An Index of ionarts Discographies
Like the Beethoven Piano Sonata Cycle Survey, the Dvořák Symphony Cycle Survey, the Bach Organ Cycle Survey, and the Sibelius Symphony Cycle Survey, this is a mere inventory of what has been recorded and whether it is still available. Favorites are denoted with the “ionarts’ choice” graphic.
There are several incomplete, out of print, hard to get, and just plain obscure (at least in the West) Bruckner Symphony cycles that are not listed below. This includes all but the third of six (!) complete and partial cycles of the Japanese conductor, founder of the Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra, and Furtwängler-inspired Bruckner-nut Takashi Asahina. (His Sixth and last, from within months of his death, can be found here.) That also includes the once ultra-inclusive Gennadi Rozhdestvensky cycle on Melodiya, which has been cobbled together from various, dubious sources as a sketchy MP3 offering on Amazon. While some incomplete and unboxed cycles have been included (Norrington, because I think his traversals are worthwhile), others (Roegner, on Edel) have not. [Ed. It has now.] There is no particular logic to that decision.
Bruckner wrote 11 Symphonies (counting the Study Symphony in f, “00”, and the retracted Symphony in d, “0”). Ten of them are complete, and the unfinished “Ninth” exists in various performance versions. The inclusiveness of a set is indicated: 00-9* would mean all 11 Symphonies including a completed 9th; 1-9 would indicate the conventional nine, with only the three finished movements for the Ninth. There are no cycles that include “00” but not “0”. Where the Te Deum is included in a set, it is mentioned; “Te Deum (F)” means that the Te Deum directly follows the third movement of the Ninth in the make-shift completion suggested by Bruckner. There are a few different ‘performing editions’ of the finale, most prominently William Carragan’s (in three revisions) and those based on the work of Nicola Samale and Giuseppe Mazzuca (1984). With John A. Phillips and Benjamin-Gunnar Cohrs included on their team, they produced the 1992 Samale/Mazzuca/Phillips/Cohrs Completions below abbreviated SMPC, along with the year of the particular revised version.
Bernard Haitink recorded a Bruckner Symphony cycle with the Concertgebouw for Philips, which is temporarily out of print. [Ed.: It can be had as part of the catch-all "Haitink Symphony Edition" box set, along with his Beethoven, Brahms, Schumann, Tchaikovsky, and Mahler] Meanwhile he was and is busily recording with his favorite orchestras (BRSO, CSO, Dresden Staatskapelle, LSO, and RCO of course). From those recordings, many in the Super Audio format, one can cobble together an incomplete Bruckner cycle of astounding quality. It's bound to expand over the next few years, and we'll be the richer for it.
[Ed.08/03/18] I've now added Ivor Bolton's cycle - the third to appear on Oehms! Somebody loves Bruckner overe there!
[Ed.03/03/18] Yannick Nézet-Séguin's cycle has just been released and added below. The mostly-Kurt Eichhorn-cycle of the Bruckner Orchester Linz has also been added, at last.
[Ed.10/09/17] A massive, much overdue update: SWR Classic has at last issued Hans Rosbaud's near-complete cycle (2-9) in never before achieved sound quality. Kurt Masur's Bruckner has been re-issued. Daniel Barenboim has recorded a third cycle, now, for the first time with "his" orchestra, the Berliner Staatskapelle. I have reviewed the 7th on Forbes: "Classical CD of the Week: Bruckner for DG" and the 4th here on ionarts: "Dip Your Ears, No. 163 (Visual Bruckner)". Jaap van Zweden had his excellent Bruckner cycle issued on Challenge Records on SACDs. The Korean Symphony Orchestra has recorded a cycle for Korean Decca under Hun-Joung Lim. The Riccardo Chailly cycle has been re-issued cheaply on Decca/Eloquence. Mario Venzago finished his controversial cycle on CPO. Brilliant Classic has put all of Heinz Rögner's Bruckner with the RSO Berlin together and made a complete cycle out of it by adding contemporary East German performances of Vaclav Neumann, Kurt Sanderling, and Franz Konwitschny to it. The Bruckner Orchestra Linz' cycle with Dennis-Russell Davies will be re-issued by SOny in December of this year. And Simone Young completed her very complete set ("00" + "0"), which has been released on Oehms. Global Amazon links have been added in all the lines I had to edit. The incomplete cycles of Dohnanyi & Harnoncourt will be added in the next round of edits...
[Ed.4/25/16] Out of the vaults from the SWR (South West German Radio) comes a new-old cycle with Michael Gielen. The picture is included below; a functioning link will be added when available.
[Ed.5/18/15] Speaking of the superlative Skrowaczewski cycle: It has been re-released at a budget price where it might be anybody’s first choice now!
[Ed.1/30/13] Curiously the smallish Oehms label is working on two concurrent Bruckner cycles, adding to their superlative Skrowaczewski cycle one on SACD’s with the Hamburg Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Simone Young (1-4 & 8 so far; "0" will appear in April of 2013, the rest—including "00"—will be recorded by 2014/15; past experiences with this conductor have me made avoid this cycle, so far), and another with the Salzburg Mozarteum Orchestra and the genial Ivor Bolton who is only Symphony 1 & 2 away from the standard 9. (No timetable yet, when, but planned.) These cycles will be included here when they are completed.
Follow @ClassicalCritic
Schallers, Youngs and Venzago cycles are also complete now :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the reminder! I shall add them before long... when I've recovered from updating and revamping the Sibelius cycle survey. :-)
ReplyDeletejust see there are also some uncompleted cycles (Sinopoli, Norrington, etc.). maybe you should also add the uncomplete cycles from Harnoncourt and v.Dohnanyi (Symphonies 3 - 9 )
ReplyDelete...and a new complete set from Barenboim/Staatskapelle Berlin (download only) has also just dropped, available on iTunes.
ReplyDeletehttp://smarturl.it/BrucknerComplete
Matt: This Barenboim is presumably the audio-version of his live cycle so far issued on DVD/bluray by Accentus?! I will include it when it is available in toto in some hard copy format.
ReplyDeleteYes, Dohnanyi & Harnoncourt probably deserve their inclusion... 3-9 is (sadly, esp. as No.2 is wonderful) basically a cycle in Bruckner.
Upcoming is also Dausgaard on BIS... and Schaller is now complete but for the "00" which he will presumably add, too. Thanks for all the tips & hints!!!
Jens
One more thing, Cambreling and SWR Baden-Baden und Freiburg (now disbanded and form with SWR Stuttgart together into a new SWRSO) finished 3, 4, 6, 7, & 9. However, not only the orchestra but also the record label Glor has been cut, sadly.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment re: Cambreling!
ReplyDeleteMight I suggest adding the terrific (if incomplete) Sawallisch/Bavarian State Orchestra digital set on Orfeo (1,5,6,9)? Wonderful stuff (you could even supplement it with a 3 and 5 he did with the Philadephians)...
ReplyDeleteYou might also include Eichorn's set with the Bruckner Orchestra Linz (00, 3, and 4 were conducted by Martin Sieghart), also in digital. Supplemented by his extraordinary live 5th with the BRSO in St. Florian's Cathedral.
Thanks for your work - you're doing a wonderful thing. I will continue to read your writing with interest.
Thanks for the comment and the suggestion and the kind words! Will consider and put something together along those lines.
ReplyDelete(And sorry to get back so tardily; I don't get notice of comments, so it takes my searching for them to find them. But I always do, as I try to keep these discographies fairly updated.)
Cheers & best,
Jens
There are also now the multi-conducter cycles from the Bavarian RSO on BRKlassik, the VPO on Decca Eloquence, and the Berlin PO on their house label.
ReplyDelete