Anton Bruckner composed his Symphony No. 5 in B flat major as his contrapuntal summa, and structured it so the massive Finale -- a combination of an expanded sonata form and an elaborate multi-subject fugue -- would be perceived as the culmination, with the three earlier movements acting as a long, discursive introduction. In theory, this is an interesting use of form, but in practice, it takes extraordinary skill to maintain tension for the first 50 minutes and get a satisfying payoff at the conclusion. Marcus Bosch and ...
Read More
Anton Bruckner composed his Symphony No. 5 in B flat major as his contrapuntal summa, and structured it so the massive Finale -- a combination of an expanded sonata form and an elaborate multi-subject fugue -- would be perceived as the culmination, with the three earlier movements acting as a long, discursive introduction. In theory, this is an interesting use of form, but in practice, it takes extraordinary skill to maintain tension for the first 50 minutes and get a satisfying payoff at the conclusion. Marcus Bosch and the Aachen Symphony Orchestra are among the few artists who make the symphony sound as it was intended, and despite the numerous pauses and the puzzle-like nature of this work, their control and energy sustain the listener's interest from the mysteriously fragmented beginning to the glorious peroration at the end. Their performance is enhanced by the marvelously sensitive reproduction of this hybrid SACD, which presents the music with extraordinary depth and nuance, and captures...
Read Less