
Anton Bruckner wearing the
Order of Franz Joseph (portrait by Josef Büche).
Anton Bruckner (4 September 1824 – 11 October 1896) was an Austrian
composer known for his symphonies, masses, and motets. The former are considered emblematic of the final stage of Austro-German Romanticism because of their rich harmonic language, complex polyphony, and considerable length. Bruckner's compositions helped to define contemporary musical radicalism, owing to their dissonances, unprepared modulations, and roving harmonies.
Unlike other radicals, such as
Wagner or
Hugo Wolf who fit the
enfant terrible mold, Bruckner showed
extreme humility before other musicians,
Wagner in particular. This apparent dichotomy between
Bruckner the man and Bruckner the composer hampers efforts to
describe his life in a way that gives a straightforward context for
his music.
His works, the symphonies in particular, had detractors, most
notably the influential Austrian critic
Eduard Hanslick, and other supporters of
Brahms, who pointed to their large size, use
of repetition, and Bruckner's propensity to
revise many of his works, often with
the assistance of colleagues, and his apparent indecision about
which versions he preferred.
Biography
Anton
Bruckner was born in Ansfelden
on September 4, 1824. His father, a
schoolmaster and organist, was his first music teacher. He died
when Anton was 13 years old. Bruckner worked for a few years as a
teacher's assistant, fiddling at village dances at night to
supplement his income.
He studied at the Augustinian monastery in St.
Florian
, becoming an organist there in 1851. In
1855, he took up a counterpoint course with
Simon Sechter. He later studied with
Otto Kitzler, who introduced him to the music
of
Richard Wagner, which Bruckner
studied extensively from 1863 onwards. Bruckner continued his
studies to the age of 40. Bruckner's genius, unlike that of a child
prodigy (
Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart, for example), did not appear until well into the fourth
decade of his life. Furthermore, broad fame and acceptance did not
come until he was over 60. A devout
Catholic who loved to drink beer,
Bruckner was out of step with his contemporaries. In 1861 he had
already made the acquaintance of
Franz
Liszt who, like Bruckner, had a strong, Catholic religious
faith and who first and foremost was a harmonic innovator,
initiating the new German school together with Wagner. Soon after
Bruckner had ended his studies under Sechter and Kitzler, he wrote
his first mature work, the Mass in D Minor.
In 1868,
after Sechter had died, Bruckner hesitantly accepted Sechter's post
as a teacher of music theory at the
Vienna Conservatory
, during which time he concentrated most of his
energy on writing symphonies. These symphonies, however,
were poorly received, at times considered "wild" and "nonsensical".
He later
accepted a post at the Vienna University
in 1875, where he tried to make music theory a part
of the curriculum. Overall, he was unhappy in Vienna
, which was
musically dominated by the critic Eduard
Hanslick. At the time there was a feud between advocates
of the music of Wagner and Brahms; by aligning himself with Wagner,
Bruckner made an unintentional enemy out of Hanslick. However, he
was not without supporters;
Deutsche Zeitung's music
critic
Theodor Helm, and famous
conductors such as
Arthur Nikisch and
Franz Schalk constantly tried to bring
his music to the public, and for this purpose proposed
'improvements' for making Bruckner's music more acceptable to the
public. While Bruckner allowed these changes, he also made sure in
his will to bequeath his original scores to the Vienna National
Library, confident of their musical validity. Another proof of
Bruckner's confidence in his artistic ability is that he often
started work on a new symphony just a few days after finishing the
previous one.
In addition to his symphonies, Bruckner wrote
masses,
motets and other
sacred
choral works, and a few chamber works,
including a string quintet. Unlike his
romantic symphonies, Bruckner's choral works
are often conservative and
contrapuntal
in style.
Biographers generally characterize Bruckner as a very simple man,
and numerous anecdotes abound as to his dogged pursuit of his
chosen craft and his humble acceptance of the fame that eventually
came his way. Once, after a rehearsal of his
Fourth Symphony, the well-meaning
Bruckner tipped the conductor
Hans Richter: "When the symphony
was over," Richter related, "Bruckner came to me, his face beaming
with enthusiasm and joy. I felt him press a coin into my hand.
'Take this' he said, 'and drink a glass of beer to my health.'"
Richter, of course, accepted the coin, a
Maria Theresa thaler, and wore it on
his watch-chain ever after.
Bruckner
was a renowned organist in his day, impressing audiences in France
in 1869, and England in 1871, giving six recitals on a new Henry Willis organ at Royal Albert
Hall
in London
and five
more at the Crystal
Palace
. Though he wrote no major works for the
organ, his improvisation sessions sometimes yielded ideas for the
Symphonies. He taught organ performance at the Conservatory; among
his students were
Hans Rott and
Franz Schmidt.
Gustav
Mahler, who called Bruckner his "forerunner", attended the
conservatory at this time (Walter n.d.).
Bruckner never married; he was attracted to teenage girls, who
turned down the proposals of the older man. One such was the
daughter of a friend, called Louise; in his grief he is believed to
have written the cantata "Entsagen" (Renunciation). His affection
for teenage girls led to an accusation of impropriety where he
taught music, and while he was exonerated, he decided to
concentrate on teaching boys afterwards. His calendar for 1874
details the names of girls who appealed to him, and the list of
such girls in all his diaries was very long. In 1880 he fell for a
17-year-old peasant girl in the cast of the Oberammergau Passion
Play. His interest in girls appears to have been based on the
assumed virtue retained through their being young, and lasted as
long as they seemed worthy of marriage; he feared sin. His
unsuccessful proposals to teenage girls continued into his
seventies; one potential relationship that might have been suitable
when he was older came to nothing because the girl would not
convert to Catholicism.
In July 1886, the emperor decorated him with the
Order of Franz Joseph.
Bruckner died in Vienna in 1896, of natural causes. He is buried in
the crypt of St. Florian monastery church, right below his favorite
organ.
The
Anton Bruckner Private University for
Music, Drama, and Dance
, an institution of higher education in Linz
, close to
his native Ansfelden, was named after him in 1932 ("Bruckner
Conservatory Linz" until 2004). The
Bruckner Orchester Linz was also
named in his honor.
Works
Sometimes Bruckner's works are referred to by WAB numbers, from the
Werkverzeichnis Anton Bruckner, a catalogue of Bruckner's
works edited by Renate Grasberger.
The revision issue has generated controversy. A common explanation
for the multiple versions is that Bruckner was willing to revise
his work on the basis of harsh, uninformed criticism from his
colleagues. "The result of such advice was to awaken immediately
all the insecurity in the non-musical part of Bruckner's
personality," musicologist
Deryck Cooke
writes. "Lacking all self-assurance in such matters, he felt
obliged to bow to the opinions of his friends, 'the experts,' to
permit ... revisions and even to help make them in some cases."
This explanation was given enormous cachet when it was championed
by Bruckner scholar
Robert
Haas, who was the chief editor of the first critical editions
of Bruckner's works published by the
International Bruckner
Society; it continues to be found in the majority of program
notes and biographical sketches concerning Bruckner. It was however
sharply criticized by scholars such as Haas's successor
Leopold Nowak, Benjamin Korstvedt and
conductor
Leon Botstein who argue that
Haas' explanation is at best idle speculation, at worst a shady
justification of Haas' own editorial decisions. Also, it has been
pointed out that Bruckner often started work on a symphony just
days after finishing the one before. As Cooke writes, "In spite of
continued opposition and criticism, and many well-meaning
exhortations to caution from his friends, he looked neither to
right nor left, but simply got down to work on the next
symphony."
Symphonies
Style
Bruckner's Symphonies are all in four movements (though he was
unable to complete the finale of the Ninth), starting with a
modified
sonata allegro form, a slow
movement, a
scherzo in
3/4 time, and a modified sonata allegro form
finale. (In the Eighth, Ninth, and one version of the Second, the
slow movements and scherzi are reversed. The Fourth features a
scherzo in which the outer sections are in 2/4 meter, not the
customary 3/4.) They are scored for a fairly standard orchestra of
woodwinds in pairs, four horns, two or three trumpets, three
trombones, tuba, timpani and strings. The later symphonies increase
this complement, but not by much. Notable is the use of
Wagner tubas in his last three symphonies. With
the exception of
Symphony No. 4, none of
Bruckner's Symphonies has subtitles, and most of the nicknames were
not thought up by the composer. Bruckner's works are trademarked
with powerful
codas and grand finales,
as well as the frequent use of
unison
passages and orchestral
tutti. His
style of orchestral writing was criticized by his Viennese
contemporaries, but by the middle of the 20th century musicologists
recognized that Bruckner's orchestration was modeled after the
sound of his primary instrument, the
pipe
organ.
Nicholas Temperley writes in the
New Grove Dictionary of
Music and Musicians that Bruckner
alone succeeded in creating a new school of symphonic
writing....
Some have classified him as a conservative, some as a
radical.
Really he was neither, or alternately was a fusion of
both....
[H]is music, though Wagnerian in its orchestration and
its in its huge rising and falling periods, patently has its roots
in older styles.
Bruckner took Beethoven's Ninth Symphony as his
starting-point....
The introduction to the first movement, beginning
mysteriously and climbing slowly with fragments of the first theme
to the gigantic full statement of that theme, was taken over by
Bruckner; so was the awe-inspiring coda of the first
movement.
The scherzo and slow movement, with their alternation
of melodies, are models for Bruckner's spacious middle movements,
while the finale with a grand culminating hymn is a feature of
almost every Bruckner symphony.
Bruckner is the first composer since Schubert about whom it is possible to make
such generalizations.
His symphonies deliberately followed a pattern, each
one building on the achievements of its
predecessors....
His melodic and harmonic style changed little, and it
had as much of Schubert in it as of Wagner....
His technique in the development and transformation of themes, learnt
from Beethoven, Liszt and Wagner, was
unsurpassed, and he was almost the equal of Brahms in the art of
melodic variation.
Cooke adds, also in the
New Grove,
Despite its general debt to Beethoven and Wagner, the
"Bruckner Symphony" is a unique conception, not only because of the
individuality of its spirit and its materials, but even more
because of the absolute originality of its formal
processes.
At first, these processes seemed so strange and
unprecedented that they were taken as evidence of sheer
incompetence....
Now it is recognized that Bruckner's unorthodox
structural methods were inevitable....
Bruckner created a new and monumental type of symphonic
organism, which abjured the tense, dynamic continuity of Beethoven,
and the broad, fluid continuity of Wagner, in order to express
something profoundly different from either composer, something
elemental and metaphysical.
In a concert review, Bernard Holland described parts of the first
movements of Bruckner's sixth and seventh symphonies as follows:
"There is the same slow, broad introduction, the drawn-out climaxes
that grow, pull back and then grow some more — a sort of musical
coitus interruptus."
In the 2001 Second Edition of the
New Grove, Mark Evan
Bonds called the Bruckner symphonies "monumental in scope and
design, combining lyricism with an inherently polyphonic design....
Bruckner favored an approach to large-scale form that relied more
on large-scale thematic and harmonic juxtaposition. Over the course
of his output, one senses an ever-increading interest in cyclic
integration that culminates in his masterpiece, the Symphony no.8
in C minor, a work whose final page integrates the main themes of
all four movements simultaneously."
Works
Otto Kitzler, Bruckner's last composition teacher, set him three
final tasks as the climax of his studies: a choral work, an
overture, and a symphony. The latter, completed in 1863, was then
Bruckner's
Study Symphony in
F minor. Bruckner later rejected this work, but he did not
destroy it. While it certainly reminds one of earlier composers
such as
Robert Schumann, it
undeniably also bears the hallmarks of the later Bruckner style.
Kitzler simply commented that the work was "not very inspired". It
was first performed in 1924 and not published until 1973 and is
occasionally listed as
Symphony No. 00.
Bruckner's
Symphony No.
1 in C minor (sometimes
called by Bruckner "das kecke Beserl", roughly translated as "the
saucy maid"Schōnzeler (1970): 67. "No. 1 he always called '''das
kecke Beserl''' (impossible to translate into English—perhaps 'the
cheeky brat').") was completed in 1866, but the original text of
this symphony was not reconstructed until 1998. Instead, it is
commonly known in two versions, the so-called
Linz Version
which is based mainly on rhythmical revisions made in 1877, and the
completely revised
Vienna Version of 1891, which begins to
reveal his mature style, e.g.
Symphony No. 8.
Next was the so-called
Symphony No. 0 in D minor of 1869, a work which
was so harshly criticized that Bruckner retracted it completely,
and it was not performed at all during his lifetime, hence his
choice for the number of the symphony.
The
Symphony No. 2 in C minor was revised in 1873,
1876, 1877 and 1892. It is sometimes called the
Symphony of
Pauses for its dramatic use of whole-orchestra rests, which
accentuate the form of the piece. In the Carragan edition of the
1872 version, the Scherzo is placed second and the Adagio third. It
is in the same key as No. 1.
Bruckner presented his
Symphony No. 3 in D minor, written in 1873, to
Wagner along with the Second, asking which of them he might
dedicate to him. Wagner chose the Third, and Bruckner sent him a
fair copy soon later, which is why the original version of the
Wagner Symphony is preserved so well despite revisions in
1874, 1876, 1877 and 1888/1889. One thing that helped Wagner choose
which Symphony to accept the dedication was that the 3rd contains
quotations from Wagner's music dramas, such as
Die Walküre
and
Lohengrin. These quotations were taken out in revised
versions.
Bruckner's first great success was his
Symphony No. 4 in E flat major, more commonly
known as the
Romantic Symphony, the only epithet applied
to a symphony by the composer himself. The 1874 version has been
seldom played and success came only after major revisions in 1878,
including a completely new scherzo and finale, and again in
1880/1881, once again with a completely rewritten finale. This
version was premiered in 1881 (under the conductor
Hans Richter). Bruckner made more
minor revisions of this symphony in 1886-1888.
Bruckner's
Symphony No.
5 in B flat major crowns
his most productive era of symphony-writing, finished at the
beginning of 1876. The original version seems unrecoverable and we
know only the thoroughly revised version of 1878. Many consider
this symphony to be Bruckner's lifetime masterpiece in the area of
counterpoint. For example, the Finale
is a combined
fugue and sonata form movement:
the first theme (characterized by the downward leap of an octave)
appears in the exposition as a four-part fugue in the strings and
the concluding theme of the exposition is presented first as a
chorale in the brass, then as a four part fugue in the development,
and culminating in a double fugue with the first theme at the
recapitulation; additionally, the coda combines not only these two
themes but also the main theme of the first movement. Bruckner
never heard it played by an orchestra.
Symphony No. 6 in A major, written in
1879-1881, is an oft-neglected work; whereas the
Bruckner rhythm (two quarters plus a quarter
triplet or vice versa) is an important part of his previous
symphonies, it pervades this work, particularly in the first
movement, making it particularly difficult to perform.
Symphony No. 7 in E major was the most beloved
of Bruckner's symphonies with audiences of the time, and is still
popular. It was written 1881-1883 and revised in 1885. During the
time that Bruckner began work on this Symphony, he was aware that
Wagner's death was imminent, and so the Adagio is slow mournful
music for Wagner, and for the first time in Bruckner's oeuvre, the
Wagner tuba is included in the
orchestra.
Bruckner began composition of his
Symphony No. 8 in C minor in 1884. In 1887
Bruckner sent the work to
Hermann Levi,
the conductor who had led his Seventh to great success. Levi, who
had said Bruckner’s Seventh Symphony was the greatest symphony
written after Beethoven, believed that the Eighth was a confusing
jumble. Bruckner was devastated by Levi's assessment. Bruckner
revised the work, sometimes with the aid of
Franz Schalk, and completed this new version in
1890. Cooke writes that "Bruckner not only recomposed [the
Eighth]... but greatly improved it in a number of ways.... This is
the one symphony that Bruckner did not fully achieve in his first
definite version, to which there can be no question of going
back."
The final accomplishment of Bruckner's life was to be his
Symphony No. 9 in D minor which he started in
August 1887, and which he dedicated "To God the Beloved." The first
three movements were completed by the end of 1894, the Adagio alone
taking 18 months to complete. Work was delayed by the composer's
poor health and by his compulsion to revise his early symphonies,
and by the time of his death in 1896 he had not finished the last
movement. The first three movements remained unperformed until
their premiere in Vienna (in
Ferdinand Löwe's version) on 11 February
1903.
Bruckner suggested using his
Te Deum as a
Finale, which would complete the homage to
Beethoven's
Ninth symphony (also in
D minor). The problem was that the Te Deum is in
C major, while the 9th Symphony is
D minor, and, although Bruckner began sketching a
transition from the Adagio key of
E major to
the triumphant key of C major, he did not pursue the idea. There
have been several attempts to complete these sketches and prepare
them for performance, as well as completions of his later sketches
for an instrumental Finale, but only the first three movements of
the Symphony are usually performed.
Sacred choral works
Bruckner wrote a
Te Deum,
settings of various
Psalms (including Psalm
150 in the 1890s), various
motets (among them
settings of
Christus factus est pro nobis and
Ave Maria), and at least seven
Masses. His
Requiem in d minor of 1849 is the
earliest work Bruckner himself considered worthy of preservation.
It shows the clear influence of Mozart's Requiem (also in d minor)
and similar works of Michael Haydn. His early Masses were usually
short Austrian
Landmessen for use in local churches and
did not always set all the numbers of the ordinary. The three
Masses Bruckner wrote in the 1860s and revised later on in his life
are more often performed. The Masses numbered
1 in D minor and
3 in F minor are for solo singers,
chorus and orchestra, while
No. 2
in E minor is for chorus and a small group of wind instruments,
and was written in an attempt to meet the Cecilians halfway. The
Cecilians wanted to rid church music of instruments entirely. No. 3
was clearly meant for concert, rather than liturgical performance,
and it is the only one of his Masses in which he set the first line
of the Gloria, "Gloria in excelsis Deo", and of the Credo, "Credo
in unum Deum", to music. (In concert performances of the other
Masses, these lines are intoned by a tenor soloist in the way a
priest would, with a line of
plainsong).
Other music
As a young man Bruckner sang in men's choirs and wrote music for
them. This music is rarely performed. Biographer Derek Watson
characterizes the pieces for men's choir as being "of little
concern to the non-German listener". Of thirty such pieces,
Helgoland is the only secular vocal work Bruckner thought
worthy enough to bequeath to the Vienna National Library.
The Overture in G minor is occasionally included in recordings of
the Symphonies, and it is one of the works Bruckner wrote during
his apprentice with Otto Kitzler. At that time he also wrote a
March in D minor and three short orchestral pieces. These works
already show hints of Bruckner's emerging style.
A String Quartet in C minor was discovered decades after Bruckner's
death, but is only of interest as a student composition. The later
String Quintet in F major, contemporaneous with the Fifth and Sixth
Symphonies, has been frequently performed.
There is an orchestral Symphonic Prelude that is sometimes
attributed to Bruckner and sometimes to Mahler. It was discovered
in the Vienna National Library in 1974 in a piano duet
transcription and later orchestrated by Albrecht Gürsching, who did
not know the original orchestral score (published by Doblinger,
Vienna). It is likely the work of one of Bruckner's students.
Bruckner's Two Aequale for three trombones is a solemn, brief
work.
He also wrote Lancer-Quadrille for piano. Among his most unusual
and evocative compositions is the choral
Abendzauber
(1878) for tenor, yodelers and four alpine horns. It was never
performed in Bruckner's lifetime.
Bruckner never wrote an opera, and as much as he was a fan of
Wagner's music dramas, he was uninterested in drama. In 1893 he
thought about writing an opera called
Astra based on a
novel by
Gertrud
Bollé-Hellmund.Although he attended performances of Wagner's
operas, he was much more interested in the music than the plot.
After seeing Wagner's
Götterdämmerung, he asked:
"Tell me, why did they burn the woman at the end?" Nor did Bruckner
ever write an oratorio.
Reception in the 20th century
Because of the long duration and vast orchestral canvas of much of
his music, Bruckner's popularity has greatly benefited from the
introduction of long-playing media and from improvements in
recording technology.
Decades
after his death, the Nazis approved of
Bruckner's music, and Hitler even consecrated
a bust of Bruckner in a widely photographed ceremony in 1937 at
Regensburg
's Walhalla
temple
. Bruckner's music was among the most popular
in Nazi Germany and the Adagio from his 7th Symphony was broadcast
by the German radio (Deutscher Reichsrundfunk) upon announcing the
news of Hitler's death on 1 May 1945. This didn't hurt Bruckner's
standing in the media though, and several movies and TV productions
in Europe and the United States have used excerpts from Bruckner's
music ever since the 1950s. Nor did the
Israel Philharmonic Orchestra
ever ban Bruckner's music as they have Wagner's, even recording
with
Zubin Mehta the Eighth Symphony.
Bruckner, unlike Wagner, is not associated with antisemitism.
In part because they both wrote long symphonies, and in part
because of
Bruno Walter's essay,
Bruckner and Mahler were often mentioned together in the 20th
Century.
Bruckner's symphonic works, much maligned in Vienna in his
lifetime, now have an important place in the tradition and musical
repertoire of the
Vienna
Philharmonic Orchestra.
Unlike many other famous composers, Bruckner has never been
portrayed in a fictional film. There is
Ken
Russell's TV movie
The Strange Affliction of Anton
Bruckner, starring
Peter
Mackriel, which fictionalizes Bruckner's real-life stay at a
sanatorium because of
Obsessive-compulsive disorder
(or 'numeromania' as it was then described), and a German TV movie,
but no feature films other than a documentary.
However, "
Visconti used the music
of Bruckner for his
Senso
(1953), its plot concerned with the Austrian invasion of Italy in
the 1860s." The score by
Carl Davis for
Ben-Hur takes
"inspiration from Bruckner to achieve reverence in biblical
scenes."
Conductors
Among the conductors most associated with the works of Bruckner,
going in chronological order, the first to be mentioned should
perhaps be
Bruno Walter, who acted as
an "ambassador" for Bruckner in the United States; made celebrated
recordings of symphonies 4, 7 and 9 late in his career; wrote an
essay on "Bruckner and Mahler".
Otto Klemperer made one of the first two
recordings of Bruckner (the adagio of the Eighth Symphony from 1924
[7255]).
Wilhelm Furtwängler made his
conducting debut with the Ninth Symphony in 1906 and conducted
Bruckner constantly throughout his career.
Hans Knappertsbusch was unusual
in continuing to perform the first published editions of Bruckner's
symphonies even after the critical editions became available.
Eugen Jochum recorded Bruckner's
numbered symphonies multiple times, as did
Herbert von Karajan.
Günter Wand, in addition to audio
recordings, also made video recordings of his Bruckner concerts.
Georg Tintner received acclaim late in
life for his complete cycle of recordings on the
Naxos
label.
The
Romanian conductor
Sergiu Celibidache did not conduct all of
Bruckner's symphonies, but in those that he did produced readings
of great breadth (Bruckner Symphony no.8), possibly the longest
accounts of the works on record. Although he never made commercial
recordings of Bruckner, several recordings of concert performances
were released after his death.
Eliahu Inbal recorded an early cycle
which featured some previously unrecorded versions. For instance,
Inbal was the first conductor to record the 1st version of
Bruckner's 3rd, 4th, and the completed finale to the 9th.
Daniel Barenboim recorded 2 complete cycles
of Bruckner's symphonies, one with the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the
other with the
Berlin
Philharmonic Orchestra.
Bernard
Haitink recorded all of Bruckner's numbered symphonies with the
Concertgebouw Orchestra, and
re-recorded several symphonies with the
Vienna Philharmonic and Berlin
Philharmonic.
Carlo Maria
Giulini made a speciality of Bruckner's late symphonies. The
late
Giuseppe Sinopoli was in the
process of recording all Bruckner's symphonies at the time of his
death.
More recently
Riccardo Chailly,
Christoph von Dohnanyi and
Christian Thielemann have
recorded several Bruckner symphonies.
See also
Media
References
- Bruckner, Anton. Symphony No. 8/2, c minor, 1890 version.
Edited by Leopold Nowak. New York: Eulenberg, 1994.
- Gilliam, Bryan, The annexation of Anton Bruckner: Nazi
revisionism and the politics of appropriation, in Bruckner
Studies edited by Timothy Jackson and Paul Hawkshaw.
- Korstvedt, Benjamin M. Anton Bruckner: Symphony No. 8
(Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 19.
- ed. Stanley Sadie, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and
Musicians (London: Macmillan, 1980), 20 vols. ISBN
0-333-23111-2.
- ed. Stanley Sadie, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and
Musicians, Second Edition (London: Macmillan, 2001), 29 vols.
ISBN 0-333-60800-3.
- "The laconic idiom of restraint, the art of mere suggestion,
involving economy of means and form, is not theirs. " Bruno Walter observed,
comparing Bruckner and Mahler (see Walter's Essay
below).
- Hans-Hubert Schönzeler,
Bruckner. New York: Grossman Publishers (1970): 8. "Josef
Bruckner had twelve children, and one of them, Anton, born in 1791,
became a teacher like his father. ... In 1823 he married Therese
Helm from Streyr, a marriage which was to be blessed with eleven
children, ... Their eldest was Josef Anton, born on 4 September
1824 and named after his grandfather."
- Derek Watson, Bruckner. New York: Schuster &
Macmillan (1997): 3
- Schōnzeler (1970): 70. "In July 1875 Bruckner ... proposed yet
a third time to the university of Vienna that a lectureship in
harmony and counterpoint be created, and at long last, despite
Hanslick's opposition, his application was successful. Bruckner was
appointed to the post, and on 25 November 1875 he gave his opening
oration.
- Peter Gammond, Bluff Your Way in Music. London:
Ravette Books (1985):: 33. "it is generally said that Bruckner was
a very simple man ... If, after listening to one of his symphonies,
you still feel that he was simple, then you are not the kind of
person who should be reading this book."
- Derek Watson, Bruckner. New York: Schuster &
Macmillan (1997): 73. "Unlike Franck or Reger, however, he
[Bruckner] has not left a single composition of any value for his
instrument."
- Watson, Derek Bruckner. New York: Schuster &
Macmillan (1997): 39
- Schōnzeler (1970): 108. "Bruckner's ... body was taken to St.
Florian. ... There, in a splendid sarcophagus, lie the earthly
remains of Anton Bruckner, but from above the crypt, from the great
'Bruckner Organ', his living spirit still bursts forth."
- Cooke, New Grove (1980), 3:360.
- Watson, Derek Bruckner. New York: Schuster &
Macmillan (1997): 46
- Temperley, New Grove (1980), 18:461–462.
- Temperley, New Grove (1980), 18:462.
- Cooke, New Grove (1980), 3:365.
- Bonds, New Grove (2001), 24:839.
- Derek Watson, Bruckner. New York: Schuster &
Macmillan (1997): 80. "That Symphony No. 2 is in C minor has
actually been cited as a proof of Bruckner's naïvety as a
composer."
- Robert Simpson, The Essence of
Bruckner: An essay towards the understanding of his music.
London: Victor Gollancz Ltd (1977): 64. "At this time Bruckner was
more obsessed with Wagner's music than at any other time in his
life, and the symphony contained a number of deliberate quotations
from, mainly, Tristan und Isolde, Die Walküre and
Die Meistersinger. This was the version Wagner saw and of
which he accepted the dedication; Bruckner sent him a fair copy of
the 1874 score."
- Derek Watson, Bruckner. New York: Schuster &
Macmillan (1997): 101. The Fifth was "the only one of his numbered
and completed symphonies of which he was never to hear a note
played."
- Simpson (1977): 123. "The Sixth is the shortest of the fully
mature symphonies. It has always been neglected, and I have never
been able to understand why, for it has consistently struck me ...
as among his most beautiful and original works; his own high
opinion of it seems thoroughly justified."
- Derek Watson, Bruckner. New York: Schuster &
Macmillan (1997): 113. The Eighth "which he regarded as his finest
work, caused him the greatest emotional strain of his whole
career."
- Cooke, New Grove (1980), 3:361.
- Simpson (1977): 181 - 182. "When Bruckner knew that he might
not finish the Ninth he suggested that the Te Deum could be used as
a finale, and the presence in the sketches of a motive ... led to
the supposition that he was composing some kind of link between the
two works. There is no evidence to suggest that Bruckner, even in
the poor state of health and mind the last few months of his life,
considered the use of the C major Te Deum as finale to a D
minor symphony to be more than a makeshift solution."
- Derek Watson, Bruckner. New York: Schuster &
Macmillan (1997): 72. "They are of little concern to the non-German
listener and do not represent important stages in Bruckner's
creative unfolding."
- Derek Watson, Bruckner. New York: Schuster &
Macmillan (1997): 19. "Studying Tristan Bruckner used a
piano score without text — a sign of how unconcerned he was with
opera as drama."
- Derek Watson, Bruckner (1997) New York: Schuster &
Macmillan, p.s 45 - 46
- Keith William Kinder, The Wind and Wind-chorus Music of
Anton Bruckner. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing
Group (2000): 51, note 14
- "Bruckner in the Movies, TV and Radio"
- Peter Gammond, Bluff Your Way in Music. London:
Ravette Books (1985):: 33. "Another misrepresentation of Bruckner
is to bracket him with Mahler."
- Charles P. Mitchell, The Great Composers Portrayed on Film:
1913 through 2002. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland &
Company, Inc., Publishers (2004): 49 - 50
- p. 437 (2008) Cooke
- p. 39, Cooke (2008) Mervyn. Cambridge A History of Film
Music Cambridge University Press
External links
- The life of Anton Bruckner in Chord and Discord,
American Bruckner Society, 1940. A very well-written biography,
with references to the conflict with the Hanslick/Brahms field, and
19th century Austrian culture and society.
- The
Bruckner Journal devoted to Anton Bruckner, edited by Ken Ward,
caters for lay enthusiasts, musicians and academics. Produced in
the UK
- Bruckner Discography edited by John F. Berky -
Detailed listing recordings of Anton Bruckner's orchestral works.
Also includes articles and free downloads
- Extensive article (35 pages) by Aart van der Wal on
Bruckner's Symphony No. 9, unfinished finale
- Classical Net - Bruckner Bio, Recordings, and
Essays
- [7256] - Anton Bruckner Bibliography
- Detailed information on the various editions and
revisions of Bruckner's symphonies
- Discography and List of Works
- http://w3.rz-berlin.mpg.de/cmp/bruckner.html
- Bruckner
biography, 19th century Austrian culture and society
- Bruckner MIDIs at Classical Archives
- Homepage for Bruckner's House museum (Ger)
- The Music of Eternity by David B. Hart,
First Things