann's terms when it becomes clear that Levi will be able to raise the 1,000 fl. (does Gutmann receive the 1,000 fl. now?)
B and his collaborators (Ferdinand Löwe, Franz Schalk and Joseph Schalk) begin to revise the FS for publication
Franz Schalk writes to his brother Joseph, telling him that Löwe has reorchestrated much of the FS with B's approval
1887 version completed (partially preserved in some surviving orchestral parts from the premiere)
A planned performance of 1887 version in Munich under Levi is cancelled due to the unavailability of orchestral parts
 
 
1887 version is premiered in Vienna by the Vienna Philharmonic under Hans Richter
The Stichvorlage (engraver's copy of the 1887 version) is extensively revised in B's hand, completed and dated, resulting in the 1888 version
B writes to Franz Schalk: asks him to thank Löwe for list of differences between score used at premiere on 22 January 1888 and revised Stichvorlage
B sends Levi the Stichvorlage for a concert Levi was preparing to give in Munich on 14 April 1888 (the concert was cancelled when Levi fell ill)
and asks him to have the orchestral parts amended accordingly at his, B's, expense; attached to the Stichvorlage is Löwe's list of revisions
B writes to Levi: requests that the Stichvorlage and revised parts be sent to him (Levi actually had a new set of parts drawn up from scratch)
1886 version performed in New York under Anton Seidl
B signs the contract for the publication of the FS (does Gutmann receive his 1,000 fl. now?)
B writes to Arthur Nikisch: the Stichvorlage has been sent via Gutmann to the printers Engelmann & Mühlberg of Leipzig
 
 
Gutmann finally publishes the 1888 version of B's FS; this is the first printed edition of the work
 
 
Gutmann issues a corrected edition of the 1888 version
The 1888 version is performed in Munich under Franz Fischer (deputizing for the indisposed Hermann Levi)
Fischer writes to B: first rehearsal has had to be abandoned; the handwritten orchestral parts were defective and had to be revised by a local copyist
 
 
B writes to Levi, asking him to send Fischer's revised orchestral parts to Gutmann for printing
3 more performances of the 1888 version take place using Fischer's revised handwritten orchestral parts
 
 
Gutmann publishes the orchestral parts of the FS (1888 version) and another print of the full score
1st performance of the FS using Gutmann's printed orchestral parts takes place in Vienna under Joseph Schalk

Instrumentation edit

The symphony requires an instrumentation of one pair each of flutes, oboes, clarinets, bassoons, with four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, timpani and strings. From the 1878 revision onwards, a single bass tuba is also incorporated into the instrumentation. The published score of 1889 introduces a part for third flute (doubling on the piccolo) and a pair of cymbals.

Recordings edit

The first commercial recording of part of the symphony was of the scherzo from the 1888 version, made by Clemens Krauss with the Vienna Philharmonic in 1929. The first commercial recording of the entire symphony was made by Karl Böhm with the Staatskapelle Dresden in 1936, in the Haas/1881 version.

The versions most often recorded are the Haas and Nowak editions of the 1880 score (referred to as the 1881 and 1886 versions in the list above). Any modern recording that does not specify this can be safely assumed to be one of these versions, while early LPs and CD remasterings of old recordings are usually of Ferdinand Löwe's 1888 edition (for example, those by Wilhelm Furtwängler and Hans Knappertsbusch).

The first recording of the original 1874 version was by Kurt Wöss with the Munich Philharmonic – a live performance on 20 September 1975. The first studio recording of the 1874 version was by Eliahu Inbal with the Frankfurt Radio Symphony.

The first recording of the 1878 version was by Warren Cohen with the MusicaNova Orchestra – a live performance on 1 May 2022.[11]

First version (1874–1876) edit

Nowak edition (1975), based on the 1874 manuscript edit

Korstvedt edition (2021), based on the 1876 revision edit

  • Jakub Hrůša conducting the Bamberger Symphoniker, Bruckner 4 – The three versions – Accentus music CD Set ACC 30533, 2020
  • Markus Poschner conducting the ORF Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, Bruckner Symphony No. 4 – 1876 version – Capriccio C8084, 2022

Version 2A (1878) edit

Korstvedt edition (2022) edit

  • Warren Cohen conducting the MusicaNova Orchestra, 1 May 2022 – MusicaNova BD/DVD/CD (Premiere of the complete 1878 version)

"Volksfest" finale only edit

Andante and "Volksfest" finale edit

Version 2B (1881–1886) edit

Haas edition (1936, rev. 1944), based on the 1881 manuscript edit

Nowak edition (1953), based on the 1886 manuscript edit

Korstvedt edition (2018), based on the 1881 manuscript edit

  • Jakub Hrůša conducting the Bamberger Symphoniker, Bruckner 4 – The three versions – Accentus music CD Set ACC 30533, 2020
  • Markus Poschner conducting the Bruckner Orchestra Linz, Anton Bruckner – Sinfonie Nr. 4 Es-Dur (1878-1880) "Romantische" – Capriccio C8084, 2022

Cohrs edition (2021), based on the 1881 manuscript edit

Third version (1888) edit

First edition (Gutmann, 1889) edit

Mahler reorchestration (1895) edit

Korstvedt critical edition (2004) edit

Published editions of the symphony edit

  • Bruckner, Anton (1890). Vierte (romantische) Symphonie (Es dur): für grosses Orchester. Vienna: A. J. Gutmann. OCLC 7059652.
  • — (1936). Robert Haas (ed.). Sämtliche Werke, Kritische Gesamtausgabe – Band 4/I: IV. Symphonie Es-Dur (Fassung von 1878 mit dem Finale von 1880) – Finale von 1878. Leipzig: Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag. OCLC 65881359.
  • — (1974). Leopold Nowak (ed.). Sämtliche Werke: Band IV/1: IV. Symphonie, Es-dur: Romantische, Fassung von 1874. Vienna: Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft. OCLC 37668282.
  • — (1953). Leopold Nowak (ed.). Sämtliche Werke: Band IV/2: IV. Symphonie Es-Dur: Fassung von 1878–80. Vienna: Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft. OCLC 1740968.
  • — (1981). Leopold Nowak (ed.). Sämtliche Werke: Band IV/2F: IV. Symphonie Es-Dur: Finale von 1878. Vienna: Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft. OCLC 8202970.
  • — (2004). Korstvedt, Benjamin M. (ed.). Sämtliche Werke: Band IV/3: IV. Symphonie, Es-Dur : Fassung von 1888 (Stichvorlage für den Erstdruck von 1889). Vienna: Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft. OCLC 56823813.
  • — (2021). Benjamin M Korstvedt (ed.). Neue Anton Bruckner Gesamtausgabe: Band IV/1: IV. Symphonie, Es-Dur : Erste Fassung. Vienna: Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft.
  • — (2019). Benjamin M Korstvedt (ed.). Neue Anton Bruckner Gesamtausgabe: Band IV/2: IV. Symphonie, Es-Dur : Zweite Fassung. Vienna: Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Constantin Floros, as reported in Brown, A. Peter (2003). The second golden age of the Viennese symphony: Brahms, Bruckner, Dvořák, Mahler, and selected contemporaries. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. p. 219. ISBN 0-253-33488-8.
  2. ^ Speer, Albert. Inside the Third Reich[full citation needed]
  3. ^ a b c d e f Williamson, John (2004). "Programme symphony and absolute music". In Williamson, John (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Bruckner. Cambridge Companions to Music. Cambridge University Press. p. 110. ISBN 0-521-00878-6.
  4. ^ Carragan 2020, p. 112.
  5. ^ Carragan 2020, p. 118.
  6. ^ a b "William Carragan – Timed Analysis Tables – Symphnony No. 4" (PDF).
  7. ^ "William Carragan – Timed Analysis Tables – Symphnony No. 5" (PDF).
  8. ^ B. Korstvedt - The versions of Bruckner's Fourth Symphony
  9. ^ Carragan 2020, pp. 102–103.
  10. ^ On the new version of Bruckner Symphony No. 4
  11. ^ a b The World Premiere of the 1878 Bruckner 4th
  12. ^ Cooke 1969 described this movement as "simply a recasting, in 1880, of the 1878 [sic] finale into its present form". Presumbably he meant "a recasting … of the 1874 finale...", which is much closer to the 1880 finale than is the Volksfest finale of 1878.
  13. ^ a b "Bruckner Symphony Versions". bruckner.webs.com.
  14. ^ Carragan 2020, pp. 98, 109 & 113
  15. ^ Leaflet of the CD box Bruckner 4 – The three versions, Accentus music LC48946
  16. ^ a b c "Introduction, (Symphony No. 4)", from Bruckner, Anton (1990). Robert Haas (ed.). Symphonies nos. 4 and 7 in full score. New York: Dover. p. xi. ISBN 0-486-26262-6.
  17. ^ a b New Anton Bruckner Complete Edition
  18. ^ According to The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (ed. Stanley Sadie, 2001), the Stichvorlage is "lost". See Korstvedt 1996 for a description of this document.
  19. ^ MWV – Symphony No. 4 in E-flat major
  20. ^ Mahler did cut and reorchestrate the symphony, but it was the 1888 version he altered.
  21. ^ Korstvedt 2004, p. 125
  22. ^ "Willkommen auf der Homepage vom Musikwissenschaftlichen Verlag". www.mwv.at.
  23. ^ Simpson 1992, for example, whose critical estimation of the 1888 version was damning.
  24. ^ Redlich 1954, pp. v–vi
  25. ^ Redlich 1954, p. vi
  26. ^ Cooke 1969, p. 364
  27. ^ Korstvedt 2004, p. 129.
  28. ^ Korstvedt 1996, p. 21.
  29. ^ Bruckner & Korstvedt 2004

References edit

  • Carragan, William (2020). Anton Bruckner – Eleven Symphonies. Windsor, Connecticut: Bruckner Society of America. ISBN 978-1-938911-59-0.
  • Cooke, Deryck (April 1969). "The Bruckner Problem Simplified". The Musical Times. 110 (1514): 362–365. doi:10.2307/951471. JSTOR 951471.
  • Korstvedt, Benjamin (October 1996). "The First Published Edition of Anton Bruckner's Fourth Symphony: Collaboration and Authenticity". 19th-Century Music. University of California Press. 20 (1): 3–26. doi:10.2307/746665. ISSN 0148-2076. JSTOR 746665.
  • Korstvedt, Benjamin (2004). "Bruckner editions: the revolution revisited". In Williamson, John (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Bruckner. Cambridge University Press. p. 129. ISBN 0-521-00878-6.
  • Redlich, Hans (1954). Introduction to Bruckner's Symphony No. 4 in E major (Romantische). London, New York: Eulenburg.
  • Simpson, Robert (1992) [1966]. The Essence of Bruckner: An Essay Towards the Understanding of his Music (Revised ed.). London: Gollancz. ISBN 0-575-05221-X.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Anton Bruckner Critical Complete Edition – Symphony No. 4 in E-flat major
  • Symphony No. 4 (Bruckner): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  • Free score (1888 edition) from the Indiana University school of music
  • Program notes for a San Francisco Symphony performance of the 1880 version
  • Article by Wayne Reisig at AllMusic.com
  • Complete discography by John Berky
  • Bruckner Symphony Versions by David Griegel
  • Time analysis versions 1874, 1880 and 1888, William Carragan

symphony, bruckner, anton, bruckner, symphony, flat, major, composer, most, popular, works, written, 1874, revised, several, times, through, 1888, dedicated, prince, konstantin, hohenlohe, schillingsfürst, premiered, 1881, hans, richter, vienna, great, acclaim. Anton Bruckner s Symphony No 4 in E flat major WAB 104 is one of the composer s most popular works It was written in 1874 and revised several times through 1888 It was dedicated to Prince Konstantin of Hohenlohe Schillingsfurst It was premiered in 1881 by Hans Richter in Vienna to great acclaim Symphony No 4Romanticby Anton BrucknerA portrait of Anton Bruckner c 1860KeyE flat majorCatalogueWAB 104Composed1873 1873 1874 1878 1878 1880 1887 1887 1888DedicationPrince Konstantin of Hohenlohe SchillingsfurstPublished1889 1889 1890 1936 1936 ed Robert Haas original version 1953 1953 ed Leopold Nowak 1878 1880 version 1975 1975 ed Leopold Nowak 1874 version 1981 1981 ed Leopold Nowak 1878 finale 2004 2004 ed Benjamin Korstvedt fr 1899 version Movements4PremiereDate20 February 1881 1881 02 20 LocationViennaConductorHans RichterPerformersVienna PhilharmonicThe symphony s nickname of Romantic was used by the composer himself This was at the height of the Romantic movement in the arts as depicted amongst others in the operas Lohengrin and Siegfried of Richard Wagner 1 According to Albert Speer the symphony was performed before the fall of Berlin in a concert on 12 April 1945 Speer chose the symphony as a signal that the Nazis were about to lose the war 2 Contents 1 Description 1 1 First movement 1 2 Second movement 1 3 Third movement 1 3 1 First version 1874 1 3 2 Second version 1878 1 4 Fourth movement 1 4 1 First version 1874 1 4 2 Second version Volksfest 1878 1 4 3 Third version 1880 2 Versions 2 1 Version I 1874 2 1 1 1876 variant 2 2 Version IIA 1878 2 3 Version IIB 1880 2 3 1 1886 variant 2 4 Version III 1888 2 4 1 Mahler reorchestration 3 Details of the different versions 4 Bruckner s Fourth Symphony and the Bruckner Problem 4 1 Haas 4 2 Nowak 4 3 Korstvedt 5 Composition history 6 Instrumentation 7 Recordings 7 1 First version 1874 1876 7 1 1 Nowak edition 1975 based on the 1874 manuscript 7 1 2 Korstvedt edition 2021 based on the 1876 revision 7 2 Version 2A 1878 7 2 1 Korstvedt edition 2022 7 2 2 Volksfest finale only 7 2 3 Andante and Volksfest finale 7 3 Version 2B 1881 1886 7 3 1 Haas edition 1936 rev 1944 based on the 1881 manuscript 7 3 2 Nowak edition 1953 based on the 1886 manuscript 7 3 3 Korstvedt edition 2018 based on the 1881 manuscript 7 3 4 Cohrs edition 2021 based on the 1881 manuscript 7 4 Third version 1888 7 4 1 First edition Gutmann 1889 7 4 2 Mahler reorchestration 1895 7 4 3 Korstvedt critical edition 2004 8 Published editions of the symphony 9 Notes 9 1 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksDescription editThe symphony has four movements Bruckner revised the symphony multiple times and it exists in three major versions The initial version of 1874 differs in several respects from the other two most importantly the entirely separate scherzo movement Allegro E major Andante quasi allegretto C minor Sehr schnell Very fast E major Allegro moderato E major Here are the tempo markings in the 1880 version Bewegt nicht zu schnell With motion not too fast E major Andante quasi allegretto C minor Scherzo Bewegt With motion Trio Nicht zu schnell Not too fast B major Finale Bewegt doch nicht zu schnell With motion but not too fast E major The 1888 version edited by Benjamin Korstvedt fr in the Gesamtausgabe Band IV Teil 3 has different tempo and metronome markings Ruhig bewegt nur nicht schnell Quiet motion just not fast Allegro molto moderato nbsp 72 Andante nbsp 66 Bewegt With motion nbsp 126 Massig bewegt nbsp 72 First movement edit The movement opens like many other Bruckner symphonies with tremolo strings A horn call opens the first theme group nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file This leads into the second theme of the first group an insistent statement of the Bruckner rhythm nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Like all Bruckner symphonies the exposition contains three theme groups The second group called the Gesangsperiode by Bruckner is in D major nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The third theme group differs between versions in the 1874 original it opens with a variation on the opening horn call nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file In the 1878 version and later it opens with a variation of the Bruckner rhythm theme from the first group nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The expansive development features a brass chorale based on the opening horn call nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file There exists much evidence that Bruckner had a program in mind for the Fourth Symphony In a letter to conductor Hermann Levi of 8 December 1884 Bruckner wrote In the first movement after a full night s sleep the day is announced by the horn 2nd movement song 3rd movement hunting trio musical entertainment of the hunters in the wood 3 There is a similar passage in a letter from the composer to Paul Heyse of 22 December 1890 In the first movement of the Romantic Fourth Symphony the intention is to depict the horn that proclaims the day from the town hall Then life goes on in the Gesangsperiode the second subject the theme is the song of the great tit Zizipe 2nd movement song prayer serenade 3rd hunt and in the Trio how a barrel organ plays during the midday meal in the forest 3 In addition to these clues that come directly from Bruckner the musicologist Theodor Helm communicated a more detailed account reported via the composer s associate Bernhard Deubler Mediaeval city Daybreak Morning calls sound from the city towers the gates open On proud horses the knights burst out into the open the magic of nature envelops them forest murmurs bird song and so the Romantic picture develops further 3 Second movement edit This movement in C minor begins with a melody on the cellos nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The accompaniment is significantly different in the original 1874 version This movement like most Bruckner slow movements is in five part ternary form A B A B A Coda The second part B is slower than the first nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Third movement edit Bruckner completely recomposed the Scherzo movement after his first version First version 1874 edit This so called Alphorn Scherzo is based mostly on a horn call that opens the movement nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file This is followed by tremolo string figures and a slightly different version of the horn call Eventually a climax is reached with the horn call sounded loudly and backed by the full orchestra leading to the Trio nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Second version 1878 edit The autograph of the so called Hunting Scherzo of the 1878 version of the symphony contains markings such as Jagdthema hunting theme and Tanzweise wahrend der Mahlzeit auf der Jagd dance tune during the lunch break while hunting 3 This is the more well known of the Scherzi It opens with triadic hunting horn calls that recalls the Military march WAB 116 4 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The more melodic Trio follows nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Fourth movement edit This movement went through three major versions but the third version of the Finale corresponds with the second major version of the symphony as a whole There were further revisions for the 1888 version but these amount to cuts and reorchestration the underlying thematic material does not change after 1880 Much of the thematic material is shared between different versions albeit with rhythmic simplification after 1874 The stark main theme in E minor is the same in all three versions nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file First version 1874 edit This version begins with cascading string figures and a reappearance of the horn call that opened the symphony albeit first appearing on the oboe This builds to a climax and the main theme is stated by the full orchestra Pizzicato strings introduce the second theme group built on two themes This group is very polyrhythmic with heavy usage of quintuplets The first theme nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file This group has several bars of five notes against eight beginning in the second theme nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The third theme group is started by a descending B minor scale which recalls Wotan s Spear leitmotif given by the whole orchestra nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Towards the end the horn call that opened the symphony returns heralding the bright E major finish to the symphony Second version Volksfest 1878 edit The second version of the movement whose nickname meaning people s festival comes from Bruckner s autograph 3 is generally not played as part of the symphony as a whole It is a simplified and shortened version of the finale The movement s opening and first theme group are generally the same as the first version The second group shows substantial differences in rhythm with the difficult quintuplets replaced by simpler rhythmic patterns Bruckner rhythm 2 3 or 3 2 The actual notes leaving aside transpositions and differences in accompaniment and articulation are unchanged The first theme nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The second theme nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The third theme group is again headed off by a descending scale with the rhythm simplified nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Significant changes are made to the coda bringing it closer to the third version Third version 1880 edit This version has the most substantial changes The cascading string figures are changed and the overall mood is much more somber than in previous versions After the first theme group comes the modified second group Here Bruckner has inserted a new theme that precedes the two themes seen in the previous versions 5 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Additionally the third theme group has been recomposed nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file In the coda a quiet chorale is introduced at bar 489 and before the peroration at bar 517 an ascending scale 6 a quote of that before the third climax in part 5 of the Adagio of the Fifth Symphony 7 In the 1888 version the recapitulation begins with the second theme group skipping over the first entirely 6 There does not seem to be any clear hint of a program for this third version of the finale 3 Versions editBruckner scholars recognise currently three versions of the Fourth Symphony Version I 1874 Version II 1878 1880 Version III 1888At least seven authentic versions and revisions of the Fourth Symphony have been identified The Fourth Symphony underwent the most prolonged the most intricate compositional process of any of the symphonies Bruckner s work on it extended from 1874 until at least 1890 He recomposed much of the symphony during this process entirely replacing the third movement and fundamentally reinventing the Finale He prepared different versions for performance at least three times and each time this led him to make changes often substantial ones And he finally saw the symphony through publication Much of this story has either been unknown or significantly misunderstood as have many of the larger issues raised by Bruckner s versions more generally For these reasons the Fourth Symphony as the most extreme case of the Bruckner problem offers a uniquely advantageous platform from which to see key matters more critically and clearly than they have been previously 8 Version I 1874 edit Bruckner s original version of the symphony was composed between 2 January and 22 November 1874 The edition by Leopold Nowak in 1975 based on manuscript Mus Hs 6082 includes some revisions from 1875 that Bruckner made in the autograph score This version was never performed or published during the composer s lifetime though the Scherzo was played in Linz on 12 December 1909 The first complete performance was given in Linz more than a century after its composition on 20 September 1975 by the Munich Philharmonic conducted by Kurt Woss The first commercial recording was made in September 1982 by the Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by Eliahu Inbal CD 2564 61371 2 1876 variant edit In 1876 Bruckner made some additional mainly metrical adjustments that he introduced in a copy of the autograph score manuscript Mus Hs 6032 when he prepared the score for a planned performance which ultimately fell through 9 The 1876 variant that has been premiered in November 2020 by Jakub Hrusa with the Bamberger Symphoniker has been issued by Benjamin Korstvedt fr in 2021 Version IIA 1878 edit When he had completed the original version of the symphony Bruckner turned to the composition of his Fifth Symphony When he had completed that piece he resumed work on the Fourth Between 18 January and 30 September 1878 he thoroughly revised the first two movements and replaced the original finale with a new movement entitled Volksfest Popular Festival In December 1878 Bruckner replaced the original Scherzo with a completely new movement which is sometimes called the Hunt Scherzo Jagd Scherzo In a letter to the music critic Wilhelm Tappert October 1878 Bruckner said that the new Scherzo represents the hunt whereas the Trio is a dance melody which is played to the hunters during their repast The original title of the Trio reads Tanzweise wahrend der Mahlzeit auf der Jagd Dance melody during the hunters meal The Volksfest finale was published as an appendix to Robert Haas s edition of 1936 and in a separate edition by Leopold Nowak in 1981 The complete 1878 version of the symphony has been first issued by William Carragan in 2014 for a foreseen performance by Gerd Schaller A critical edition of the 1878 version has been issued by Benjamin Korstvedt in 2022 In close contact with Korstvedt MusicaNova Phoenix Arizona has performed a world premiere of the 1878 version of the Symphony on 1 May 2022 10 11 Version IIB 1880 edit After the lapse of almost a year during which he composed his String Quintet in F Major Bruckner took up his Fourth Symphony once again Between 19 November 1879 and 5 June 1880 he composed a new finale the third though it shares much of its thematic material with the first version 12 and discarded the Volksfest finale This was the version performed at the work s premiere on 20 February 1881 which was the first premiere of a Bruckner symphony not to be conducted by Bruckner himself Some changes made after the first performance of the latter numerous changes in orchestration a replacement of a 4 bar passage with a 12 bar passage in the Finale and a 20 bar cut in the Andante 13 Most of these changes are described in Carragan s Red Book 14 Moreover Bruckner reworked the passage that bridges the end of the development section of the Finale and the beginning of the reprise Bars 351 430 i e the transition at the end of the development as well as the reprise of the first motif and the first part of the second motif were removed and replaced by a few bars new transition This abbreviated version was used for the first performance and Bruckner specifically requested that it was used when the Fourth was played for a second time 15 The 1880 version is available in an edition by Robert Haas which was published in 1936 based on Bruckner s manuscript in the Austrian National Library 16 A critical edition of the 1880 version has been issued by Benjamin Korstvedt in 2019 17 Another edition has been issued by Benjamin Gunnar Cohrs for the Anton Bruckner Urtext Gesamtausgabe in 2021 with the abbreviated finale as it was performed by Felix Mottl on 10 December 1881 in Karlsruhe 1886 variant edit The 1886 version is largely the same as the 1880 version but has a number of changes notably in the last few bars of the Finale in which the third and fourth horns play the main theme of the first movement 13 made by Bruckner while preparing a score of the symphony for Anton Seidl who took it with him to New York City This version was published in an edition by Nowak in 1953 based on the original copyist s score which was rediscovered in 1952 and is now in the collection of Columbia University In the title of Nowak s publication it was confusingly described as the 1878 1880 version It was performed in New York by Seidl on 4 April 1888 Version III 1888 edit With the assistance of Ferdinand Lowe and probably also Franz and Joseph Schalk Bruckner thoroughly revised the symphony in 1887 88 with a view to having it published Although Lowe and the Schalks made some changes to the score these are now thought to have been authorized by Bruckner This version was first performed to acclaim by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Hans Richter in Vienna on 20 January 1888 The only surviving manuscript which records the compositional process of this version is the Stichvorlage or engraver s copy of the score which was prepared for the symphony s publisher Albert J Gutmann of Vienna The Stichvorlage was written down by three main copyists whose identities are unknown but it is possible they were none other than Lowe and the two Schalks One copyist copied out the 1st and 4th movements the others each copied out one of the inner movements Some tempi and expression marks were added in a fourth hand these may have been inserted by Hans Richter during rehearsals or even by Bruckner who is known to have taken an interest in such matters The Stichvorlage is now in an inaccessible private collection in Vienna there is however a set of black and white photographs of the entire manuscript in the Wiener Stadtbibliothek A Wst M H 9098 c 18 In February 1888 Bruckner made extensive revisions to all four movements after having heard the premiere of the 1887 version the previous month These changes were entered in Bruckner s own hand into the Stichvorlage which he then dated The Stichvorlage was sent to the Viennese firm of Albert J Gutmann sometime between 15 May and 20 June 1888 In September 1889 the score was published by Gutmann This was the first edition of the symphony to be published in the composer s lifetime In 1890 Gutmann issued a corrected text of this edition which rectified a number of misprints A critical edition has been issued in 2004 by Benjamin Korstvedt 19 Mahler reorchestration edit In 1895 Gustav Mahler made an arrangement of the 1888 version which is heavily cut and reorchestrated It is available in recordings by Gennady Rozhdestvensky and Anton Nanut Details of the different versions editThe following table summarises the details of the different versions Year Common designation Korstvedt Redlich Cooke Other designation Source Printed editions1874 1876 I I I Original VersionUrfassung Nowak 1975Korstvedt 2021 1876 revision 1878 II IIa II Volksfest Version Haas 1936 Finale Haas 1944 Finale Nowak 1981 Finale Carragan 2014Korstvedt 20221880 IIb III First Definitive Vienna Version1878 80 Version Unpublished1881 Karlsruhe VersionOriginalfassung1878 80 Version Autograph A Wn Mus Hs 19 476 Haas 1936Haas 1944Korstvedt 2019Cohrs 20211886 Revised New York Version1878 80 Version Copyist s Score Columbia Nowak 19531887 III III IV Lowe Schalk Stichvorlage private collection Photographs A Wst M H 9098 c Unpublished1888 Schalk amp Lowe VersionEndfassungFassung letzter Hand Stichvorlage private collection Photographs A Wst M H 9098 c Gutmann 1889Woss 1927Redlich 1955Korstvedt 2004Bruckner s Fourth Symphony and the Bruckner Problem editAny critical appraisal of Bruckner s Fourth Symphony must take into account the so called Bruckner Problem that is the controversy surrounding the degrees of authenticity and authorial status of the different versions of his symphonies Between 1890 and 1935 there was no such controversy as far as the Fourth was concerned Gutmann s print of the symphony the 1888 version was unchallenged British musicologist Donald Tovey s analysis of the symphony mentioned no other version nor does the Swiss theorist Ernst Kurth Gutmann s version was the one performed by the leading conductors of the day Mahler 20 Weingartner Richter and Fischer Haas edit In 1936 Robert Haas editor of the Gesamtausgabe the critical edition of all of Bruckner s works dismissed the version printed in 1889 as being without authenticity saying that the circumstances that accompanied its publication can no longer be verified 16 and calling it a murky source for the specialist 16 In Haas s opinion the 1880 version was the Fassung letzter Hand that is the last version of the symphony to be transmitted in a manuscript in Bruckner s own hand It later transpired that this assertion is not entirely true but when Haas denied authorial status to the 1889 version he was unaware that the Stichvorlage from which that print was taken has extensive revisions in Bruckner s own hand which Bruckner made in February 1888 after the premiere of the 1887 version of the symphony To account for the fact that Bruckner had allowed the 1888 version to be printed Haas created the now popular image of Bruckner as a composer with so little confidence in his own orchestral technique that he was easily persuaded to accept the revisions of others like Lowe and the Schalks Haas s 1936 edition contained the entire symphony based on Bruckner s 1881 autograph and included the Volksfest finale in an appendix he described this edition as the original version Originalfassung He planned a second volume containing the earlier 1874 version of the symphony but this was never completed 21 In 1940 Alfred Orel announced the rediscovery of the Stichvorlage from which the 1888 version had been printed He noted that Bruckner had emended it himself and in 1948 declared it the true Fassung letzter Hand Even Haas appears to have had second thoughts on the matter when he learned of the existence of the Stichvorlage In 1944 he announced his intention to restore the 1888 version to the Bruckner Gesamtausgabe but events overtook him Nowak edit With the Anschluss of Austria to Hitler s Germany in 1938 the Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag Wien MWV and the Internationale Bruckner Gesellschaft IBG in Vienna had been dissolved and all efforts had been transferred to Leipzig In 1945 late into a bomb attack on Leipzig the publishing stock was destroyed After the war the IBG the MWV and Bruckner s documented output returned to Austria In 1951 Leopold Nowak presented the first volume of the Neue Bruckner Gesamtausgabe with a corrected reprint of Alfred Orel s edition of the Ninth Symphony Nowak had already served in score editing capacities before 1945 had worked on discovering new sources and had corrected errors 22 About the Fourth Symphony Nowak was not immediately convinced that the 1888 version was authentic He rejected the evidence of the Stichvorlage on the grounds that Bruckner had not signed it He also repeated and revised arguments Haas had invoked to cast doubt on Bruckner s involvement in the preparation of the 1887 version Throughout the second half of the twentieth century most commentators accepted Haas s and Nowak s arguments without taking the trouble to investigate the matter any further 23 The rediscovery of the copyist s score of the 1886 version was the only significant change to the Gesamtausgabe during Nowak s long editorship 1951 1989 Nowak issued critical editions of the original 1874 version 1975 the 1886 version 1953 and the Volksfest finale of the 1878 version 1981 as well as a new edition of the 1881 version 1981 Gutmann s print of the 1888 version however remained beyond the pale as far as Nowak was concerned Critical appreciation of the symphony took an interesting turn in 1954 when Eulenburg issued a new edition of the 1888 version by the German born British musicologist Hans F Redlich According to Redlich the publication of the revised version in 1889 did not mark the end of the Fourth Symphony s long process of composition and revision as most commentators had assumed for on 18 January 1890 Bruckner supposedly began to indite yet another version of the symphony The strangest feature in this tangle of conflicting evidence is the fact that the so called Endfassung final version of the symphony which according to R Haas combined versions II and III i e essentially the same as the 1880 version and is embodied in HS 19476 of the Nat Bibl Vienna Austrian National Library seems to have been put on paper after the issue of the revised version i e the published 1888 version This emerges clearly from the Facsimile of its first page published as Plate IV in R Haas Anton Bruckner Potsdam 1934 p 128 which bears the date of its commencement Vienna January 18 1890 It is possible to see in this MS score as well as in its date a silent protest of Bruckner s against the published score of 1889 24 Redlich buttressed this argument by questioning the authenticity of a number of emendations to the score which he considered alien to Bruckner s native style Among these the following may be noted the introduction of piccolo and cymbals in bar 76 of the finale the use of pp cymbals in bar 473 of the finale and the use of muted horns in bar 147 of the finale the aperto command for which is omitted in bar 155 25 In 1969 Deryck Cooke repeated these arguments in his influential series of articles The Bruckner Problem Simplified going so far as to claim that Bruckner withheld his ultimate sanction by refusing to sign the copy sent to the printer 26 Cooke who referred to the 1888 version as the completely spurious Lowe Schalk score concluded that the existence of the alleged manuscript of 1890 to which Redlich had first drawn attention effectively annulled all revisions made after 1881 Korstvedt edit In 1996 however critical opinion of the Fourth Symphony was turned on its head by the American musicologist Benjamin Korstvedt fr who demonstrated that the manuscript referred to by Redlich and Cooke does not in fact exist Were it true that Bruckner made such a copy Cooke s claim would merit consideration But Bruckner never did Redlich and Cooke were misled by a photograph in Haas s biography of Bruckner This photograph which shows the first page of Bruckner s autograph score of the second version is cropped in such a way that the date 18 Janner 1878 which is mentioned by Haas seems to read 18 Janner 1890 27 28 Korstvedt has also refuted Haas s oft repeated argument that Bruckner was a diffident composer who lacked faith in his own ability and was willing to make concessions that contravened his own artistic judgement No evidence has been adduced in support of this assessment of the composer On the contrary there are first hand accounts from Bruckner s own associates that it was impossible to persuade him to accept emendations against his own better judgement It is Korstvedt s contention that while the preparation of the 1888 version was indeed a collaborative effort between Bruckner Lowe and probably also Franz and Joseph Schalk this in no way undermines its authorial status it still represents Bruckner s final thoughts on his Fourth Symphony and should be regarded as the true Endfassung or Fassung letzter Hand There is no evidence that Bruckner refused to sign the Stichvorlage He may have omitted to do so but this is also true of other Bruckner manuscripts whose authenticity is not doubted Furthermore there is no real evidence that Bruckner was forced to accept revisions in order to get the work published as Haas claimed The only condition that Gutmann made prior to publication was that he be paid 1 000 fl in advance to cover his costs Once this money was delivered to him he would have been quite happy presumably to print whatever version of the symphony Bruckner sent him In 2004 Korstvedt issued the first modern edition of the 1888 version of the symphony for the Gesamtausgabe 29 In 2019 Korstvedt issued a modern edition of the 1881 version 17 in 2021 an edition of the 1876 variant of the first version and in 2022 the 1878 version Composition history editThe following table summarizes the Fourth Symphony s complicated history of composition or Wirkungsgeschichte to use the critical term preferred by Bruckner scholars The principal sources for these data are Korstvedt 1996 and Redlich 1954 B Bruckner FS Fourth Symphony mvt movement 1874 2 January 24 January 21 February 10 April 13 June 25 July 5 August 22 November 1875 passim 1876 August September 12 October 1878 18 January 1 August 30 September 9 October December 1879 19 November 1880 5 June 1881 20 February 10 December 1885 1886 4 June Summer August 1 October October 16 November 1887 3 January Spring 9 May December 14 December 1888 22 January February 23 February 27 February 9 March 4 April 15 May 20 June 1889 September 1890 10 December 11 December 1891 18 April 1892 Spring 15 June B sketches the 1st mvt of his FS 1st mvt sketch of score is completed 1st mvt full score and instrumentation are worked out B begins to sketch 2nd mvt B begins to sketch 3rd mvt 3rd mvt is completed B begins to sketch 4th mvt 1st version 1874 of the FS is completed Unsuccessful attempts by B to have his FS performed B meets the progressive music critic Wilhelm Tappert at the inaugural Bayreuth Festival Tappert persuades the conductor Benjamin Bilse to perform the FS in Berlin B sends Bilse a score and a set of orchestral parts B writes to Tappert declaring his intention to thoroughly revise the FS before any performance He engages Tappert s efforts to recover the score and parts from Bilse without success B begins to revise the FS B begins composition of the Volksfest finale 1st revision completed 1878 version B writes to Tappert another unsuccessful attempt to recover score and parts from Bilse B describes the revised version of his FS and announces his intention of replacing the Scherzo with a new Hunt Scherzo Hunt Scherzo is composed B begins to compose a 3rd version of the finale to replace the Volksfest finale New finale is completed 1880 version 1880 version premiered in Vienna by the VPO conducted by Richter 1st premiere of a B symphony to be conducted by someone other than B B makes some changes to the symphony after the first performance resulting in the 1881 version A performance of the 1881 version in Karlsruhe under Felix Mottl is a failure 1st performance of a B symphony at which the composer is not present B sends the score of the 1881 version to publishers Bote and Bock of Berlin with a view to publication but it is rejected B sends the score of the 1881 version to publishers Schott of Mainz with a view to publication but it is again rejected 1st and 3rd movements of the 1881 version are performed at the Sondershausen Musikfest in Thuringia B makes some further changes while preparing the score to be sent with Anton Seidl to New York City resulting in the 1886 version B sends a copy of the score of the 1886 version to Anton Seidl who takes it to New York 2nd version 1878 1886 of the symphony set aside by B Hermann Levi sends a postcard to Viennese publisher Albert Gutmann interesting him in the publication of the FS Gutmann agrees to publish the FS but demands an advance fee of 1 000 marks 1 000 fl B writes to Levi rejecting Gutmann s terms as impossible for him to meet B relents and agrees to Gutmann s terms when it becomes clear that Levi will be able to raise the 1 000 fl does Gutmann receive the 1 000 fl now B and his collaborators Ferdinand Lowe Franz Schalk and Joseph Schalk begin to revise the FS for publication Franz Schalk writes to his brother Joseph telling him that Lowe has reorchestrated much of the FS with B s approval 1887 version completed partially preserved in some surviving orchestral parts from the premiere A planned performance of 1887 version in Munich under Levi is cancelled due to the unavailability of orchestral parts 1887 version is premiered in Vienna by the Vienna Philharmonic under Hans Richter The Stichvorlage engraver s copy of the 1887 version is extensively revised in B s hand completed and dated resulting in the 1888 version B writes to Franz Schalk asks him to thank Lowe for list of differences between score used at premiere on 22 January 1888 and revised Stichvorlage B sends Levi the Stichvorlage for a concert Levi was preparing to give in Munich on 14 April 1888 the concert was cancelled when Levi fell ill and asks him to have the orchestral parts amended accordingly at his B s expense attached to the Stichvorlage is Lowe s list of revisions B writes to Levi requests that the Stichvorlage and revised parts be sent to him Levi actually had a new set of parts drawn up from scratch 1886 version performed in New York under Anton Seidl B signs the contract for the publication of the FS does Gutmann receive his 1 000 fl now B writes to Arthur Nikisch the Stichvorlage has been sent via Gutmann to the printers Engelmann amp Muhlberg of Leipzig Gutmann finally publishes the 1888 version of B s FS this is the first printed edition of the work Gutmann issues a corrected edition of the 1888 version The 1888 version is performed in Munich under Franz Fischer deputizing for the indisposed Hermann Levi Fischer writes to B first rehearsal has had to be abandoned the handwritten orchestral parts were defective and had to be revised by a local copyist B writes to Levi asking him to send Fischer s revised orchestral parts to Gutmann for printing 3 more performances of the 1888 version take place using Fischer s revised handwritten orchestral parts Gutmann publishes the orchestral parts of the FS 1888 version and another print of the full score 1st performance of the FS using Gutmann s printed orchestral parts takes place in Vienna under Joseph SchalkInstrumentation editThe symphony requires an instrumentation of one pair each of flutes oboes clarinets bassoons with four horns three trumpets three trombones timpani and strings From the 1878 revision onwards a single bass tuba is also incorporated into the instrumentation The published score of 1889 introduces a part for third flute doubling on the piccolo and a pair of cymbals Recordings editThe first commercial recording of part of the symphony was of the scherzo from the 1888 version made by Clemens Krauss with the Vienna Philharmonic in 1929 The first commercial recording of the entire symphony was made by Karl Bohm with the Staatskapelle Dresden in 1936 in the Haas 1881 version The versions most often recorded are the Haas and Nowak editions of the 1880 score referred to as the 1881 and 1886 versions in the list above Any modern recording that does not specify this can be safely assumed to be one of these versions while early LPs and CD remasterings of old recordings are usually of Ferdinand Lowe s 1888 edition for example those by Wilhelm Furtwangler and Hans Knappertsbusch The first recording of the original 1874 version was by Kurt Woss with the Munich Philharmonic a live performance on 20 September 1975 The first studio recording of the 1874 version was by Eliahu Inbal with the Frankfurt Radio Symphony The first recording of the 1878 version was by Warren Cohen with the MusicaNova Orchestra a live performance on 1 May 2022 11 First version 1874 1876 edit Nowak edition 1975 based on the 1874 manuscript edit Kurt Woss conducting the Munich Philharmonic live performance 1975 Bruckner Haus Linz LP 2 12430 315 premiere of this version Eliahu Inbal conducting the Frankfurt Radio Symphony studio recording 1982 Teldec first commercial recording of this version Chitaru Asahina conducting the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra live performance 1982 JVC Dennis Russell Davies conducting the Bruckner Orchestra Linz live performance 2003 Arte Nova Kent Nagano conducting the Bavarian State Orchestra studio recording 2007 Sony Roger Norrington conducting the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra live performance 2007 Hanssler Simone Young conducting the Hamburg Philharmonic live performance 2007 Oehms Gerd Schaller conducting the Philharmonie Festiva live performance 2021 Profil Gunter Hanssler PH 22010 Francois Xavier Roth conducting the Gurzenich Orchestra Cologne live performance 2022 Myrios Classics Korstvedt edition 2021 based on the 1876 revision edit Jakub Hrusa conducting the Bamberger Symphoniker Bruckner 4 The three versions Accentus music CD Set ACC 30533 2020 Markus Poschner conducting the ORF Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra Bruckner Symphony No 4 1876 version Capriccio C8084 2022Version 2A 1878 edit Korstvedt edition 2022 edit Warren Cohen conducting the MusicaNova Orchestra 1 May 2022 MusicaNova BD DVD CD Premiere of the complete 1878 version Volksfest finale only edit Gennady Rozhdestvensky conducting the USSR Ministry of Culture Orchestra studio recording 1987 Melodiya First recording of this movement Uwe Christian Harrer with the Leondinger Symphony Orchestra Kultur CD SW010053 2 live 1996 Georg Tintner Royal Scottish National Orchestra studio recording 1998 Naxos Gerd Schaller conducting the Philharmonie Festiva Profil PH13049 live 2014 Jakub Hrusa conducting the Bamberger Symphoniker Bruckner 4 The three versions Accentus music CD Set ACC 30533 2020 Markus Poschner conducting the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra Capriccio LC08748 2022Andante and Volksfest finale edit Simon Rattle conducting the London Symphonic Orchestra Bruckner Symphony No 4 LSO Live LSO085 2022Version 2B 1881 1886 edit Haas edition 1936 rev 1944 based on the 1881 manuscript edit Karl Bohm conducting the Staatskapelle Dresden studio recording for HMV 1936 First recording of the complete symphony Otto Klemperer conducting the Concertgebouw Orchestra live performance 1947 Tahra Eduard van Beinum conducting the Concertgebouw Orchestra live performance 1952 Audiophile Bruno Walter conducting the Columbia Symphony Orchestra studio recording 1960 Sony CBS Bernard Haitink conducting the Concertgebouw Orchestra studio recording 1965 Philips Herbert von Karajan conducting the Berlin Philharmonic studio recording 1970 EMI Karl Richter conducting the West Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra live performance 1977 Altus Bernard Haitink conducting the Vienna Philharmonic studio recording 1985 Philips Sergiu Celibidache conducting the Munich Philharmonic live performance 1993 EMI Georg Tintner conducting the Royal Scottish National Orchestra studio recording 1996 Naxos Gunter Wand conducting the Berlin Philharmonic live performance 1998 BMG RCA Yannick Nezet Seguin conducting the Orchestre Metropolitain 2011 ATMA Classique Nowak edition 1953 based on the 1886 manuscript edit Eugen Jochum conducting the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra studio recording 1955 Deutsche Grammophon first commercial recording of this edition Otto Klemperer conducting the Philharmonia Orchestra studio recording 1963 EMI Eugen Jochum conducting the Berlin Philharmonic studio recording 1965 Deutsche Grammophon Sergiu Celibidache conducting the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra live performance 1969 Deutsche Grammophon Karl Bohm conducting the Vienna Philharmonic studio recording 1973 Decca London Eugen Jochum conducting the Concertgebouw Orchestra live performance 1975 Altus Georg Solti conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra studio recording 1981 London Riccardo Muti conducting the Berlin Philharmonic studio recording 1985 EMI Giuseppe Sinopoli conducting the Staatskapelle Dresden studio recording 1987 Deutsche Grammophon Riccardo Chailly conducting the Concertgebouw Orchestra studio recording 1989 Decca Nikolaus Harnoncourt conducting the Concertgebouw Orchestra studio recording 1997 Teldec Stanislaw Skrowaczewski conducting the Saarbrucken Radio Symphony Orchestra studio recording 1998 Arte Nova Oehms Classics Philippe Herreweghe conducting the Orchestre des Champs Elysees studio recording 2006 Harmonia Mundi Simon Rattle conducting the Berlin Philharmonic concert performance 2006 EMI Mariss Jansons conducting the Concertgebouw Orchestra concert performance 2008 RCO Live Bernard Haitink conducting the London Symphony Orchestra concert performance 2011 LSO live Korstvedt edition 2018 based on the 1881 manuscript edit Jakub Hrusa conducting the Bamberger Symphoniker Bruckner 4 The three versions Accentus music CD Set ACC 30533 2020 Markus Poschner conducting the Bruckner Orchestra Linz Anton Bruckner Sinfonie Nr 4 Es Dur 1878 1880 Romantische Capriccio C8084 2022Cohrs edition 2021 based on the 1881 manuscript edit Simon Rattle conducting the London Symphonic Orchestra Bruckner Symphony No 4 LSO Live LSO085 2022Third version 1888 edit First edition Gutmann 1889 edit Clemens Krauss conducting the Vienna Philharmonic studio recording 1929 scherzo only Earliest recording of any part of the symphony Bruno Walter conducting the NBC Symphony Orchestra live performance 1940 oldest surviving complete recording of this edition Wilhelm Furtwangler conducting the Vienna Philharmonic live performance Stuttgart 1951 multiple labels Wilhelm Furtwangler conducting the Vienna Philharmonic live performance Munich 1951 multiple labels Mahler reorchestration 1895 edit Gennady Rozhdestvensky conducting the USSR Ministry of Culture Orchestra 1984 Melodyia Andante and Finale heavily cut Anton Nanut conducting the Ljubljana Radio Symphony OrchestraKorstvedt critical edition 2004 edit Akira Naito conducting the Tokyo New City Orchestra 2005 Delta Classics first recording of this edition Osmo Vanska conducting the Minnesota Orchestra 2010 BIS Records Franz Welser Most conducting the Cleveland Orchestra 2012 Dirigent Jakub Hrusa conducting the Bamberger Symphoniker Bruckner 4 The three versions Accentus music CD Set ACC 30533 2020Published editions of the symphony editBruckner Anton 1890 Vierte romantische Symphonie Es dur fur grosses Orchester Vienna A J Gutmann OCLC 7059652 1936 Robert Haas ed Samtliche Werke Kritische Gesamtausgabe Band 4 I IV Symphonie Es Dur Fassung von 1878 mit dem Finale von 1880 Finale von 1878 Leipzig Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag OCLC 65881359 1974 Leopold Nowak ed Samtliche Werke Band IV 1 IV Symphonie Es dur Romantische Fassung von 1874 Vienna Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner Gesellschaft OCLC 37668282 1953 Leopold Nowak ed Samtliche Werke Band IV 2 IV Symphonie Es Dur Fassung von 1878 80 Vienna Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner Gesellschaft OCLC 1740968 1981 Leopold Nowak ed Samtliche Werke Band IV 2F IV Symphonie Es Dur Finale von 1878 Vienna Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner Gesellschaft OCLC 8202970 2004 Korstvedt Benjamin M ed Samtliche Werke Band IV 3 IV Symphonie Es Dur Fassung von 1888 Stichvorlage fur den Erstdruck von 1889 Vienna Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner Gesellschaft OCLC 56823813 2021 Benjamin M Korstvedt ed Neue Anton Bruckner Gesamtausgabe Band IV 1 IV Symphonie Es Dur Erste Fassung Vienna Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner Gesellschaft 2019 Benjamin M Korstvedt ed Neue Anton Bruckner Gesamtausgabe Band IV 2 IV Symphonie Es Dur Zweite Fassung Vienna Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner Gesellschaft Notes edit Constantin Floros as reported in Brown A Peter 2003 The second golden age of the Viennese symphony Brahms Bruckner Dvorak Mahler and selected contemporaries Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press p 219 ISBN 0 253 33488 8 Speer Albert Inside the Third Reich full citation needed a b c d e f Williamson John 2004 Programme symphony and absolute music In Williamson John ed The Cambridge Companion to Bruckner Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press p 110 ISBN 0 521 00878 6 Carragan 2020 p 112 Carragan 2020 p 118 a b William Carragan Timed Analysis Tables Symphnony No 4 PDF William Carragan Timed Analysis Tables Symphnony No 5 PDF B Korstvedt The versions of Bruckner s Fourth Symphony Carragan 2020 pp 102 103 On the new version of Bruckner Symphony No 4 a b The World Premiere of the 1878 Bruckner 4th Cooke 1969 described this movement as simply a recasting in 1880 of the 1878 sic finale into its present form Presumbably he meant a recasting of the 1874 finale which is much closer to the 1880 finale than is the Volksfest finale of 1878 a b Bruckner Symphony Versions bruckner webs com Carragan 2020 pp 98 109 amp 113 Leaflet of the CD box Bruckner 4 The three versions Accentus music LC48946 a b c Introduction Symphony No 4 from Bruckner Anton 1990 Robert Haas ed Symphonies nos 4 and 7 in full score New York Dover p xi ISBN 0 486 26262 6 a b New Anton Bruckner Complete Edition According to The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians ed Stanley Sadie 2001 the Stichvorlage is lost See Korstvedt 1996 for a description of this document MWV Symphony No 4 in E flat major Mahler did cut and reorchestrate the symphony but it was the 1888 version he altered Korstvedt 2004 p 125 Willkommen auf der Homepage vom Musikwissenschaftlichen Verlag www mwv at Simpson 1992 for example whose critical estimation of the 1888 version was damning Redlich 1954 pp v vi Redlich 1954 p vi Cooke 1969 p 364 Korstvedt 2004 p 129 Korstvedt 1996 p 21 Bruckner amp Korstvedt 2004 References edit Carragan William 2020 Anton Bruckner Eleven Symphonies Windsor Connecticut Bruckner Society of America ISBN 978 1 938911 59 0 Cooke Deryck April 1969 The Bruckner Problem Simplified The Musical Times 110 1514 362 365 doi 10 2307 951471 JSTOR 951471 Korstvedt Benjamin October 1996 The First Published Edition of Anton Bruckner s Fourth Symphony Collaboration and Authenticity 19th Century Music University of California Press 20 1 3 26 doi 10 2307 746665 ISSN 0148 2076 JSTOR 746665 Korstvedt Benjamin 2004 Bruckner editions the revolution revisited In Williamson John ed The Cambridge Companion to Bruckner Cambridge University Press p 129 ISBN 0 521 00878 6 Redlich Hans 1954 Introduction to Bruckner s Symphony No 4 in E major Romantische London New York Eulenburg Simpson Robert 1992 1966 The Essence of Bruckner An Essay Towards the Understanding of his Music Revised ed London Gollancz ISBN 0 575 05221 X Further reading editKurth Ernst 1925 Bruckner in German Berlin M Hesse OCLC 6731647 Tovey Donald Francis 1935 Essays in Musical Analysis Vol II Symphonies London Oxford University Press OCLC 912417 External links editAnton Bruckner Critical Complete Edition Symphony No 4 in E flat major Symphony No 4 Bruckner Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Free score 1888 edition from the Indiana University school of music Program notes for a performance of the 1888 version of the symphony Program notes for a San Francisco Symphony performance of the 1880 version Article by Wayne Reisig at AllMusic com Complete discography by John Berky Bruckner Symphony Versions by David Griegel Time analysis versions 1874 1880 and 1888 William Carragan Portal nbsp Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Symphony No 4 Bruckner amp oldid 1175711301, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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