Between 1975 and 1981, Herbert von Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic recorded legacy-worthy performances for Deutsche Grammophon of Anton Bruckner's nine numbered symphonies, and this 2010 box set brings them all together in one convenient edition. From conducting the symphonies for over four decades, Karajan learned to control and sustain the rhythmic pulse over a long time frame, and this became his special claim to fame in Bruckner: a serious challenge most other conductors wouldn't take up and a goal Karajan ...
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Between 1975 and 1981, Herbert von Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic recorded legacy-worthy performances for Deutsche Grammophon of Anton Bruckner's nine numbered symphonies, and this 2010 box set brings them all together in one convenient edition. From conducting the symphonies for over four decades, Karajan learned to control and sustain the rhythmic pulse over a long time frame, and this became his special claim to fame in Bruckner: a serious challenge most other conductors wouldn't take up and a goal Karajan constantly strove to achieve. As a result of his concentrated efforts and of maintaining a clear focus on Bruckner's symphonic trajectories by directing all the music's mounting energies to a cathartic release at the end, these performances are regarded by many as belonging in a class by themselves and impossible to overrate for their unity, coherence, and clarity. Of course, any large symphonic cycle can and should be interpreted in different ways, and the great recordings by Eugen Jochum,...
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