The majority of conductors who have recorded
Anton Bruckner's Symphony No. 1 in C minor have used one of two editions of the well-established 1877 "Linz" version, and
Claudio Abbado has previously recorded that version, twice using the 1953 edition by
Leopold Nowak, and several times using the 1935 edition of
Robert Haas. For this Accentus Music release,
Abbado conducts the "Vienna" version of 1891 with the
Lucerne Festival Orchestra, and the choice of the later score shows a preference for
Bruckner's decisive revisions over the uncertainties of the earlier states of the score. A few other conductors have used this version, notably
Günter Wand,
Gennady Rozhdestvensky,
Leon Botstein, and
Riccardo Chailly, but this is still only a small number of Brucknerians who endorse it. Even so, this is a somewhat more pugnacious First with numerous changes of details, and listeners familiar with the "Linz" version may be startled when they hear them. Ultimately, the real value of this performance lies not in the minutiae of
Bruckner's changes but in the directness and confidence of the players, who deliver the symphony with a kind of urgency that is beneficial to the music, and a rawness of orchestration and scoring that fit with the composer's mature expression.
Abbado has performed a service by advocating for this seldom played version, so anyone who is curious can compare all of his readings to understand their differences and
Abbado's changing approach to this work.