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{{Short description|Symphony by Anton Bruckner}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2021}}
{{Infobox musical composition {{Infobox musical composition
| name = Symphony No. 8 | name = Symphony No. 8
| image = Anton Bruckner.jpg | image = File:Anton bruckner.jpg
| caption = A portrait of Anton Bruckner | caption = Painting of Bruckner (1889)
| key = C minor | key = C minor
| dedication = Emperor ] | dedication = Emperor ]
Line 8: Line 10:
| catalogue = ] 108 | catalogue = ] 108
| movements = 4 | movements = 4
| composed = {{plainlist| | composed = 1884–1892
* {{Timeline-event|date={{Start date|1884}}|end_date={{End date|1887}}|location=}}
* {{Timeline-event|date={{Start date|1889}}|end_date={{End date|1890}}|location=}}
* {{Start date|1892}}
}}
| premiere_date = {{Start date|1892|12|18|df=y}} | premiere_date = {{Start date|1892|12|18|df=y}}
| premiere_location = Stadttheater, Leipzig | premiere_location = ], Vienna
| premiere_conductor= ] | premiere_conductor= ]
| premiere_performers= ] | premiere_performers= ]
| published = {{plainlist| | published = 1892
* {{Start date|1892}}
* {{Start date|1939}} (ed. Robert Haas) ("original version")
* {{Start date|1955}} {{nowrap|(ed. Leopold Nowak)}} (1890 version)
* {{Start date|1972}} {{nowrap|(ed. Leopold Nowak)}} (1887 version)
}}
| first_recording = {{Start date|1949}} ], ]
}} }}
]'s '''Symphony No. 8 in C minor''' is the last Symphony the composer completed. It exists in two major versions of 1887 and 1890. It was premiered under conductor ] in 1892 in ]. It is dedicated to the Emperor ]. ]'s '''Symphony No. 8''' in ], ] 108, is the last symphony the composer completed. It exists in two major versions of 1887 and 1890. It was premiered under conductor ] in 1892 at the ], Vienna. It is dedicated to the Emperor ].


This symphony is sometimes nicknamed ''The Apocalyptic'', but this was not a name Bruckner gave to the work himself.<ref>{{cite book This symphony is sometimes nicknamed ''The Apocalyptic'', but this was not a name Bruckner gave to the work himself.<ref>{{cite book
|first=Percy A |first=Percy A.
|last=Scholes |last=Scholes|author-link=Percy Scholes
|title=The Oxford Companion to Music |title=The Oxford Companion to Music
|location=London, New York |location=London, New York
Line 38: Line 30:
}}</ref> }}</ref>


==Composition and publication== == Composition and publication ==
Bruckner began work on the Eighth Symphony in July 1884.<ref name="korstvedt_comphis">], p. 11</ref> Working mainly during the summer vacations from his duties at the ] and the ], the composer had all four movements completed in draft form by August 1885.<ref name="korstvedt_comphis"/> The ] of the work took Bruckner until April 1887 to complete: during this stage of composition the order of the inner movements was reversed, leaving the scherzo second and the Adagio as the third movement.<ref name="korstvedt_comphis"/> Bruckner began work on the Eighth Symphony in July 1884.<ref name="korstvedt_comphis">], p. 11</ref> Working mainly during the summer vacations from his duties at the ] and the ], the composer had all four movements completed in draft form by August 1885.<ref name="korstvedt_comphis" /> The ] of the work took Bruckner until April 1887 to complete; during this stage of composition, the order of the inner movements was reversed, leaving the Scherzo second and the Adagio as the third movement.<ref name="korstvedt_comphis" />


In September 1887 Bruckner had the score copied and sent to conductor ]. Levi was one of Bruckner's closest collaborators, having given a performance of the ] in Munich that was "the greatest triumph Bruckner had yet experienced".<ref name="korstvedt_1516">], pp. 15–16</ref> He had also arranged for Bruckner's career to be supported in other ways, including financial assistance from the nobility, and an honorary doctorate from the University of Vienna.<ref name="korstvedt_1516"/> However the conductor wrote back to Bruckner that:<ref>], p. 18</ref> In September 1887, Bruckner had the score copied and sent to conductor ]. Levi was one of Bruckner's closest collaborators, having given a performance of the ] in Munich that was "the greatest triumph Bruckner had yet experienced".<ref name="korstvedt_1516">], pp. 15–16</ref> He had also arranged for Bruckner's career to be supported in other ways, including financial assistance from the nobility, and an honorary doctorate from the University of Vienna.<ref name="korstvedt_1516" /> However the conductor wrote back to Bruckner that:<ref>], p. 18</ref>


:I find it impossible to perform the Eighth in its current form. I just can't make it my own! As much as the themes are magnificent and direct, their working-out seems to me dubious; indeed, I consider the orchestration quite impossible... Don't lose your courage, take another look at your work, talk it over with your friends, with ], maybe a reworking can achieve something. <blockquote>I find it impossible to perform the Eighth in its current form. I just can't make it my own! As much as the themes are magnificent and direct, their working-out seems to me dubious; indeed, I consider the orchestration quite impossible... Don't lose your courage, take another look at your work, talk it over with your friends, with ], maybe a reworking can achieve something.</blockquote>


By January 1888 Bruckner had come to agree with Levi that the symphony would benefit from further work.<ref name="korstvedt_19">], p. 19</ref> He began work on the revision in March 1889 and completed the new version of the symphony in March 1890.<ref name="korstvedt_19"/> Once the revision was completed, the composer wrote to Emperor Franz Josef I for permission to dedicate the symphony to him.<ref name="korstvedt_20">], p. 20</ref> The Emperor accepted Bruckner's request and also offered to help pay for the work's publication.<ref name="korstvedt_21">], p. 21</ref> Bruckner had some trouble finding a publisher for the work, but in late 1890 the Haslinger-Schlesinger-Lienau company agreed to undertake publication. Bruckner's associates Josef Schalk and Max von Oberleithner assisted with the publication process: Schalk prepared the musical text to be sent to the printer while Oberleithner corrected the proofs and also provided financial support.<ref>] pp. 88, 22</ref> The symphony was eventually published in March 1892. It was the only one of Bruckner's symphonies to be published before its first performance.<ref>], pp. 21–22</ref> By January 1888, Bruckner had come to agree with Levi that the symphony would benefit from further work.<ref name="korstvedt_19">], p. 19</ref> Early work of revision was carried out in the first movement and the Scherzo, expressed as pencil notations in their score. A distinct version of the Adagio now called the "intermediate Adagio" or "Adagio of 1888" was also retrieved and edited in 2004 by Dermot Gault and Takanobu Kawasaki. Thereafter, Bruckner concentrated on the new versions of the ] and ].<ref name=carragan1/> He began work on the final version of the Adagio in March 1889 and completed the new version of the symphony in March 1890.<ref name="korstvedt_19" />


Once the new version was completed, the composer wrote to Emperor ] for permission to dedicate the symphony to him.<ref name="korstvedt_20">], p. 20</ref> The emperor accepted Bruckner's request and also offered to help pay for the work's publication.<ref name="korstvedt_21">], p. 21</ref> Bruckner had some trouble finding a publisher for the work, but in late 1890 the Haslinger-Schlesinger-Lienau company agreed to undertake publication. Bruckner's associates Josef Schalk and Max von Oberleithner assisted with the publication process: Schalk prepared the musical text to be sent to the printer while Oberleithner corrected the proofs and also provided financial support.<ref>] pp. 88, 22</ref> The symphony was eventually published in March 1892. It was the only one of Bruckner's symphonies to be published before its first performance.<ref>], pp. 21–22</ref>
==Premiere and reception==
By the time the 1890 revision was complete Hermann Levi was no longer conducting concerts in Munich: as a result he recommended that his protege ], ] of ], lead the first performance of the Symphony. The premiere was twice scheduled to occur under the young conductor's direction during 1891, but each time Weingartner substituted another work at the last minute.<ref>], p. 23</ref> Eventually the conductor told Bruckner that he was unable to undertake the performance because he was about to take up a new position at the Berlin Opera. However, Weingartner admitted, in a letter to Levi, that the real reason that he was unable to perform the symphony was because the work was too difficult and he did not have enough rehearsal time: in particular the ] players in his orchestra did not have enough experience to cope with their parts.<ref name="Korstvedt, p. 24">], p. 24</ref>


== Premiere and reception ==
After a possible Munich performance by Levi was canceled because of a feared outbreak of ], Bruckner focused his efforts on securing a Vienna premiere for the symphony. At last ], subscription conductor of the ], agreed to conduct the work. The first performance took place on 18 December 1892. Although some of the more conservative members of the audience left at the end of each movement, many of Bruckner's supporters were also present, including ] and ].<ref name="korstvedt_4"/>
By the time the 1890 revision was complete, Levi was no longer conducting concerts in Munich. As a result, he recommended that his protege ], ] of ], lead the first performance of the symphony. The premiere was twice scheduled to occur under the young conductor's direction during 1891, but each time Weingartner substituted another work at the last minute.<ref>], p. 23</ref> Eventually the conductor told Bruckner that he was unable to undertake the performance because he was about to take up a new position at the Berlin Opera. However, Weingartner admitted, in a letter to Levi, that the real reason he was unable to perform the symphony was because the work was too difficult and he did not have enough rehearsal time: in particular, the ] players in his orchestra did not have enough experience to cope with their parts.<ref name="Korstvedt, p. 24">], p. 24</ref>


After a Munich performance by Levi was cancelled because of a feared outbreak of ], Bruckner focused his efforts on securing a Vienna premiere for the symphony. At last ], subscription conductor of the ], agreed to conduct the work. The first performance took place on 18 December 1892. Although some of the more conservative members of the audience left at the end of each movement, many of Bruckner's supporters were also present, including ] and ].<ref name="korstvedt_4" />
The well known critic ] left after the slow movement. His review described the symphony as "interesting in detail, but strange as a whole, indeed repellent. The peculiarity of this work consists, to put it briefly, in importing Wagner's dramatic style into the symphony."<ref name="korstvedt_4">], p. 4</ref> (Korstvedt points out that this was less negative than Hanslick's reviews of Bruckner's earlier symphonies). There were also many positive reviews from Bruckner's admirers. One anonymous writer described the symphony as "the crown of music in our time".<ref>], p. 5</ref> Hugo Wolf wrote to a friend that the symphony was "the work of a giant" that "surpasses the other symphonies of the master in intellectual scope, awesomeness, and greatness".<ref name="Korstvedt, p. 6">], p. 6</ref>


The well known critic ] left after the slow movement. His review described the symphony as "interesting in detail, but strange as a whole, indeed repellent. The peculiarity of this work consists, to put it briefly, in importing Wagner's dramatic style into the symphony."<ref name="korstvedt_4">], p. 4</ref> (Korstvedt points out that this was less negative than Hanslick's reviews of Bruckner's earlier symphonies.) There were also many positive reviews from Bruckner's admirers. One anonymous writer described the symphony as "the crown of music in our time".<ref>], p. 5</ref> Hugo Wolf wrote to a friend that the symphony was "the work of a giant" that "surpasses the other symphonies of the master in intellectual scope, awesomeness, and greatness".<ref name="Korstvedt, p. 6">], p. 6</ref>
The symphony was slow to enter the orchestral repertoire. Only two further performances occurred during Bruckner's lifetime.<ref name="k26">], p. 26</ref> The American premiere did not take place until 1909,<ref name="k26"/> while the symphony had to wait until 1929 for its first London performance.<ref>{{cite book

The symphony was slow to enter the orchestral repertoire. Only two further performances occurred during Bruckner's lifetime.<ref name="k26">], p. 26</ref> The American premiere did not take place until 1909,<ref name="k26" /> while the symphony had to wait until 1929 for its first London performance.<ref>{{cite book
|title=Bruckner's Symphonies: Analysis, Reception and Cultural Politics |title=Bruckner's Symphonies: Analysis, Reception and Cultural Politics
|first=Julian |first=Julian
Line 61: Line 55:
|publisher=Cambridge University Press |publisher=Cambridge University Press
|year=2004 |year=2004
|url=http://books.google.com/?id=P48fIaydaigC&pg=PA32&vq=%22the+first+london+performance+of+the+eighth+symphony%22&dq=Bruckner%27s+Symphonies:+Analysis,+Reception+and+Cultural+Politics |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P48fIaydaigC&pg=PA32
|page=32 |page=32
}}</ref> }}</ref>


==Description== == Description ==
The symphony has four ]. The total duration varies by performance and the edition of the score used, but is typically around 80 minutes. The symphony has four ]. The total duration varies by performance and the edition of the score used, but is typically around 80 minutes.
{{ordered list|list_style_type=upper-roman|
|Allegro moderato (C minor)
|Scherzo: Allegro moderato — Trio: Langsam (C minor → C major, Trio in A{{flat}} major)
|Adagio: Feierlich langsam, doch nicht schleppend (D{{flat}} major)
|Finale: Feierlich, nicht schnell (C minor → C major)
}}


=== First movement === === First movement ===


] this passage is "like the beginning of the world"<ref name="Korstvedt, p. 6"/>]] The symphony begins in a tonally ambiguous manner with a theme rhythmically reminiscent of the main theme of the first movement of ]'s ] and of the ] of 1862.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.abruckner.com/Data/articles/articlesEnglish/schoenzelerhanshub/schoenzeler_4pcs_requiem.pdf|title=Leaflet of Unicorn LP UNS-210 by H. Schönzeler, Hubert}}</ref> According to theorist ] this passage is "like the beginning of the world."<ref name="Korstvedt, p. 6" />
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
The symphony begins in a tonally ambiguous manner with a theme rhythmically reminiscent of the main theme of the first movement of ]'s ] and of the ] of 1862.<ref></ref> A more song-like second subject group uses the ]. The third subject group, which is strikingly dissonant, forms a smooth transition to the development. In structure, the opening movement is therefore a typically Brucknerian three-subject sonata form, though handled with more panache than in his previous works. The development was substantially refined in 1890. In both versions, this section of the movement contains a massive, augmented three-part statement of the main theme, impressively given on full orchestra in combination with the ] of the second subject group.
\relative c {
] occurs in the melody in the first and third bars]]
\new PianoStaff <<
This combination of the main two themes of the exposition rises pitch-wise by a third until the orchestra drops away, leaving a single flute accompanied by a timpani.
\new Staff <<
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \minor \clef treble \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Allegro moderato" 2 = 55
\new Voice {
f'1:16 \pp |
f1:16 |
f1:16 |
f1:16 |
g1:16 |
}
\new Voice {
f,1 ~ |
f ~ |
f ~ |
f |
g |
}
>>
\new Staff {
\clef bass \key c \minor
r1 |
r2 r4 r8 r16 f,16 \pp |
ges4 r2 r8 r16 f16 (|
des'4.. \< c16) \! es4. (d16 \> des16 ) |
c4 \! r2 r4 |
}
>>
}
</score>}}
A more song-like second subject group uses the ]:
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c' {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key g \major \clef treble \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \stemUp \tempo 2 = 55
d4 \p ^\markup \italic {"Breit und ausdrucksvoll" } (e4) \tuplet 3/2 { fis4 g4 a4 } |
b2 cis,4 d4 |
es4 (f4) \tuplet 3/2 { g4 a4 b4 } |
b4 (c4) c2 |
}
\new Staff <<
\new Voice \relative c' {
\stemUp \clef bass \key g \major \time 2/2
b1 ^~ |
b2 b2 |
b2. d4 |
ees2. r4 |
}
\new Voice \relative c {
\stemDown
<g d'>1 \p ~ |
<g d'>2 <g f'>2 |
<g ees'>2. <gis f'>4 |
<a ges'>2. s4 |
}
>>
>>
}
</score>}}
The third subject group, which is strikingly dissonant, forms a smooth transition to the development:
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c' {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key ees \minor \clef treble \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 2 = 55
r1 |
<es es'>2 \p (\tuplet 3/2 { <ges ges'>4 <d d'>4 <es es'>4 } |
<f f'>4) r4 r2 |
<f f'>2 (\tuplet 3/2 { <as as'>4 <e e'>4 <f f'>4 } |
<fis fis'>4) r4 r2 |
}
\new Staff {
\clef bass \key ees \minor
es,2 \p (ges4. f8 |
es4) r4 r2 |
f2 (as4. ges8 |
f4) r4 r2 |
fis4 r4 r2 |
}
\new Staff {
\clef bass \key ees \minor
\tuplet 3/2 { es4 -. \p ces4 -. bes4 -. } \tuplet 3/2 { ges'4 -. d4 -. bes'4 -. } |
\tuplet 3/2 { es4 -. ces4 -. bes4 -. } \tuplet 3/2 { ges4 -. d4 -. es4 -. } |
\tuplet 3/2 { f4 -. ces4 -. bes4 -. } \tuplet 3/2 {as'4 -. ces4 -. es4 -. } |
\tuplet 3/2 { f4 -. ces4 -. bes4 -. } \tuplet 3/2 {as4 -. e4 -. f4 -. } |
\tuplet 3/2 { fis4 -. r2 } r2 |
}
>>
}
</score>}}
In structure, the opening movement is therefore a typically Brucknerian three-subject sonata form, though handled with more panache than in his previous works. The development was substantially refined in 1890. In both versions, this section of the movement contains a massive, augmented three-part statement of the main theme, impressively given on full orchestra in combination with the ] of the second subject group.
This combination of the main two themes of the exposition rises pitch-wise by a third until the orchestra drops away, leaving a single flute accompanied by a ].


In the recapitulation, the third theme leads to a great climax for the entire orchestra, in which the bare rhythm of the main theme is dominant:
In the recapitulation, the third theme leads to a great climax for the entire orchestra, in which the bare rhythm of the main theme is dominant. This suddenly breaks off, leaving just the trumpets and three of the horns hammering out the rhythm, timpani thundering beneath. When the strings and woodwinds rejoin, it is in a very dejected mood. At this juncture the two versions differ significantly. In the 1887 version, this solemn passage leads to what many consider an unconvincingly premature victory-coda, which sounds the main theme in ]. For the 1890 version, the triumphant ending was cut, and the despondent passage extended by a few bars to form a pianissimo coda in itself (thus becoming the only instance of a first movement ending softly in Bruckner's symphonic œuvre). This quiet, sombre ending is for low winds and low strings in a thoroughly bleak ], and there is no doubt from contemporary letters of Bruckner that it represented death in some way.
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"trumpet" \relative c'' \key c \minor \clef treble \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 2 = 55
r2 r4 r8 r16 c''16 \ff |
c2...-> c16 |
c4.. c16 c4. c16 c16 |
c2...-> r16 |
}
>>
}
</score>}}
This suddenly breaks off, leaving just the trumpets and three of the horns hammering out the rhythm, timpani thundering beneath. When the strings and woodwinds rejoin, it is in a very dejected mood. At this juncture the two versions differ significantly. In the 1887 version, this solemn passage leads to what many consider an unconvincingly premature victory coda, which sounds the main theme in ]. For the 1890 version, the triumphant ending was cut, and the despondent passage extended by a few bars to form a pianissimo coda in itself (thus becoming the only instance of a first movement ending softly in Bruckner's symphonic œuvre). This quiet, sombre ending is for low winds and low strings in a thoroughly bleak ], that remembers the music at the corresponding spot in the ]. There is no doubt from contemporary letters of Bruckner that it represented death in some way.


It has been suggested by some scholars that the coda was inspired by the climax of the Dutchman's monologue in Wagner's '']'', with the words, "Ihr Welten endet euren Lauf, ewige Vernichtung, nimm mich auf!".<ref>{{cite book It has been suggested by some scholars that the coda was inspired by the climax of the Dutchman's monologue in Wagner's '']'', with the words, "Ihr Welten endet euren Lauf, ewige Vernichtung, nimm mich auf!".<ref>{{cite book
|url=http://books.google.com/?id=vRI_PGC_IBEC&pg=RA1-PA274&vq=%22endet+euren%22&dq=The+Second+Golden+Age+of+the+Viennese+Symphony |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vRI_PGC_IBEC&pg=RA1-PA274
|title=The second golden age of the Viennese symphony: Brahms, Bruckner, Dvořák, Mahler, and selected contemporaries |title=The second golden age of the Viennese symphony: Brahms, Bruckner, Dvořák, Mahler, and selected contemporaries
|first=A. Peter |first=A. Peter
|last=Brown |last=Brown
|publisher=Indiana University Press |publisher=Indiana University Press
|location=Bloomington, IN |location=Bloomington, Indiana
|year=2003 |year=2003
|isbn=0-253-33488-8 |isbn=0-253-33488-8
Line 91: Line 196:
=== Second movement === === Second movement ===


The five-note '']'' theme, accompanied by ] figures in the upper strings, is a reminiscence of the ''Credo'' of the ]:
] theme in the scherzo]]
{{Block indent|<score sound="1>
The '']'' theme is a reminiscence of the ''Credo'' of the ].
\relative c''' {

\new PianoStaff <<
The main part of the Scherzo is fundamentally the same in both versions, though somewhat more repetitive in the first version. The orchestration and dynamics are more refined in the second version, helping to give the movement a rich and original sound. The Trios, however, are quite different: the 1890 version was rewritten as an adumbration of the ensuing Adagio movement, featuring the harps, and the tempo was slowed down. In both versions, this Scherzo is Bruckner's largest, lasting around 14 or 15 minutes in most performances.
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \minor \clef treble \time 3/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Allegro moderato" 4 = 120
r8 <as b f'>8:16 \pp <g bes es>8:16 <f as des>8:16 <es g c>8:16 <d f b>8:16 |
r8 <as' b f'>8:16 <g bes es>8:16 <f as des>8:16 <es g c>8:16 <d f b>8:16 |
R2. |
}
\new Staff {
\clef treble \key c \minor
c,4 \downbow \mf es8 \downbow f8 g8 g,8 |
c4 \downbow es8 \downbow f8 g8 g,8 |
c4 \downbow r2 |
}
>>
}
</score>}}
The main part of the Scherzo is fundamentally the same in both versions, though somewhat more repetitive in the first version. The orchestration and dynamics are more refined in the second version, helping to give the movement a rich and original sound. The Trios, however, are quite different: the 1890 version was rewritten as an adumbration of the ensuing Adagio movement, featuring the harps, and the tempo was slowed down:
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c'' {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key aes \major \clef treble \time 2/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Langsam" 4 = 45
c4. \p \< (e,8) |
e8 (f8) des'8 ( c8 \! ) |
ces8. (bes16) as8 ( ges16 fes16 |
es8) r8 r4 |
}
\new Staff {
\clef bass \key aes \major
< as,, c c'>8 \p -. <c c'>8 -. < as c c'>8 -. < g c bes' c>8 -. |
< f c' bes' c>8 -. <c' as' c>8 -. < g c bes' c>8 -. < g c bes' c>8 -. |
< as fes' ces' fes>8 -. < as fes' ces' fes>8 -. < as fes' ces'>8 -. < as fes' ces'>8 -. |
< bes g' des'>8 -. r8 r4 |
}
>>
}
</score>}}
This Scherzo is Bruckner's largest, lasting around 14 or 15 minutes in most performances.


=== Third movement === === Third movement ===


The main difference between versions is at the climax, for which in the 1887 version Bruckner managed to insert six cymbal clashes. He must have thought that excessive, as he pared it down to two in the 1890 version. The key of this climax was also altered from ] in 1887 to ] in 1890. The coda of this movement is recalled in the ] of the ]. The main difference between versions is at the climax, for which in the 1887 version Bruckner managed to insert six cymbal clashes. He must have thought that excessive, as he pared it down to two in the 1890 version. The key of this climax was also altered from ] in 1887 to ] in 1890. The coda of this movement is recalled in the coda of the ] of the ].


This Adagio differs from those in other symphonies by the composer in that the second thematic group is not presented in a more flowing tempo. The two themes are, first, a recollection of the slow movement of Schubert's ] for Pianoforte and an answering descending passage, both over throbbing, richly scored strings; and, secondly, a tonally unstable passage radiant with ecstasy. The structure and scale of the Adagio as it develops these themes is grander than any of Bruckner's previous slow movements. This Adagio differs from those in other symphonies by the composer in that the second thematic group is not presented in a more flowing tempo. The two themes are, first, a recollection of the slow movement of Schubert's ] for Pianoforte and an answering descending passage, both over throbbing, richly scored strings; and, secondly, a tonally unstable passage radiant with ecstasy. The structure and scale of the Adagio as it develops these themes is grander than any of Bruckner's previous slow movements.


The movement opens in an unusual way; while it is in {{music|time|4|4}} time, the string accompaniment is made up of a mix of uneven triplets and eighth notes. ] describes this as a "fascinating rhythmic hall of mirrors."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.limelightmagazine.com.au/features/simon-rattle-on-mastering-bruckner/|title=Simon Rattle on Mastering Bruckner}}</ref>
The Adagio is the most controversial of all the movements in terms of different versions. For example, ] inserted one quiet, solemn passage in his edition of the 1890 score which restored a cut between two loud passages (before the main climax of the movement), whereas in the ] edition these two loud passages are joined. This difference greatly affects the impression given to the listener for this section of the movement as it heads towards the great ] climax. The 1890 Adagio, in both the edition of ] and that of ], remains shorter than the 1887 original.
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c'' {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key des \major \clef treble \time 4/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Feierlich langsam, doch nicht schleppend" 4 = 40
r1 |
r1 |
r4 as2 \downbow \p \< as4 \! |
as4.. \> (beses16) as4 \! r4 |
}
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \clef bass \key des \major
\tuplet 3/2 { <des,,, as' f'>8 \downbow \pp <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow |
\tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 \downbow <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow |
\tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 \downbow <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow |
\tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 \downbow <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 r8 |
}
>>
}
</score>}}
This eventually leads to a great chorale in the strings that starts in G{{flat}} major but leads to F major:
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c' {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff <<
\new Voice = "first" {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"string ensemble 1" \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 4 = 40 \stemUp \clef treble \key ges \major \time 4/4
bes2 des4.. ^(des16) |
bes2 f'4.. ^(f16) |
bes4 c4 des4 es4 |
fes4 ges4 as4 ces4 |
fes2 es2 |
es2 des2 |
c2. g4 |
a2 ^~ a8 r8 r4 |
}
\new Voice = "second" {
\stemDown
bes,,2 \pp a2 |
bes2 \< des4 \! \> c4 \! |
bes4 \p f'4 _\markup \italic { "cresc." } f4 ges4 |
as4 ges4 as4 ces4 |
<fes, as fes' as des>2 \f <as es' c>2 _\markup \italic { "dim." } |
<g es' g bes>2 \p <f g des' g bes>2 _\markup \italic {"dim." } |
<f a c f a>2 \pp <c' e a>4 _(<g c e>4) |
<f a c f>2 _~ <f a c f>8 s8 s4 |
}
>>
\new Staff <<
\new Voice = "third" {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"string ensemble 1" \stemUp \clef bass \key ges \major \time 4/4
des,2 \pp des2 |
des2 \< <es a>2 \! \> |
<des>4 \! a'4 _\markup \italic { "cresc." } des4 des8(deses8) |
ces4 es4 ces4 ges4 |
des'2 \f es2 _\markup \italic { "dim." } |
<es bes>2 \p bes2 _\markup \italic { "dim." } |
c2 \pp <bes c g'>2 |
<a c>2 ^~ <a c>8 r8 r4 |
}
\new Voice = "fourth" {
\stemDown \clef bass \key ges \major \time 4/4
ges,2 f2 |
ges2 f2 |
ges4 f4 bes4 beses4 |
as4 ces4 fes4 es4 |
<des as'>2 <as as'>2 |
es'2 <bes des'>2 |
<f f'>2 <c' bes'>2 |
<c f,>2 _~ <c f,>8 s8 s4 |
}
>>
>>
}
</score>}}
The second part of the movement begins with a cello melody:
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c' {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key e \major \clef treble \time 4/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 4 = 40
<e e'>1:16 \p |
<e e'>1:16 |
}
\new Staff {
\clef bass \key e \major
e4.. \mf gis,16 gis4 dis'8 d8 |
cis4.. cis,16 cis4 r4 |
}
>>
}
</score>}}

The Adagio is the most controversial of all the movements in terms of different versions. For example, ] inserted one quiet, solemn passage in his edition of the 1890 score which restored a cut between two loud passages (before the main climax of the movement), whereas in the ] edition these two loud passages are joined. This difference greatly affects the impression given to the listener for this section of the movement as it heads towards the great ] climax. The 1890 Adagio, in both the edition of ] and that of ], remains shorter than the 1887 original.


=== Fourth movement === === Fourth movement ===


Beginning belligerently (by Bruckner's standards), this movement reaches a triumphant conclusion using themes (or at least rhythmic impressions of these) from all four movements. The form of this movement is complex, derived from a three-subject sonata structure but, like the opening movement of Bruckner's ], highly individualised. The scale and complexity of this movement are both on a different level from that in the opening of the Seventh Symphony, however, not least in that this movement must synthesise the entire symphony (as it reworks old ideas and new ones into a coherent whole), and forms what must be a satisfactory conclusion for the whole work. Beginning belligerently (by Bruckner's standards), this movement reaches a triumphant conclusion using themes (or at least rhythmic impressions of these) from all four movements. The form of this movement is complex, derived from a three-subject sonata structure but, like the opening movement of ], highly individualised. The scale and complexity of this movement are both on a different level from that in the opening of the Seventh Symphony, however, not least in that this movement must synthesise the entire symphony (as it reworks old ideas and new ones into a coherent whole), and forms what must be a satisfactory conclusion for the whole work.


The opening theme is a powerful ], originally given over a march, in which the rhythmic thundering of the timpani recalls certain passages in the opening movement. The second subject, a song-theme, is remarkable in that it recollects not only its counterpart in the first movement but also the Adagio. The third subject is a march-theme, which is a direct reworking of the introduction to the third subject group of the opening movement. In the recapitulation, this third theme is presented as a ] which leads to the solemn coda and the splendid, bright finish to the symphony. The opening theme is a powerful ], originally given over a march, in which the rhythmic thundering of the timpani recalls certain passages in the opening movement:
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"trombone" \key c \minor \clef "bass" \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Feierlich, nicht schnell" 2 = 70
fis1 \ff ~ ^^ |
fis1 |
\grace { <fis a>8 } <fis a>1 ~ |
<fis a>2 <f bes>4.. -> <f bes c>16 |
<f bes des>2... ^^ <f bes c>16 |
<f bes des>4.. <des f bes c>16 <des f bes des>4.. <des f bes>16 |
\clef "treble" <bes' des ges>1 ~ _^ ~ |
<bes des ges>4.. <ges bes es ges>16 <ges bes es f>4.. -> <bes es ges>16 |
<des f as>1 \fff _^ |
}
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"trombone" \key c \minor \clef "bass"
fis,,1 \ff ~ _^ |
fis1 |
\grace { <d d'>8 } <d d'>1 ~ _^ |
<d d'>2 <des des'>4.. -> <c c'>16 |
<bes bes'>2... _^ <bes bes'>16 |
<bes bes'>4.. <bes bes'>16 <bes bes'>4.. <bes bes'>16 <ges ges'>1 ~ _^ |
<ges ges'>4.. <es' es'>16 <es es'>4.. -> <es es'>16 |
<des des'>1 \fff _^ |
}
>>
}
</score>}}
The second subject, a song theme, is remarkable in that it recollects not only its counterpart in the first movement but also the Adagio:
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c'' {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff <<
\new Voice { \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"string ensemble 1" \key aes \major \clef treble \time 4/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Langsamer" 2 = 42
\stemUp | % 1
as1 ^"breit" \p ^~ |
as2 bes2 |
des1 _\markup { \italic "cresc." } |
c2 ^(f2) |
es2 s2 |
}
\new Voice {
\clef "treble" \key aes \major \stemDown \time 4/4 | % 1
as,2. _(c,4) |
as'4 _(g4 f4 e4) |
f2 des4 (c8 bes8) |
f'2 es4 (des4) |
c2 r2 |
}
>>
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"string ensemble 1" \key aes \major \clef treble \time 4/4
r2 as'2 ~ \p |
as2 as2 |
as4. _\markup { \italic "cresc." } (bes8) f4 ( g4 ) |
bes4 as4 (~ as8 g8 f8 g8) |
as2 r2 |
}
>>
}
</score>}}
The third subject is a march theme, which is a direct reworking of the introduction to the third subject group of the opening movement:
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key ees \minor \clef bass \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 2 = 60
<es es'>2. \p (<ges ges'>4 |
<es es'>2. <d d'>8 <es es'>8 |
<f f'>2 \< <ges ges'>4 \! \> <f f'>8 <es es'>8 |
<f f'>2 \!) r2 |
}
\new Staff {
\set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key ees \minor \clef bass \time 2/2
<es es'>4 \p <bes bes'>4 <es es'>4 <bes' bes'>4 |
<es, es'>4 <as, as'>4 <es' es'>4 <d d'>8 -- <es es'>8 -- |
<f f'>4 <es es'>8 -- <f f'>8 -- <ges ges'>4 <f f'>8 -- <es es'>8 -- |
<f f'>4 <ges ges'>8 -- <as as'>8 -- <bes bes'>4 <bes, bes'>4 |
}
>>
}
</score>}}
In the recapitulation, this third theme is presented as a ] which leads to the solemn coda and the splendid, bright finish to the symphony.


The development presents these three themes and other elements in ways which recollect earlier parts of the symphony, both episodically and in simultaneously parallel combinations. The thematic treatment is subtle and counterpoint is frequently used in the presentation of themes. It therefore seems natural that such a synthesis concludes by contrapuntally combining all the main themes of the symphony: the coda begins in a solemn ] in which the opening theme of the Finale reaches a powerful climax. This is answered quietly by the woodwind giving out the same theme, then more optimistically by the full orchestra, from which, in a flurry of trumpets and timpani, the Scherzo theme heralds a remarkably succinct combination of all the themes in ]. For all its grandeur, the ending is remarkably concise, and the perorations are more terse than those of, say, Bruckner's own ]. The development presents these three themes and other elements in ways which recollect earlier parts of the symphony, both episodically and in simultaneously parallel combinations. The thematic treatment is subtle and counterpoint is frequently used in the presentation of themes. It therefore seems natural that such a synthesis concludes by contrapuntally combining all the main themes of the symphony: the coda begins in a solemn ] in which the opening theme of the Finale reaches a powerful climax. This is answered quietly by the woodwind giving out the same theme, then more optimistically by the full orchestra, from which, in a flurry of trumpets and timpani, the Scherzo theme heralds a remarkably succinct combination of all the themes in ]:
{{Block indent|<score sound="1">
\relative c {
\new PianoStaff <<
\new Staff {
\set Staff.instrumentName = "I." \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \major \clef bass \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 2 = 60
r2 r4 r8 r16 c16 |
c2... -^ g'16 |
e4.. -> c16 g'4. -> e16 d16 |
c2... -^ g16 |
e'4.. -> c16 g'4. -> e16 d16 |
c2... -^ r16 |
}
\new Staff {
\set Staff.instrumentName = "II." \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \major \clef treble \time 2/2
r1 |
c''2 e4 -. f4 -. |
g4 -. g,4 -. r2 |
c2 -> e4 c8 e8 |
g4 -. g,4 -. r2 |
c2 r2 |
}
\new Staff {
\set Staff.instrumentName = "III." \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \major \clef treble \time 2/2
r1 |
r4 g2 -> g4 -> |
g4.. -> a16 g4 r4 |
r4 g2 -> g4 -> |
c4.. -> g16 g4 r4 |
R1 |
}
\new Staff {
\set Staff.instrumentName = "IV." \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \major \clef treble \time 2/2
r1 |
<g, e'>1 ~ |
<g e'>1 |
\grace { <g e'>8 } <g e'>1 ~ |
<g e'>2 r2 |
<g e'>1 |
}
>>
}
</score>}}
For all its grandeur, the ending is remarkably concise, and the perorations are more terse than those of, say, Bruckner's own ].


==Versions== == Versions ==


Two complete autograph manuscripts of the symphony exist, dating from 1887 and 1890 respectively. More sketches exist from all phases of work on this symphony than for most of Bruckner's works. For example, thanks to the sketches, we can see the evolution of the opening theme. Part scores show that the tonal ambiguity of the symphony's opening was not how Bruckner originally envisaged the main theme: the rhythm was to fit an arpeggiated contour in ]. The final opening is much less defined and hovers in more of a ] region, though it suggests several keys. Two complete autograph manuscripts of the symphony exist, dating from 1887 and 1890 respectively. More sketches exist from all phases of work on this symphony than for most of Bruckner's works. For example, thanks to the sketches, we can see the evolution of the opening theme. Part scores show that the tonal ambiguity of the symphony's opening was not how Bruckner originally envisaged the main theme: the rhythm was to fit an arpeggiated contour in ]. The final opening is much less defined and hovers in more of a ] region, though it suggests several keys.


===1887 version=== === 1887 version ===
This was Bruckner's first version of the symphony, but was not published until 1972 in an edition edited by ].<ref>{{cite book This was Bruckner's first version of the symphony, but was not published until 1972 in an edition edited by ].<ref>{{cite book
|first=Anton |first=Anton
|last=Bruckner |last=Bruckner
|coauthors=Leopold Nowak |author2=]
|title=Symphony no. 8/1, C minor, 1887 version |title=Symphony no. 8/1, C minor, 1887 version
|publisher=]
|publisher=Eulenberg
|location=London, New York |location=London, New York
|year=1994 |year=1994
|oclc=32221753 |oclc=32221753
|origyear=1972 |orig-year=1972
}}</ref> }}</ref>
It has some significant differences from the more familiar later versions, including a loud ending to the first movement and a different tonality for the climax of the slow movement. It is also notably longer than the 1890 version, and has a different instrumentation (the most significant consistent difference being that the 1890 version has triple rather than double woodwind throughout the first three movements). The double woodwind of the 1887 version gives a somewhat more austere character to the overall sound of the work. <blockquote>There are enormous variants in orchestration, harmony, voice leading and motivic treatment between the two versions. In some sections one can almost speak of two different pieces, rather than two versions of the same work.<ref>Benjamin Korstvedt, leaflet of LP - Jubal 5003/4: Georg Tintner, National Youth Orchestra of Canada ''Symphony No. 8'', 31 August 1982</ref></blockquote> Some significant differences from the more familiar later versions include a loud ending to the first movement and a different tonality for the climax of the slow movement. It is also notably longer than the 1890 version, and has a different instrumentation (the most significant consistent difference being that the 1890 version has triple rather than double woodwind throughout the first three movements). The double woodwind of the 1887 version gives a somewhat more austere character to the overall sound of the work. Some scholars support this version of the symphony. Bryan Gilliam, for example, argues that the later version (from 1890) is shorter and smoother, and is hence a dubious concession to the Brahms-loving bourgeoisie of the time.<ref>Gilliam, Bryan. "The Two Versions of Bruckner's Eighth Symphony." ''19th Century Music'' 16, no. 1 (1992): 59–69.</ref>


The 1887 version was premiered by ] for the BBC in 1973,<ref>{{Cite web |date=1997-05-07 |title=Obituary: Hans-Hubert Schonzeler |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituary-hanshubert-schonzeler-1260316.html |access-date=2022-04-02 |website=The Independent |language=en}}</ref> and has thereafter been recorded by ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ].
Some scholars support this version of the symphony. Bryan Gilliam, for example, argues that the later version (from 1890) is shorter and smoother, and is hence a dubious concession to the Brahms-loving bourgeoisie of the time.<ref>Gilliam, Bryan. "The Two Versions of Bruckner's Eighth Symphony." 19th Century Music 16, no. 1 (1992): 59–69.</ref>
It was premiered by ] for the BBC in 1973,<ref></ref> and has been recorded by ], ], ], ], ] and ].


A digitalisation of the North-American premiere of the 1887 version by Tintner with the ], Kingston, Ontario (Canada), 31 August 1982 (LP: Jubal 5003/4, 1982),<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.abruckner.com/downloads/downloadofthemonth/march16/|title=March, 2016: Symphony No. 8 / Georg Tintner / National Youth Orchestra of Canada - Anton Bruckner|website=www.abruckner.com}}</ref> and of a 2009 live performance by ] with the ] can be heard on John Berky's website.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.abruckner.com/downloads/downloadofthemonth/february17/|title=February, 2017: Symphony No. 8 (1887) / Gennadi Rozhdestvensky / Bolshoi Theater Orchestra - Anton Bruckner|website=www.abruckner.com}}</ref>
===1888 version===
A fair copy of an intermediate version of the Adagio with an estimated date of 1888 exists in the ]. It has been recorded by ] with the Tokyo New City Orchestra.<ref></ref> A MIDI version is also available.<ref name="griegel">{{cite web
|first=David
|last=Griegel
|url=http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.geocities.com/dkgriegel/versions.html&date=2009-10-26+09:09:03
|title=Bruckner Symphony Versions
|accessdate=2007-07-18
|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070623015425/http://www.geocities.com/dkgriegel/versions.html|archivedate=2007-06-23}}</ref>
The other movements have been recently reconstituted by Carragan<ref></ref> and performed by Gert Schaller.<ref></ref>


The new edition by Paul Hawkshaw has been premiered by ] with the ] on 27 October 2017.<ref name="new">{{Cite web|url=https://www.abruckner.com/editorsnote/features/new_edition_of_the/|title=Latest News!! - Anton Bruckner|website=www.abruckner.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2jaNk4nAaA |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211213/B2jaNk4nAaA |archive-date=2021-12-13 |url-status=live|title=Bruckner Symphony No 8|via=www.youtube.com}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
===1890 version===
Some scholars such as ] and ] have suggested that the 1890 revision was the product of Bruckner's insecurity and pressure from his colleagues such as Josef Schalk: Cooke even referred to it as the "Bruckner-Schalk revision".<ref name="k69">], p. 69</ref> Against this Leopold Nowak has pointed out that there is no evidence of any handwriting other than Bruckner's own in the 1890 manuscript.<ref name="k69"/> According to the testimony of Bruckner's friends and associates the composer was extremely resistant to outside interference.<ref name="k69"/>


===Intermediate versions===
The scoring of the 1890 version is fuller and more grandiloquent than the 1887 version, with subtler textures and harmonies in the woodwind in particular, allowed for by the increased size of this section of the orchestra. It was published in 1955 in an edition edited by ].<ref>Bruckner, Anton. Symphony No. 8/2, c minor, 1890 version. Edited by Leopold Nowak. (New York: Eulenberg, 1992)</ref>'''
A copy of an intermediate version of the Adagio with an estimated date of 1888 exists in the ]. This Adagio, which already requires triple woodwind, has been edited by Dermot Gault and Takanobu Kawasaki<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.abruckner.com/Data/articles/articlesEnglish/gaultdermotthe1888/b8_commentary_new.pdf|title=Dermot Gault and Takanobu Kawasaki, Anton Bruckner, Symphony No 8 – Intermediate Adagio (1888)}}</ref> and recorded by ] with the Tokyo New City Orchestra.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.abruckner.com/recordings/3430/notes.htm|title=Search Discography - Anton Bruckner|website=www.abruckner.com}}</ref> A MIDI version is also available.<ref name="griegel">{{cite web
|first=David
|last=Griegel
|url=http://www.geocities.com/dkgriegel/versions.html
|title=Bruckner Symphony Versions
|access-date=2007-07-18
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091018215549/http://geocities.com/dkgriegel/versions.html
|archive-date=18 October 2009
|url-status=dead
}}</ref><br/>
Intermediate versions of the other movements have been edited by ]<ref name=carragan1>{{Cite web|url=https://carragan.com/composer-anton-bruckner/bruckners-eighth-a-work-in-progress/|title=Bruckner's Eighth as a Work in Progress|first=William|last=Carragan|author-link=William Carragan}}</ref> and performed by Gerd Schaller.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.abruckner.com/editorsnote/features/2012ebrachklangfes/|title=Features - Anton Bruckner|website=www.abruckner.com}}</ref>
<blockquote>This account of the Eighth was founded on individual, possibly non-contemporaneous manuscripts rather than one complete copy. … Thus it will always have to be regarded as experimental, not on the same editorial level as the firmly-established manuscript versions of 1887 and 1890 and the printed version of 1892. But in it we have a fascinating view of the work-in-progress of Bruckner the eternal reviser, looking for the most expressive realization of his lofty thoughts and melodic inspiration.<ref name=carragan1/></blockquote>


===1892 edition=== === 1890 version ===
Some scholars such as ] and ] have suggested that the 1890 revision was the product of Bruckner's insecurity and pressure from his colleagues such as Josef Schalk. Cooke even referred to it as the "Bruckner-Schalk revision".<ref name="k69">], p. 69</ref> Against this, ] pointed out that there is no evidence of handwriting in the 1890 manuscript other than Bruckner's own;<ref name="k69" /> according to testimony of his friends and associates, the composer was resistant to interference.<ref name="k69" /> The scoring is fuller and more grandiloquent than in 1887, with subtler textures and harmonies in the woodwind in particular, allowed for by the increased size of this section of the orchestra. The 1890 version was published in 1955 as edited by Nowak.<ref>Bruckner, Anton. Symphony No. 8/2, c minor, 1890 version. Edited by ]. (New York: ], 1992)</ref>

==Editions==
===First edition (1892)===
This was the first publication of the symphony, and was also the version used at the first performance.<ref>{{cite book This was the first publication of the symphony, and was also the version used at the first performance.<ref>{{cite book
|first=Anton |first=Anton
Line 156: Line 525:
|location=Berlin, Vienna |location=Berlin, Vienna
|year=1892 |year=1892
}}</ref> It contains some relatively minor changes from the 1890 manuscript, the most notable being a six-measure cut and a two-bar repeated passage in the Finale. The alterations were made by ] and Max von Oberleithner, almost certainly without Bruckner's direct involvement, but were probably approved by the composer before publication. Korstvedt writes that ''while the 1892 edition may not be "pure Bruckner" whatever that might be – to all appearances Bruckner authorized it, and for that reason it needs to be taken seriously.''.<ref>] </ref> This edition is available in complete recordings by ], ], ], ], ], ] and Takeo Noguchi. ] also used this edition in his severely cut broadcast performance of 1947; this performance, which has been preserved on disc, amounts to a wholly new "edition". }}</ref> It contains some relatively minor changes from the 1890 manuscript, the most notable being a six-] cut and a two-bar repeated passage in the Finale. The alterations were made by ] and Max von Oberleithner, almost certainly without Bruckner's direct involvement, but were probably approved by the composer before publication. Korstvedt writes that "while the 1892 edition may not be "pure Bruckner" whatever that might be – to all appearances Bruckner authorized it, and for that reason it needs to be taken seriously."<ref>] </ref> This edition is available in complete recordings by ], ], ], ], ], ] and Takeo Noguchi. ] also used this edition in his severely cut broadcast performance of 1947; this performance, which has been preserved on disc, amounts to a wholly new "edition".

===Haas edition===


===Haas’s "mixed" edition===
] published his edition of the Eighth Symphony in 1939.<ref>{{cite book ] published his edition of the Eighth Symphony in 1939.<ref>{{cite book
|first=Anton |first=Anton
|last=Bruckner |last=Bruckner
|coauthors=Robert Haas |author2=Robert Haas|author2-link=Robert Haas (musicologist)
|title=Symphony no. 8 in C minor |title=Symphony no. 8 in C minor
|publisher=Belwin Mills |publisher=Belwin Mills
Line 169: Line 537:
|year=1979 |year=1979
|oclc=4562394 |oclc=4562394
|origyear=1939 |orig-year=1939
}}</ref> Haas mainly based his work on the 1890 autograph but also included some passages from the 1887 version that were changed or omitted in the 1890 score. }}</ref> He based it on the 1890 autograph but included passages from 1887 that had been changed or omitted. The ''Gesamtausgabe'' describes it as a "Mischform", or mixed form. Nevertheless, it remains a beloved and, perhaps, the most frequently played and recorded edition of the work.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.abruckner.com/discography/symphony8incminor/|title=Symphony No. 8 in C Minor - Anton Bruckner|website=www.abruckner.com}}</ref>


Haas argued that Levi’s comments were a crippling blow to Bruckner’s artistic confidence, even leading him to "entertain suicidal notions", although Haas had no evidence for this.<ref>], </ref> This led, Haas maintained, to Bruckner’s three-year effort to revise the Eighth Symphony and many of his earlier works. This line of thought supports Haas’ editorial methods. Haas took what he admired from Bruckner's different versions and rolled them into his own version. He justified the rejection of various features of Bruckner’s 1890 revision on biographical grounds: they are the ideas of a Bruckner who mistrusted his own judgment, and therefore non-Brucknerian. Haas argued that Levi's comments were a crippling blow to Bruckner's artistic confidence, even leading him to "entertain suicidal notions", although Haas had no evidence for this.<ref>], </ref> This led, Haas maintained, to Bruckner's three-year effort to revise the Eighth Symphony and many of his earlier works. This line of thought supports Haas' editorial methods. Haas took what he admired from Bruckner's different versions and rolled them into his own version. He justified the rejection of various features of Bruckner's 1890 revision on biographical grounds: they are the ideas of a Bruckner who mistrusted his own judgment, and therefore non-Brucknerian.


The most significant omissions that Bruckner made (and therefore of Haas's restorations) are in the Adagio and Finale of the work. In addition, Haas inserted eight measures into the finale that he appears to have composed himself by combining the harmonies of the 1887 manuscript with material Bruckner penciled into the margin of the 1890 score, discarding five measures of Bruckner's own music in the process. There were no footnotes or other indication in Haas's edition that these changes had been made. Korstvedt has described these interventions as "exceed reasonable limits of scholarly responsibility".<ref>], </ref> Despite its dubious scholarship Haas's edition has proved enduringly popular: conductors such as ], ] and ] continued to use it even after the Nowak/1890 edition was published, while noted Bruckner conductor ] has written that the Haas edition is "the best" version of the symphony and referred to Haas himself as "brilliant".<ref>{{cite AV media notes The most significant omissions that Bruckner made (and therefore of Haas's restorations) are in the Adagio and Finale of the work. In addition, Haas inserted into the finale a transitional passage of eight bars from a sketch found in the library of the ] (A-KR C56-14e1), discarding five bars of Bruckner's own revision.<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|url=http://www.mwv.at/english/TextBruckner/Katalog/symph08.htm|title=Anton Bruckner - VIII. SYMPHONIE C-MOLL|website=www.mwv.at}}</ref> Korstvedt has described these interventions as "exceed reasonable limits of scholarly responsibility".<ref>], </ref>
|first=Georg
|last=Tintner
|title=Bruckner: Complete Symphonies
|publisher=Naxos
|id=8.501101
}}
</ref> On the other hand, ] used Haas's edition for his first recording, made in 1949, before Nowak published his edition, and Nowak's for his subsequent recordings, while Wilhelm Furtwängler, despite having given the premiere of the Haas score, reverted to the 1892 edition in his final years.


Despite its dubious scholarship, Haas's edition has proved enduringly popular: conductors such as ], ] and ] continued to use it even after the Nowak/1890 edition was published, while noted Bruckner conductor ] has written that the Haas edition is "the best" version of the symphony and referred to Haas himself as "brilliant".<ref name = "Tintner">{{Cite web|url=https://www.naxos.com/mainsite/blurbs_reviews.asp?item_code=8.554215-16&catNum=554215&filetype=About+this+Recording&language=English#|title=BRUCKNER, A.: Symphony No. 8 (original 1887 version, ed. L. Nowak) / Symphony No. 0, "Nullte" (Ireland National Symphony, Tintner)|website=www.naxos.com}}</ref> On the other hand, ] used Haas's edition for his first recording, made in 1949, before Nowak published his edition, and Nowak's for his subsequent recordings, while Wilhelm Furtwängler, despite having given the premiere of the Haas score, reverted to the 1892 edition in his final years.
The controversy over the Haas edition centers on the fact that its musical text was a fabrication of the editor and was never approved by Bruckner himself. In particular Leopold Nowak, who succeeded Haas as principal editor of the Bruckner complete works, argued that there is little evidence for the psychological breakdown that Haas claimed Bruckner suffered upon Levi's rejection of the work. Bruckner’s letters at the time suggest that he was frustrated by Levi’s judgment (dismissing Levi as having a “hard time grasping things”) and psychologically healthy. Bruckner’s revisions, according to this view, are the result of his artistic perfectionism. Nowak therefore rejected Haas's approach by sticking closely to Bruckner's autograph scores. Since its publication Nowak's edition of the 1890 version has become more popular than Haas's, although Haas's is still often performed.


The controversy over the Haas edition centers on the fact that its musical text was a fabrication of the editor never approved by Bruckner himself. In particular, Nowak, who succeeded Haas as principal editor of the Bruckner complete works, argued that there is little evidence for the psychological breakdown that Haas claimed Bruckner suffered upon Levi's rejection of the work. Bruckner's letters at the time suggest that he was frustrated by Levi's judgment (dismissing Levi as having a "hard time grasping things") and psychologically healthy. Bruckner's revisions, according to this view, are the result of his artistic perfectionism. Nowak therefore rejected Haas's approach by sticking closely to Bruckner's autograph scores.
However, on examining the microfilm of the original manuscript of 1890 version, the passages allegedly added by Haas from the 1887 version are virtually all there. What Haas actually did was to restore certain passages that Bruckner had crossed out. In a letter Bruckner wrote to the conductor ] on January 1891 he mentioned the hope that these cut passages would prove “valid for posterity, and for a circle of friends and connoisseurs”.<ref></ref> According to Korstvedt, however, this commentary actually applies to cuts in the Finale suggested to Weingartner in October 1890, now lost, with the request, on March 1891, of not modifying physically the score so that the orchestral parts remain unaltered for publication.<ref name="Korstvedt, p. 24"/>


===Nowak’s two editions===
==Instrumentation==
As noted above, under the discussion of versions, Nowak left in 1955 an edition of the 1890 version and in 1972 an edition of the 1887 version.
The 1887 version requires an instrumentation of three each of the following woodwind: ]s (the third doubling as ]), ]s, ]s, ]s (the third doubling as ]) – the triple woodwinds, however, only enter in the Finale (with double woodwind for the earlier movements) – in addition to eight ]s, three trumpets, three ]s, a quartet of ]s, which double as Horns 5–8 in the Finale, and a single contrabass tuba, along with ], ]s, ], three ]s, and ]. The 1890 version deletes the piccolo part, and extends the triple woodwinds on all four movements. In addition, the 1890 score calls for eight horns, four of which double as Wagner tubas at various points in the symphony for all movements. This was, in total, the largest orchestra Bruckner ever used (since the Ninth Symphony, which uses an otherwise identical orchestra, does not require harps and percussion other than timpani).

=== Hawkshaw's new edition ===
Both versions will be published in the new Collected Edition. The new edition of the 1887 version corrects enough mistakes in the older print. Nevertheless, it is still very much the same score.<ref name="new"/>

== Instrumentation ==
The 1887 version is scored for three flutes, a ] in the climax of the Adagio, three oboes, three clarinets and three bassoons. The third part of each woodwind only appear in the Finale, while the third bassoon also doubles as ] in the Finale. The brass include eight ] – with horns 5 to 8 only appearing in the Finale. In addition, there are three trumpets, three trombones, four ]s and a single contrabass tuba, along with ], ]s, ], three ]s, and ].<br/>The 1890 version deletes the piccolo part, and extends the triple woodwinds and calls for eight horns on all four movements. Horns 5 to 8 replace the Wagner tubas in most of the first and third movements, doubling as Wagner tubas at some points of the symphony.<br/>This is the only symphony where Bruckner employs the harp. This was, in total, the largest orchestra Bruckner ever used (since the Ninth Symphony, which uses an otherwise identical orchestra, does not require harps and percussion other than timpani).


== Programme == == Programme ==


In an 1891 letter to conductor ], Bruckner gave extramusical associations to several parts of the symphony:<ref>], </ref><blockquote> In an 1891 letter to conductor ], Bruckner gave extramusical associations to several parts of the symphony:<ref>], </ref>
In the '''first movement''', the trumpet and horn passage based on the rhythm of the theme in the ''Todesverkündigung'' , which gradually grows stronger, and finally emerges very strongly. At the end: surrender.<p>


<blockquote>
'''Scherzo''': Main theme – named ''deutscher Michel''.<ref>Karl Riha: ''Der deutsche Michel. Zur Ausprägung einer nationalen Allegorie im 19. Jahrhundert'', in Jürgen Link & Wulf Wülfing (eds.): ''Nationale Mythen und Symbole in der zweiten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts. Strukturen und Funktionen von Konzepten nationaler Identität''. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta 1991 (Sprache und Geschichte 16), 146–171. ISBN 3-608-91062-X; ''Deutscher Michel'' ("German Michael") is "a rather old-fashioned personification of Germany, with a slightly pejorative connotation, referring to the qualities of being guileless and honest". {{cite book
In the first movement, the trumpet and horn passage based on the rhythm of the theme in the ''Todesverkündigung'' , which gradually grows stronger, and finally emerges very strongly. At the end: surrender.
|url=http://books.google.com/?id=-xRq2PynAyMC&pg=PA272&vq=%22deutscher+michel%22&dq=%22deutscher+michel%22

Scherzo: Main theme – named ''deutscher Michel''.<ref>Karl Riha: ''Der deutsche Michel. Zur Ausprägung einer nationalen Allegorie im 19. Jahrhundert'', in Jürgen Link & Wulf Wülfing (eds.): ''Nationale Mythen und Symbole in der zweiten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts. Strukturen und Funktionen von Konzepten nationaler Identität''. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta 1991 (Sprache und Geschichte 16), 146–171. {{ISBN|3-608-91062-X}}; ''Deutscher Michel'' ("German Michael") is "a rather old-fashioned personification of Germany, with a slightly pejorative connotation, referring to the qualities of being guileless and honest". {{cite book
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-xRq2PynAyMC&pg=PA272
|first=Fritz Karl Michael |first=Fritz Karl Michael
|last=Hillenbrand |last=Hillenbrand
Line 204: Line 573:
|isbn=0-415-09785-1 |isbn=0-415-09785-1
|page=272 |page=272
}}</ref> In the second part, the fellow wants to sleep, and in his dreamy state cannot find his tune: finally, he plaintively turns back.
}}
</ref> In the second part, the fellow wants to sleep, and in his dreamy state cannot find his tune: finally, he plaintively turns back.<p>


Finale: At the time our Emperor received the visit of the Czars at ];<ref>According to ] p. 52, Bruckner was mistaken about the location of this meeting, which took place between ], Tsar ], and Kaiser ] at ] in September 1884.</ref> thus, strings: the Cossacks; brass: military music; trumpets: fanfares, as the Majesties meet. In closing, all themes … thus as ''deutscher Michel'' arrives home from his journey, everything is already gloriously brilliant. In the Finale there is also the death march and then (brass) transfiguration.
'''Finale''': At the time our Emperor received the visit of the Czars at ];<ref>
</blockquote>
According to ] p. 52, Bruckner was mistaken about the location of this meeting, which took place between ], Tsar ], and Kaiser ] at ] in September 1884.
</ref> thus, strings: the Cossacks; brass: military music; trumpets: fanfares, as the Majesties meet. In closing, all themes ... thus as ''deutscher Michel'' arrives home from his journey, everything is already gloriously brilliant. In the Finale there is also the death march and then (brass) transfiguration.</blockquote>


Bruckner's associates report other comments that the composer is said to have made about the symphony. The coda to the first movement is ''how it is when one is on his deathbed, and opposite hangs a clock, which, while his life comes to an end, beats on ever steadily: tick, tock, tick, tock''<ref>], p. 52</ref> while in the slow movement ''I have gazed too deeply into a maiden's eyes''.<ref>{{Cite book Bruckner's associates report other comments that the composer is said to have made about the symphony. The coda to the first movement is "how it is when one is on his deathbed, and opposite hangs a clock, which, while his life comes to an end, beats on ever steadily: tick, tock, tick, tock"<ref>], p. 52</ref> while in the slow movement "I have gazed too deeply into a maiden's eyes".<ref>{{cite book
|first=John |first=John
|last=Williamson |last=Williamson
|contribution=Programme symphpony and absolute music |contribution=Programme symphony and absolute music
|editor-first=John |editor-first=John
|editor-last=Williamson |editor-last=Williamson
|title=The Cambridge Companion to Bruckner |title=The Cambridge Companion to Bruckner
|series=]
|publisher=Cambridge University Press |publisher=Cambridge University Press
|isbn=0-521-00878-6 |isbn=0-521-00878-6
|year=2004 |year=2004
|pages=112 |page=112
|url=http://books.google.com/?id=ZDPCd_3Zg0gC&pg=PA112&vq=%22there+i+have+gazed+too+deeply+into+a+maiden%27s+eyes%22&dq=companion+to+bruckner+maiden |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZDPCd_3Zg0gC&pg=PA112
}}</ref>
|postscript=<!--None-->
}}
</ref>


In an unsigned programme note at the 1892 first performance Joseph Schalk elaborated Bruckner's program, adding references to ] (]'s ], ] or ], etc.) mixed with a few Christian references such as the ]. In an unsigned programme note at the 1892 first performance Joseph Schalk elaborated Bruckner's program, adding references to ] (]'s ], ] or ], etc.) mixed with a few Christian references such as the ].


== Discography ==
== Differences in performance ==
Over the recorded lifetime of this symphony, significantly different approaches have been taken, including tempo choices and the choice of score. Over the recorded lifetime of this symphony, significantly different approaches have been taken, including tempo choices and the choice of score.


], in a live performance with the ] in 1944 used a modified Haas edition. ], in a live performance with the ] in 1944 used a modified Haas edition.


On 29 September 1944, the ], conducted by ], recorded the last three movements of the 8th Symphony with the finale in experimental stereophonic sound. In his interpretation Karajan kept strict metre whereas "recordings from the 1940s ... typically present this passage as a grand accelerando-rallentando, with a tempo increase of as much as 20 percent," while Karajan's recording "is a notable exception."<ref>], p. 98 – 99</ref> On 29 September 1944, the ], conducted by ], recorded the last three movements of the 8th Symphony with the finale in experimental stereophonic sound. In his interpretation Karajan kept strict metre whereas "recordings from the 1940s typically present this passage as a grand accelerando-rallentando, with a tempo increase of as much as 20 percent," while Karajan's recording "is a notable exception."<ref>], pp. 98–99</ref>


The first commercial recording of the complete symphony was made by ] with the ] in 1949 for ]. Jochum later recorded it in studio with the ] in 1964 for Deutsche Grammophon, and in 1976 with the ] for EMI using the Nowak 1890 edition both times. ], in a studio recording with the Vienna Philharmonic in 1976 for Deutsche Grammophon used the Nowak 1890 edition, but with one Haas passage in the finale. The first commercial recording of the complete symphony was made by ] with the ] in 1949 for ]. Jochum later recorded it in studio with the ] in 1964 for Deutsche Grammophon, and in 1976 with the ] for EMI using the Nowak 1890 edition both times. ], in a studio recording with the Vienna Philharmonic in 1976 for Deutsche Grammophon used the Nowak 1890 edition, but with one Haas passage in the finale.


In the last two decades of the 20th century, recordings tended to "set a broader basic tempo, ... abstain from dramatic tempo fluctuations – especially increases – and place great store by fullness of tone, precise ensemble, and textural clarity."<ref>], p. 101</ref> In the last two decades of the 20th century, recordings tended to "set a broader basic tempo, abstain from dramatic tempo fluctuations – especially increases – and place great store by fullness of tone, precise ensemble, and textural clarity."<ref>], p. 101</ref>


Typically, this work lasts about 80 minutes, although there are performances running as long as 103 minutes.<ref>{{cite news |first=Mark |last=Stryker |title=DSO’s big bite of a Bruckner: After a sprightly scherzo, orchestra finds symphony’s middle a lot to chew |url=http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2009901310336 |work=Detroit Free Press |date=31 January 2009 |accessdate=3 February 2009 }} {{Dead link|date=October 2010|bot=H3llBot}} "Friday's performance lasted a fairly typical 80 minutes, though I've heard recordings as long as 103 minutes."</ref> ] and the aforementioned Günter Wand each recorded the Haas hybrid version more than once. After ] recorded the 1887 version for the first time, other conductors have followed. ] has recorded a disc comparing excerpts from the Haas and Nowak editions. Typically, this work lasts about 80 minutes,<ref name="auto"/> although there are performances running as long as 103 minutes (]'s interpretation).<ref>], ], 12-09-1993 - EMI CDC 5 56696 2 ().</ref> ] and the aforementioned Günter Wand each recorded the Haas hybrid version more than once. After ] recorded the 1887 version for the first time, other conductors have followed. ] has recorded a disc comparing excerpts from the Haas and Nowak editions.

=== 1887 version ===
==== Nowak edition (1972) ====
Some conductors preferred to record the first version of the symphony:
* ] with Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra - Lanta Fe LF-432, 1973 (world premiere)
* ] recorded it several times, the first time with the Frankfurt Radio Symphony - Teldec CD 243791, 1982
* ] with the National Youth Orchestra of Canada - LP Jubal LP 5003/4, 1982, and the National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland - Naxos 8.554215/6, 1996
* ] with the SWZ Symphony Orchestra - Harvest Classics HC-06097, 2007
* ] with the Hamburg Philharmonic Orchestra - ] ] OC 638, 2008
* ] with Cleveland Orchestra - ] Arthaus Musik 101581, 2010
A digitisation of the North American premiere of the 1887 version by ] with the National Youth Orchestra of Canada<ref></ref> and a performance by ] with the ] Orchestra (March 10, 2009) can be heard on John Berky's website.<ref> </ref>

==== Hawkshaw Edition (2014) ====
* Markus Poschner with the Bruckner Orchestra Linz - Capriccio LC 80087, 2023

===1888 intermediate version, Gault & Kawasaki and Carragan===
* Akira Naito with the Tokyo New City Orchestra (Adagio 1888; 1890 version, Nowak edition, for the other three movements) - Delta Classics DCCA-0003, 2004
* ] avec le ] Orchestra - Profil PH13027, Live 2012<ref></ref>

=== 1890 version ===
==== Haas "mixed version" (1939) ====
The majority of recordings are based on this edition.{{cn |date=May 2024}} Some conductors, as ], ] and ] have recorded it several times

==== Nowak critical edition (1955) ====
Other conductors, who have also recorded this symphony several times, have preferred ], including:
* ] recorded the work multiple times. His first recording, ], with the Hamburg State Philharmonic Orchestra was based on the Haas edition, but his following recordings were all based on the Nowak edition.
* From ], there are also several recordings. The last one, with the ], exceeded in duration all other available recordings (105 minutes, 20 more than average).
* ] has also recorded it many times, notably with the ] and the ].

=== 1892 Version, Schalk ===
Some conductors have based their recordings on the first printed edition:
* ] with the Philharmonic Society of New York - Andromeda ANDRCD 9092, 1941
* ] with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra - Adagio Classics 4004, 1951
* ] with the Concertgebouw Orchestra - Audiophile Classics 101.556, 1951
* ] with the Vienna Symphonic Orchestra - Box set Music and Arts 1227, 1953
* ] with the Boston Symphonic Orchestra - Vibrato 2VLL-150, 1962
* ] with the Vienna Symphonic Orchestra - Vibrato 2VLL-150, 1971


== Notes == == Notes ==
{{reflist|2}} {{Reflist|30em}}

== Bibliography ==
*''Anton Bruckner, Sämtliche Werke, Kritische Gesamtausgabe – Band 8: VIII. Symphonie c-Moll (Originalfassung)'', Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag, Robert Haas (Editor), Leipzig, 1939
*''Anton Bruckner: Sämtliche Werke: Band VIII: VIII. Symphonie c-Moll'', Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft, Vienna
** VIII/1: ''1. Fassung 1887'', Leopold Nowak (Editor), 1972/1992
** VIII/2: ''2. Fassung 1890'', Leopold Nowak (Editor), 1955/1994
*{{cite book |first=Anton |last=Bruckner |editor=Benjamin M Korstvedt |title=Neue Anton Bruckner Gesamtausgabe: Band VIII/1: Symphonie Nr.8 in c-Moll: Erste Fassung |year=2022 |location=Vienna |publisher=Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft|ref=none|author-mask=1}}


==Bibliography==
* {{cite book * {{cite book
|first=Benjamin M. |first=Benjamin M.
Line 251: Line 660:
|title=Bruckner: Symphony No. 8 |title=Bruckner: Symphony No. 8
|location = Cambridge, UK; New York |location = Cambridge, UK; New York
|url=http://books.google.com/?id=f9wx27TgxWAC |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f9wx27TgxWAC
|publisher=Cambridge University Press |publisher=Cambridge University Press
|year=2000 |year=2000
Line 259: Line 668:


== External links == == External links ==
* *
* {{IMSLP2|id=Symphony_No.8_in_C_minor_%28Bruckner%2C_Anton%29|cname=Symphony No. 8}} * {{IMSLP|work=Symphony No.8 in C minor, WAB 108 (Bruckner, Anton)|cname=Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)}}
*
*
* by John Berky
* by David Griegel
* *
*
*
* *


{{Anton Bruckner|state=collapsed}}
{{Bruckner symphonies}}
{{Portal bar|Classical music}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2012}}
{{Authority control}}


] ]
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Latest revision as of 17:06, 28 December 2024

Symphony by Anton Bruckner

Symphony No. 8
by Anton Bruckner
Painting of Bruckner (1889)
KeyC minor
CatalogueWAB 108
Composed1884–1892
DedicationEmperor Franz Joseph I of Austria
Published1892
Movements4
Premiere
Date18 December 1892 (1892-12-18)
LocationMusikverein, Vienna
ConductorHans Richter
PerformersVienna Philharmonic

Anton Bruckner's Symphony No. 8 in C minor, WAB 108, is the last symphony the composer completed. It exists in two major versions of 1887 and 1890. It was premiered under conductor Hans Richter in 1892 at the Musikverein, Vienna. It is dedicated to the Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria.

This symphony is sometimes nicknamed The Apocalyptic, but this was not a name Bruckner gave to the work himself.

Composition and publication

Bruckner began work on the Eighth Symphony in July 1884. Working mainly during the summer vacations from his duties at the University of Vienna and the Vienna Conservatory, the composer had all four movements completed in draft form by August 1885. The orchestration of the work took Bruckner until April 1887 to complete; during this stage of composition, the order of the inner movements was reversed, leaving the Scherzo second and the Adagio as the third movement.

In September 1887, Bruckner had the score copied and sent to conductor Hermann Levi. Levi was one of Bruckner's closest collaborators, having given a performance of the Symphony No. 7 in Munich that was "the greatest triumph Bruckner had yet experienced". He had also arranged for Bruckner's career to be supported in other ways, including financial assistance from the nobility, and an honorary doctorate from the University of Vienna. However the conductor wrote back to Bruckner that:

I find it impossible to perform the Eighth in its current form. I just can't make it my own! As much as the themes are magnificent and direct, their working-out seems to me dubious; indeed, I consider the orchestration quite impossible... Don't lose your courage, take another look at your work, talk it over with your friends, with Schalk, maybe a reworking can achieve something.

By January 1888, Bruckner had come to agree with Levi that the symphony would benefit from further work. Early work of revision was carried out in the first movement and the Scherzo, expressed as pencil notations in their score. A distinct version of the Adagio – now called the "intermediate Adagio" or "Adagio of 1888" – was also retrieved and edited in 2004 by Dermot Gault and Takanobu Kawasaki. Thereafter, Bruckner concentrated on the new versions of the Fourth and Third. He began work on the final version of the Adagio in March 1889 and completed the new version of the symphony in March 1890.

Once the new version was completed, the composer wrote to Emperor Franz Josef I for permission to dedicate the symphony to him. The emperor accepted Bruckner's request and also offered to help pay for the work's publication. Bruckner had some trouble finding a publisher for the work, but in late 1890 the Haslinger-Schlesinger-Lienau company agreed to undertake publication. Bruckner's associates Josef Schalk and Max von Oberleithner assisted with the publication process: Schalk prepared the musical text to be sent to the printer while Oberleithner corrected the proofs and also provided financial support. The symphony was eventually published in March 1892. It was the only one of Bruckner's symphonies to be published before its first performance.

Premiere and reception

By the time the 1890 revision was complete, Levi was no longer conducting concerts in Munich. As a result, he recommended that his protege Felix Weingartner, Kapellmeister of Mannheim, lead the first performance of the symphony. The premiere was twice scheduled to occur under the young conductor's direction during 1891, but each time Weingartner substituted another work at the last minute. Eventually the conductor told Bruckner that he was unable to undertake the performance because he was about to take up a new position at the Berlin Opera. However, Weingartner admitted, in a letter to Levi, that the real reason he was unable to perform the symphony was because the work was too difficult and he did not have enough rehearsal time: in particular, the Wagner tuba players in his orchestra did not have enough experience to cope with their parts.

After a Munich performance by Levi was cancelled because of a feared outbreak of cholera, Bruckner focused his efforts on securing a Vienna premiere for the symphony. At last Hans Richter, subscription conductor of the Vienna Philharmonic, agreed to conduct the work. The first performance took place on 18 December 1892. Although some of the more conservative members of the audience left at the end of each movement, many of Bruckner's supporters were also present, including Hugo Wolf and Johann Strauss.

The well known critic Eduard Hanslick left after the slow movement. His review described the symphony as "interesting in detail, but strange as a whole, indeed repellent. The peculiarity of this work consists, to put it briefly, in importing Wagner's dramatic style into the symphony." (Korstvedt points out that this was less negative than Hanslick's reviews of Bruckner's earlier symphonies.) There were also many positive reviews from Bruckner's admirers. One anonymous writer described the symphony as "the crown of music in our time". Hugo Wolf wrote to a friend that the symphony was "the work of a giant" that "surpasses the other symphonies of the master in intellectual scope, awesomeness, and greatness".

The symphony was slow to enter the orchestral repertoire. Only two further performances occurred during Bruckner's lifetime. The American premiere did not take place until 1909, while the symphony had to wait until 1929 for its first London performance.

Description

The symphony has four movements. The total duration varies by performance and the edition of the score used, but is typically around 80 minutes.

  1. Allegro moderato (C minor)
  2. Scherzo: Allegro moderato — Trio: Langsam (C minor → C major, Trio in A♭ major)
  3. Adagio: Feierlich langsam, doch nicht schleppend (D♭ major)
  4. Finale: Feierlich, nicht schnell (C minor → C major)

First movement

The symphony begins in a tonally ambiguous manner with a theme rhythmically reminiscent of the main theme of the first movement of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 in D minor and of the March in D minor of 1862. According to theorist Heinrich Schenker this passage is "like the beginning of the world."


\relative c {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff <<
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \minor \clef treble \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Allegro moderato" 2 = 55
      \new Voice {
        f'1:16 \pp |
        f1:16 |
        f1:16 |
        f1:16 |
        g1:16 |
      }
      \new Voice {
        f,1 ~  |
        f ~ |
        f ~ |
        f |
        g |
      }
    >>
    \new Staff {
      \clef bass \key c \minor
      r1 |
      r2 r4 r8 r16 f,16 \pp |
      ges4 r2 r8 r16 f16 (|
      des'4.. \< c16) \! es4. (d16 \> des16 ) |
      c4 \! r2 r4 |
    }
  >>
}

A more song-like second subject group uses the Bruckner rhythm:


\relative c' {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key g \major \clef treble \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \stemUp \tempo 2 = 55
      d4 \p ^\markup \italic {"Breit und ausdrucksvoll" } (e4) \tuplet 3/2 { fis4 g4 a4 } |
      b2 cis,4 d4 |
      es4 (f4) \tuplet 3/2 { g4 a4 b4 } |
      b4 (c4) c2 |
    }
    \new Staff <<
      \new Voice \relative c' {
        \stemUp \clef bass \key g \major \time 2/2
        b1 ^~ |
        b2 b2 |
        b2. d4 |
        ees2. r4 |
      }
      \new Voice \relative c {
        \stemDown
        <g d'>1 \p ~ |
        <g d'>2 <g f'>2 |
        <g ees'>2. <gis f'>4 |
        <a ges'>2. s4 |
      }
    >>
  >>
}

The third subject group, which is strikingly dissonant, forms a smooth transition to the development:


\relative c' {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key ees \minor \clef treble \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 2 = 55
      r1 |
      <es es'>2 \p (\tuplet 3/2 { <ges ges'>4 <d d'>4 <es es'>4 } |
      <f f'>4) r4 r2 |
      <f f'>2 (\tuplet 3/2 { <as as'>4 <e e'>4 <f f'>4 } |
      <fis fis'>4) r4 r2 |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \clef bass \key ees \minor
      es,2 \p (ges4. f8 |
      es4) r4 r2 |
      f2 (as4. ges8 |
      f4) r4 r2 |
      fis4 r4 r2 |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \clef bass \key ees \minor
      \tuplet 3/2 { es4 -. \p ces4 -. bes4 -. } \tuplet 3/2 { ges'4 -. d4 -. bes'4 -. } |
      \tuplet 3/2 { es4 -. ces4 -. bes4 -. } \tuplet 3/2 { ges4 -. d4 -. es4 -. } |
      \tuplet 3/2 { f4 -. ces4 -. bes4 -. } \tuplet 3/2 {as'4 -. ces4 -. es4 -. } |
      \tuplet 3/2 { f4 -. ces4 -. bes4 -. } \tuplet 3/2 {as4 -. e4 -. f4 -. } |
      \tuplet 3/2 { fis4 -. r2 } r2 |
    }
  >>
}

In structure, the opening movement is therefore a typically Brucknerian three-subject sonata form, though handled with more panache than in his previous works. The development was substantially refined in 1890. In both versions, this section of the movement contains a massive, augmented three-part statement of the main theme, impressively given on full orchestra in combination with the Bruckner rhythm of the second subject group. This combination of the main two themes of the exposition rises pitch-wise by a third until the orchestra drops away, leaving a single flute accompanied by a timpano.

In the recapitulation, the third theme leads to a great climax for the entire orchestra, in which the bare rhythm of the main theme is dominant:


\relative c {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"trumpet" \relative c'' \key c \minor \clef treble \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 2 = 55
      r2 r4 r8 r16 c''16 \ff |
      c2...-> c16 |
      c4.. c16 c4. c16 c16 |
      c2...-> r16 |
    }
  >>
}

This suddenly breaks off, leaving just the trumpets and three of the horns hammering out the rhythm, timpani thundering beneath. When the strings and woodwinds rejoin, it is in a very dejected mood. At this juncture the two versions differ significantly. In the 1887 version, this solemn passage leads to what many consider an unconvincingly premature victory coda, which sounds the main theme in C major. For the 1890 version, the triumphant ending was cut, and the despondent passage extended by a few bars to form a pianissimo coda in itself (thus becoming the only instance of a first movement ending softly in Bruckner's symphonic œuvre). This quiet, sombre ending is for low winds and low strings in a thoroughly bleak C minor, that remembers the music at the corresponding spot in the Symphony in F Minor. There is no doubt from contemporary letters of Bruckner that it represented death in some way.

It has been suggested by some scholars that the coda was inspired by the climax of the Dutchman's monologue in Wagner's Der fliegende Hollander, with the words, "Ihr Welten endet euren Lauf, ewige Vernichtung, nimm mich auf!".

Second movement

The five-note Deutscher Michel theme, accompanied by tremolo figures in the upper strings, is a reminiscence of the Credo of the Mass in E minor:


\relative c''' {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \minor \clef treble \time 3/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Allegro moderato" 4 = 120
      r8 <as b f'>8:16 \pp <g bes es>8:16 <f as des>8:16 <es g c>8:16 <d f b>8:16 |
      r8 <as' b f'>8:16 <g bes es>8:16 <f as des>8:16 <es g c>8:16 <d f b>8:16 |
      R2. |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \clef treble \key c \minor
      c,4 \downbow \mf es8 \downbow f8 g8 g,8 |
      c4 \downbow es8 \downbow f8 g8 g,8 |
      c4 \downbow r2 |
    }
  >>
}

The main part of the Scherzo is fundamentally the same in both versions, though somewhat more repetitive in the first version. The orchestration and dynamics are more refined in the second version, helping to give the movement a rich and original sound. The Trios, however, are quite different: the 1890 version was rewritten as an adumbration of the ensuing Adagio movement, featuring the harps, and the tempo was slowed down:


\relative c'' {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key aes \major \clef treble \time 2/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Langsam" 4 = 45
      c4. \p \< (e,8) |
      e8 (f8) des'8 ( c8 \! ) |
      ces8. (bes16) as8 ( ges16 fes16 |
      es8) r8 r4 |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \clef bass \key aes \major
      < as,, c c'>8 \p -. <c c'>8 -. < as c c'>8 -. < g c bes' c>8 -. |
      < f c' bes' c>8 -. <c' as' c>8 -. < g c bes' c>8 -. < g c bes' c>8 -. |
      < as fes' ces' fes>8 -. < as fes' ces' fes>8 -. < as fes' ces'>8 -. < as fes' ces'>8 -. |
      < bes g' des'>8 -. r8 r4 |
    }
  >>
}

This Scherzo is Bruckner's largest, lasting around 14 or 15 minutes in most performances.

Third movement

The main difference between versions is at the climax, for which in the 1887 version Bruckner managed to insert six cymbal clashes. He must have thought that excessive, as he pared it down to two in the 1890 version. The key of this climax was also altered from C major in 1887 to E-flat major in 1890. The coda of this movement is recalled in the coda of the Adagio of the Ninth Symphony.

This Adagio differs from those in other symphonies by the composer in that the second thematic group is not presented in a more flowing tempo. The two themes are, first, a recollection of the slow movement of Schubert's Wanderer Fantasie for Pianoforte and an answering descending passage, both over throbbing, richly scored strings; and, secondly, a tonally unstable passage radiant with ecstasy. The structure and scale of the Adagio as it develops these themes is grander than any of Bruckner's previous slow movements.

The movement opens in an unusual way; while it is in
4 time, the string accompaniment is made up of a mix of uneven triplets and eighth notes. Simon Rattle describes this as a "fascinating rhythmic hall of mirrors."


\relative c'' {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key des \major \clef treble \time 4/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Feierlich langsam, doch nicht schleppend" 4 = 40
      r1 |
      r1 |
      r4 as2 \downbow \p  \< as4 \! |
      as4.. \> (beses16) as4 \! r4 |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \clef bass \key des \major
      \tuplet 3/2 { <des,,, as' f'>8 \downbow \pp <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow |
      \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 \downbow <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow |
      \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 \downbow <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow |
      \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 \downbow <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>8 \downbow \tuplet 3/2 { <des as' f'>8 <des as' f'>4 ~ } <des as' f'>8 r8 |
    }
  >>
}

This eventually leads to a great chorale in the strings that starts in G♭ major but leads to F major:


\relative c' {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff <<
      \new Voice = "first" {
        \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"string ensemble 1" \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 4 = 40 \stemUp \clef treble \key ges \major \time 4/4
        bes2 des4.. ^(des16) |
        bes2 f'4.. ^(f16) |
        bes4 c4 des4 es4 |
        fes4 ges4 as4 ces4 |
        fes2 es2 |
        es2 des2 |
        c2. g4 |
        a2 ^~ a8 r8 r4 |
      }
      \new Voice = "second" {
        \stemDown
        bes,,2 \pp a2 |
        bes2 \< des4 \! \> c4 \! |
        bes4 \p f'4 _\markup \italic { "cresc." } f4 ges4 |
        as4 ges4 as4 ces4 |
        <fes, as fes' as des>2 \f <as es' c>2 _\markup \italic { "dim." } |
        <g es' g bes>2 \p <f g des' g bes>2 _\markup \italic {"dim." } |
        <f a c f a>2 \pp <c' e a>4 _(<g c e>4) |
        <f a c f>2 _~ <f a c f>8 s8 s4 |
      }
    >>
    \new Staff <<
      \new Voice = "third" {
        \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"string ensemble 1" \stemUp \clef bass \key ges \major \time 4/4
        des,2 \pp des2 |
        des2 \< <es a>2 \! \> |
        <des>4 \! a'4 _\markup \italic { "cresc." } des4 des8(deses8) |
        ces4 es4 ces4 ges4 |
        des'2 \f es2 _\markup \italic { "dim." } |
        <es bes>2 \p bes2 _\markup \italic { "dim." } |
        c2 \pp <bes c g'>2 |
        <a c>2 ^~ <a c>8 r8 r4 |
      }
      \new Voice = "fourth" {
        \stemDown \clef bass \key ges \major \time 4/4
        ges,2 f2 |
        ges2 f2 |
        ges4 f4 bes4 beses4 |
        as4 ces4 fes4 es4 |
        <des as'>2 <as as'>2 |
        es'2 <bes des'>2 |
        <f f'>2 <c' bes'>2 |
        <c f,>2 _~ <c f,>8 s8 s4 |
      }
    >>
  >>
}

The second part of the movement begins with a cello melody:


\relative c' {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key e \major \clef treble \time 4/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 4 = 40
      <e e'>1:16 \p |
      <e e'>1:16 |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \clef bass \key e \major
      e4.. \mf gis,16 gis4 dis'8 d8 |
      cis4.. cis,16 cis4 r4 |
    }
  >>
}

The Adagio is the most controversial of all the movements in terms of different versions. For example, Robert Haas inserted one quiet, solemn passage in his edition of the 1890 score which restored a cut between two loud passages (before the main climax of the movement), whereas in the Leopold Nowak edition these two loud passages are joined. This difference greatly affects the impression given to the listener for this section of the movement as it heads towards the great E♭ major climax. The 1890 Adagio, in both the edition of Robert Haas and that of Leopold Nowak, remains shorter than the 1887 original.

Fourth movement

Beginning belligerently (by Bruckner's standards), this movement reaches a triumphant conclusion using themes (or at least rhythmic impressions of these) from all four movements. The form of this movement is complex, derived from a three-subject sonata structure but, like the opening movement of Symphony No. 7, highly individualised. The scale and complexity of this movement are both on a different level from that in the opening of the Seventh Symphony, however, not least in that this movement must synthesise the entire symphony (as it reworks old ideas and new ones into a coherent whole), and forms what must be a satisfactory conclusion for the whole work.

The opening theme is a powerful chorale, originally given over a march, in which the rhythmic thundering of the timpani recalls certain passages in the opening movement:


\relative c {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"trombone" \key c \minor \clef "bass" \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Feierlich, nicht schnell" 2 = 70
      fis1 \ff ~ ^^ |
      fis1 |
      \grace { <fis a>8 } <fis a>1 ~ |
      <fis a>2 <f bes>4.. -> <f bes c>16 |
      <f bes des>2... ^^ <f bes c>16 |
      <f bes des>4.. <des f bes c>16 <des f bes des>4.. <des f bes>16 |
      \clef "treble" <bes' des ges>1 ~ _^ ~ |
      <bes des ges>4.. <ges bes es ges>16 <ges bes es f>4.. -> <bes es ges>16 |
      <des f as>1 \fff _^ |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"trombone" \key c \minor \clef "bass"
      fis,,1 \ff ~ _^ |
      fis1 |
      \grace { <d d'>8 } <d d'>1 ~ _^ |
      <d d'>2 <des des'>4.. -> <c c'>16 |
      <bes bes'>2... _^ <bes bes'>16 |
      <bes bes'>4.. <bes bes'>16 <bes bes'>4.. <bes bes'>16 <ges ges'>1 ~ _^ |
      <ges ges'>4.. <es' es'>16 <es es'>4.. -> <es es'>16 |
      <des des'>1 \fff _^ |
    }
  >>
}

The second subject, a song theme, is remarkable in that it recollects not only its counterpart in the first movement but also the Adagio:


\relative c'' {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff <<
      \new Voice { \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"string ensemble 1" \key aes \major \clef treble \time 4/4 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo "Langsamer" 2 = 42
        \stemUp | % 1
        as1 ^"breit" \p ^~ |
        as2 bes2 |
        des1 _\markup { \italic "cresc." } |
        c2 ^(f2) |
        es2 s2 |
      }
      \new Voice {
        \clef "treble" \key aes \major \stemDown \time 4/4 | % 1
        as,2. _(c,4) |
        as'4 _(g4 f4 e4) |
        f2 des4 (c8 bes8) |
        f'2 es4 (des4) |
        c2 r2 |
      }
    >>
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"string ensemble 1" \key aes \major \clef treble \time 4/4
      r2 as'2 ~ \p |
      as2 as2 |
      as4. _\markup { \italic "cresc." } (bes8) f4 ( g4 ) |
      bes4 as4 (~ as8 g8 f8 g8) |
      as2 r2 |
    }
  >>
}

The third subject is a march theme, which is a direct reworking of the introduction to the third subject group of the opening movement:


\relative c {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key ees \minor \clef bass \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 2 = 60
      <es es'>2. \p (<ges ges'>4 |
      <es es'>2. <d d'>8 <es es'>8 |
      <f f'>2 \< <ges ges'>4 \! \> <f f'>8 <es es'>8 |
      <f f'>2 \!) r2 |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key ees \minor \clef bass \time 2/2
      <es es'>4 \p <bes bes'>4 <es es'>4 <bes' bes'>4 |
      <es, es'>4 <as, as'>4 <es' es'>4 <d d'>8 -- <es es'>8 -- |
      <f f'>4 <es es'>8 -- <f f'>8 -- <ges ges'>4 <f f'>8 -- <es es'>8 -- |
      <f f'>4 <ges ges'>8 -- <as as'>8 -- <bes bes'>4 <bes, bes'>4 |
    }
  >>
}

In the recapitulation, this third theme is presented as a fugue which leads to the solemn coda and the splendid, bright finish to the symphony.

The development presents these three themes and other elements in ways which recollect earlier parts of the symphony, both episodically and in simultaneously parallel combinations. The thematic treatment is subtle and counterpoint is frequently used in the presentation of themes. It therefore seems natural that such a synthesis concludes by contrapuntally combining all the main themes of the symphony: the coda begins in a solemn C minor in which the opening theme of the Finale reaches a powerful climax. This is answered quietly by the woodwind giving out the same theme, then more optimistically by the full orchestra, from which, in a flurry of trumpets and timpani, the Scherzo theme heralds a remarkably succinct combination of all the themes in C major:


\relative c {
  \new PianoStaff <<
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.instrumentName = "I." \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \major \clef bass \time 2/2 \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 2 = 60
      r2 r4 r8 r16 c16 |
      c2... -^ g'16 |
      e4.. -> c16 g'4. -> e16 d16 |
      c2... -^ g16 |
      e'4.. -> c16 g'4. -> e16 d16 |
      c2... -^ r16 |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.instrumentName = "II." \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \major \clef treble \time 2/2
      r1 |
      c''2 e4 -. f4 -. |
      g4 -. g,4 -. r2 |
      c2 -> e4 c8 e8 |
      g4 -. g,4 -. r2 |
      c2 r2 |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.instrumentName = "III." \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \major \clef treble \time 2/2
      r1 |
      r4 g2 -> g4 -> |
      g4.. -> a16 g4 r4 |
      r4 g2 -> g4 -> |
      c4.. -> g16 g4 r4 |
      R1 |
    }
    \new Staff {
      \set Staff.instrumentName = "IV." \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"piano" \key c \major \clef treble \time 2/2
      r1 |
      <g, e'>1 ~ |
      <g e'>1 |
      \grace { <g e'>8 } <g e'>1 ~ |
      <g e'>2 r2 |
      <g e'>1 |
    }
  >>
}

For all its grandeur, the ending is remarkably concise, and the perorations are more terse than those of, say, Bruckner's own Symphony No. 5 in B flat major.

Versions

Two complete autograph manuscripts of the symphony exist, dating from 1887 and 1890 respectively. More sketches exist from all phases of work on this symphony than for most of Bruckner's works. For example, thanks to the sketches, we can see the evolution of the opening theme. Part scores show that the tonal ambiguity of the symphony's opening was not how Bruckner originally envisaged the main theme: the rhythm was to fit an arpeggiated contour in C minor. The final opening is much less defined and hovers in more of a B-flat major region, though it suggests several keys.

1887 version

This was Bruckner's first version of the symphony, but was not published until 1972 in an edition edited by Leopold Nowak.

There are enormous variants in orchestration, harmony, voice leading and motivic treatment between the two versions. In some sections one can almost speak of two different pieces, rather than two versions of the same work.

Some significant differences from the more familiar later versions include a loud ending to the first movement and a different tonality for the climax of the slow movement. It is also notably longer than the 1890 version, and has a different instrumentation (the most significant consistent difference being that the 1890 version has triple rather than double woodwind throughout the first three movements). The double woodwind of the 1887 version gives a somewhat more austere character to the overall sound of the work. Some scholars support this version of the symphony. Bryan Gilliam, for example, argues that the later version (from 1890) is shorter and smoother, and is hence a dubious concession to the Brahms-loving bourgeoisie of the time.

The 1887 version was premiered by Hans-Hubert Schönzeler for the BBC in 1973, and has thereafter been recorded by Dennis Russell Davies, Vladimir Fedoseyev, Eliahu Inbal, Georg Tintner, Michael Gielen, Kent Nagano, Simone Young, Franz Welser-Möst and Fabio Luisi.

A digitalisation of the North-American premiere of the 1887 version by Tintner with the National Youth Orchestra of Canada, Kingston, Ontario (Canada), 31 August 1982 (LP: Jubal 5003/4, 1982), and of a 2009 live performance by Gennadi Rozhdestvensky with the Bolshoi Orchestra can be heard on John Berky's website.

The new edition by Paul Hawkshaw has been premiered by Peter Oundjian with the Yale Symphony Orchestra on 27 October 2017.

Intermediate versions

A copy of an intermediate version of the Adagio with an estimated date of 1888 exists in the Austrian National Library. This Adagio, which already requires triple woodwind, has been edited by Dermot Gault and Takanobu Kawasaki and recorded by Akira Naito with the Tokyo New City Orchestra. A MIDI version is also available.
Intermediate versions of the other movements have been edited by William Carragan and performed by Gerd Schaller.

This account of the Eighth was founded on individual, possibly non-contemporaneous manuscripts rather than one complete copy. … Thus it will always have to be regarded as experimental, not on the same editorial level as the firmly-established manuscript versions of 1887 and 1890 and the printed version of 1892. But in it we have a fascinating view of the work-in-progress of Bruckner the eternal reviser, looking for the most expressive realization of his lofty thoughts and melodic inspiration.

1890 version

Some scholars such as Deryck Cooke and Robert Haas have suggested that the 1890 revision was the product of Bruckner's insecurity and pressure from his colleagues such as Josef Schalk. Cooke even referred to it as the "Bruckner-Schalk revision". Against this, Leopold Nowak pointed out that there is no evidence of handwriting in the 1890 manuscript other than Bruckner's own; according to testimony of his friends and associates, the composer was resistant to interference. The scoring is fuller and more grandiloquent than in 1887, with subtler textures and harmonies in the woodwind in particular, allowed for by the increased size of this section of the orchestra. The 1890 version was published in 1955 as edited by Nowak.

Editions

First edition (1892)

This was the first publication of the symphony, and was also the version used at the first performance. It contains some relatively minor changes from the 1890 manuscript, the most notable being a six-bar cut and a two-bar repeated passage in the Finale. The alterations were made by Joseph Schalk and Max von Oberleithner, almost certainly without Bruckner's direct involvement, but were probably approved by the composer before publication. Korstvedt writes that "while the 1892 edition may not be "pure Bruckner" – whatever that might be – to all appearances Bruckner authorized it, and for that reason it needs to be taken seriously." This edition is available in complete recordings by Wilhelm Furtwängler, Hans Knappertsbusch, Josef Krips, William Steinberg, George Szell, Bruno Walter and Takeo Noguchi. Serge Koussevitzky also used this edition in his severely cut broadcast performance of 1947; this performance, which has been preserved on disc, amounts to a wholly new "edition".

Haas’s "mixed" edition

Robert Haas published his edition of the Eighth Symphony in 1939. He based it on the 1890 autograph but included passages from 1887 that had been changed or omitted. The Gesamtausgabe describes it as a "Mischform", or mixed form. Nevertheless, it remains a beloved and, perhaps, the most frequently played and recorded edition of the work.

Haas argued that Levi's comments were a crippling blow to Bruckner's artistic confidence, even leading him to "entertain suicidal notions", although Haas had no evidence for this. This led, Haas maintained, to Bruckner's three-year effort to revise the Eighth Symphony and many of his earlier works. This line of thought supports Haas' editorial methods. Haas took what he admired from Bruckner's different versions and rolled them into his own version. He justified the rejection of various features of Bruckner's 1890 revision on biographical grounds: they are the ideas of a Bruckner who mistrusted his own judgment, and therefore non-Brucknerian.

The most significant omissions that Bruckner made (and therefore of Haas's restorations) are in the Adagio and Finale of the work. In addition, Haas inserted into the finale a transitional passage of eight bars from a sketch found in the library of the Kremsmünster Abbey (A-KR C56-14e1), discarding five bars of Bruckner's own revision. Korstvedt has described these interventions as "exceed reasonable limits of scholarly responsibility".

Despite its dubious scholarship, Haas's edition has proved enduringly popular: conductors such as Herbert von Karajan, Bernard Haitink and Günter Wand continued to use it even after the Nowak/1890 edition was published, while noted Bruckner conductor Georg Tintner has written that the Haas edition is "the best" version of the symphony and referred to Haas himself as "brilliant". On the other hand, Eugen Jochum used Haas's edition for his first recording, made in 1949, before Nowak published his edition, and Nowak's for his subsequent recordings, while Wilhelm Furtwängler, despite having given the premiere of the Haas score, reverted to the 1892 edition in his final years.

The controversy over the Haas edition centers on the fact that its musical text was a fabrication of the editor never approved by Bruckner himself. In particular, Nowak, who succeeded Haas as principal editor of the Bruckner complete works, argued that there is little evidence for the psychological breakdown that Haas claimed Bruckner suffered upon Levi's rejection of the work. Bruckner's letters at the time suggest that he was frustrated by Levi's judgment (dismissing Levi as having a "hard time grasping things") and psychologically healthy. Bruckner's revisions, according to this view, are the result of his artistic perfectionism. Nowak therefore rejected Haas's approach by sticking closely to Bruckner's autograph scores.

Nowak’s two editions

As noted above, under the discussion of versions, Nowak left in 1955 an edition of the 1890 version and in 1972 an edition of the 1887 version.

Hawkshaw's new edition

Both versions will be published in the new Collected Edition. The new edition of the 1887 version corrects enough mistakes in the older print. Nevertheless, it is still very much the same score.

Instrumentation

The 1887 version is scored for three flutes, a piccolo in the climax of the Adagio, three oboes, three clarinets and three bassoons. The third part of each woodwind only appear in the Finale, while the third bassoon also doubles as contrabassoon in the Finale. The brass include eight horns – with horns 5 to 8 only appearing in the Finale. In addition, there are three trumpets, three trombones, four Wagner tubas and a single contrabass tuba, along with timpani, cymbals, triangle, three harps, and strings.
The 1890 version deletes the piccolo part, and extends the triple woodwinds and calls for eight horns on all four movements. Horns 5 to 8 replace the Wagner tubas in most of the first and third movements, doubling as Wagner tubas at some points of the symphony.
This is the only symphony where Bruckner employs the harp. This was, in total, the largest orchestra Bruckner ever used (since the Ninth Symphony, which uses an otherwise identical orchestra, does not require harps and percussion other than timpani).

Programme

In an 1891 letter to conductor Felix Weingartner, Bruckner gave extramusical associations to several parts of the symphony:

In the first movement, the trumpet and horn passage based on the rhythm of the theme in the Todesverkündigung , which gradually grows stronger, and finally emerges very strongly. At the end: surrender.

Scherzo: Main theme – named deutscher Michel. In the second part, the fellow wants to sleep, and in his dreamy state cannot find his tune: finally, he plaintively turns back.

Finale: At the time our Emperor received the visit of the Czars at Olmütz; thus, strings: the Cossacks; brass: military music; trumpets: fanfares, as the Majesties meet. In closing, all themes … thus as deutscher Michel arrives home from his journey, everything is already gloriously brilliant. In the Finale there is also the death march and then (brass) transfiguration.

Bruckner's associates report other comments that the composer is said to have made about the symphony. The coda to the first movement is "how it is when one is on his deathbed, and opposite hangs a clock, which, while his life comes to an end, beats on ever steadily: tick, tock, tick, tock" while in the slow movement "I have gazed too deeply into a maiden's eyes".

In an unsigned programme note at the 1892 first performance Joseph Schalk elaborated Bruckner's program, adding references to Greek mythology (Aeschylus's Prometheus, Zeus or Cronus, etc.) mixed with a few Christian references such as the Archangel Michael.

Discography

Over the recorded lifetime of this symphony, significantly different approaches have been taken, including tempo choices and the choice of score.

Wilhelm Furtwängler, in a live performance with the Vienna Philharmonic in 1944 used a modified Haas edition.

On 29 September 1944, the Preussische Staatskapelle Berlin, conducted by Herbert von Karajan, recorded the last three movements of the 8th Symphony with the finale in experimental stereophonic sound. In his interpretation Karajan kept strict metre whereas "recordings from the 1940s … typically present this passage as a grand accelerando-rallentando, with a tempo increase of as much as 20 percent," while Karajan's recording "is a notable exception."

The first commercial recording of the complete symphony was made by Eugen Jochum with the Hamburg State Philharmonic Orchestra in 1949 for Deutsche Grammophon. Jochum later recorded it in studio with the Berlin Philharmonic in 1964 for Deutsche Grammophon, and in 1976 with the Dresden Staatskapelle for EMI using the Nowak 1890 edition both times. Karl Böhm, in a studio recording with the Vienna Philharmonic in 1976 for Deutsche Grammophon used the Nowak 1890 edition, but with one Haas passage in the finale.

In the last two decades of the 20th century, recordings tended to "set a broader basic tempo, … abstain from dramatic tempo fluctuations – especially increases – and place great store by fullness of tone, precise ensemble, and textural clarity."

Typically, this work lasts about 80 minutes, although there are performances running as long as 103 minutes (Sergiu Celibidache's interpretation). Herbert von Karajan and the aforementioned Günter Wand each recorded the Haas hybrid version more than once. After Eliahu Inbal recorded the 1887 version for the first time, other conductors have followed. Takashi Asahina has recorded a disc comparing excerpts from the Haas and Nowak editions.

1887 version

Nowak edition (1972)

Some conductors preferred to record the first version of the symphony:

  • Hans-Hubert Schönzeler with Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra - Lanta Fe LF-432, 1973 (world premiere)
  • Eliahu Inbal recorded it several times, the first time with the Frankfurt Radio Symphony - Teldec CD 243791, 1982
  • Georg Tintner with the National Youth Orchestra of Canada - LP Jubal LP 5003/4, 1982, and the National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland - Naxos 8.554215/6, 1996
  • Michael Gielen with the SWZ Symphony Orchestra - Harvest Classics HC-06097, 2007
  • Simone Young with the Hamburg Philharmonic Orchestra - SACD Oehms Classics OC 638, 2008
  • Franz Welser-Möst with Cleveland Orchestra - DVD Arthaus Musik 101581, 2010

A digitisation of the North American premiere of the 1887 version by Georg Tintner with the National Youth Orchestra of Canada and a performance by Gennady Rozhdestvensky with the Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra (March 10, 2009) can be heard on John Berky's website.

Hawkshaw Edition (2014)

  • Markus Poschner with the Bruckner Orchestra Linz - Capriccio LC 80087, 2023

1888 intermediate version, Gault & Kawasaki and Carragan

  • Akira Naito with the Tokyo New City Orchestra (Adagio 1888; 1890 version, Nowak edition, for the other three movements) - Delta Classics DCCA-0003, 2004
  • Gerd Schaller avec le Philharmonie Festiva Orchestra - Profil PH13027, Live 2012

1890 version

Haas "mixed version" (1939)

The majority of recordings are based on this edition. Some conductors, as Wilhelm Furtwängler, Herbert von Karajan and Günter Wand have recorded it several times

Nowak critical edition (1955)

Other conductors, who have also recorded this symphony several times, have preferred Nowak, including:

1892 Version, Schalk

Some conductors have based their recordings on the first printed edition:

  • Bruno Walter with the Philharmonic Society of New York - Andromeda ANDRCD 9092, 1941
  • Hans Knappertsbusch with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra - Adagio Classics 4004, 1951
  • George Szell with the Concertgebouw Orchestra - Audiophile Classics 101.556, 1951
  • Volkmar Andreae with the Vienna Symphonic Orchestra - Box set Music and Arts 1227, 1953
  • William Steinberg with the Boston Symphonic Orchestra - Vibrato 2VLL-150, 1962
  • Josef Krips with the Vienna Symphonic Orchestra - Vibrato 2VLL-150, 1971

Notes

  1. Scholes, Percy A. (1955). The Oxford Companion to Music. London, New York: Oxford University Press. p. 136. OCLC 287395.
  2. ^ Korstvedt, p. 11
  3. ^ Korstvedt, pp. 15–16
  4. Korstvedt, p. 18
  5. ^ Korstvedt, p. 19
  6. ^ Carragan, William. "Bruckner's Eighth as a Work in Progress".
  7. Korstvedt, p. 20
  8. Korstvedt, p. 21
  9. Korstvedt pp. 88, 22
  10. Korstvedt, pp. 21–22
  11. Korstvedt, p. 23
  12. Korstvedt, p. 24
  13. ^ Korstvedt, p. 4
  14. Korstvedt, p. 5
  15. ^ Korstvedt, p. 6
  16. ^ Korstvedt, p. 26
  17. Horton, Julian (2004). Bruckner's Symphonies: Analysis, Reception and Cultural Politics. Cambridge University Press. p. 32. ISBN 0-521-82354-4.
  18. "Leaflet of Unicorn LP UNS-210 by H. Schönzeler, Hubert" (PDF).
  19. 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. 274. ISBN 0-253-33488-8.
  20. "Simon Rattle on Mastering Bruckner".
  21. Bruckner, Anton; Leopold Nowak (1994) . Symphony no. 8/1, C minor, 1887 version. London, New York: Eulenburg. OCLC 32221753.
  22. Benjamin Korstvedt, leaflet of LP - Jubal 5003/4: Georg Tintner, National Youth Orchestra of Canada Symphony No. 8, 31 August 1982
  23. Gilliam, Bryan. "The Two Versions of Bruckner's Eighth Symphony." 19th Century Music 16, no. 1 (1992): 59–69.
  24. "Obituary: Hans-Hubert Schonzeler". The Independent. 7 May 1997. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  25. "March, 2016: Symphony No. 8 / Georg Tintner / National Youth Orchestra of Canada - Anton Bruckner". www.abruckner.com.
  26. "February, 2017: Symphony No. 8 (1887) / Gennadi Rozhdestvensky / Bolshoi Theater Orchestra - Anton Bruckner". www.abruckner.com.
  27. ^ "Latest News!! - Anton Bruckner". www.abruckner.com.
  28. "Bruckner Symphony No 8". Archived from the original on 13 December 2021 – via www.youtube.com.
  29. "Dermot Gault and Takanobu Kawasaki, Anton Bruckner, Symphony No 8 – Intermediate Adagio (1888)" (PDF).
  30. "Search Discography - Anton Bruckner". www.abruckner.com.
  31. Griegel, David. "Bruckner Symphony Versions". Archived from the original on 18 October 2009. Retrieved 18 July 2007.
  32. "Features - Anton Bruckner". www.abruckner.com.
  33. ^ Korstvedt, p. 69
  34. Bruckner, Anton. Symphony No. 8/2, c minor, 1890 version. Edited by Leopold Nowak. (New York: Eulenburg, 1992)
  35. Bruckner, Anton (1892). VIII. Symphonie. Berlin, Vienna: Haslinger-Schlesinger-Lienau.
  36. Korstvedt p. 91
  37. Bruckner, Anton; Robert Haas (1979) . Symphony no. 8 in C minor. Melville, NY: Belwin Mills. OCLC 4562394.
  38. "Symphony No. 8 in C Minor - Anton Bruckner". www.abruckner.com.
  39. Korstvedt, p. 68
  40. ^ "Anton Bruckner - VIII. SYMPHONIE C-MOLL". www.mwv.at.
  41. Korstvedt, p. 105
  42. "BRUCKNER, A.: Symphony No. 8 (original 1887 version, ed. L. Nowak) / Symphony No. 0, "Nullte" (Ireland National Symphony, Tintner)". www.naxos.com.
  43. Korstvedt, p. 51
  44. Karl Riha: Der deutsche Michel. Zur Ausprägung einer nationalen Allegorie im 19. Jahrhundert, in Jürgen Link & Wulf Wülfing (eds.): Nationale Mythen und Symbole in der zweiten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts. Strukturen und Funktionen von Konzepten nationaler Identität. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta 1991 (Sprache und Geschichte 16), 146–171. ISBN 3-608-91062-X; Deutscher Michel ("German Michael") is "a rather old-fashioned personification of Germany, with a slightly pejorative connotation, referring to the qualities of being guileless and honest". Hillenbrand, Fritz Karl Michael (1995). Underground Humour in Nazi Germany, 1933–1945. Routledge. p. 272. ISBN 0-415-09785-1.
  45. According to Korstvedt p. 52, Bruckner was mistaken about the location of this meeting, which took place between Franz Joseph I of Austria, Tsar Alexander III of Russia, and Kaiser Wilhelm I of Germany at Skierniewice in September 1884.
  46. Korstvedt, p. 52
  47. 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. 112. ISBN 0-521-00878-6.
  48. Korstvedt, pp. 98–99
  49. Korstvedt, p. 101
  50. Sergiu Celibidache, Munich Philharmonic, 12-09-1993 - EMI CDC 5 56696 2 (Discography of the Symphony No. 8 in C Minor).
  51. Symphony No. 8: Georg Tintner with the National Youth Orchestra of Canada
  52. Symphony No. 8 (1887) by Gennady Rozhdestvensky with the Bolshoi Theater Orchestra
  53. The 1888 Bruckner 8th Performed at Ebrach

Bibliography

  • Anton Bruckner, Sämtliche Werke, Kritische Gesamtausgabe – Band 8: VIII. Symphonie c-Moll (Originalfassung), Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag, Robert Haas (Editor), Leipzig, 1939
  • Anton Bruckner: Sämtliche Werke: Band VIII: VIII. Symphonie c-Moll, Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft, Vienna
    • VIII/1: 1. Fassung 1887, Leopold Nowak (Editor), 1972/1992
    • VIII/2: 2. Fassung 1890, Leopold Nowak (Editor), 1955/1994
  • — (2022). Benjamin M Korstvedt (ed.). Neue Anton Bruckner Gesamtausgabe: Band VIII/1: Symphonie Nr.8 in c-Moll: Erste Fassung. Vienna: Musikwissenschaftlicher Verlag der Internationalen Bruckner-Gesellschaft.

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