Bruckner!!!

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ttf_savio
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_savio »

I just listen this in youtube. Bruckner is fantastic music!! Seem to be very young players? So nice to listen. Not all is perfect, but really a pleasure to listen.  Image Image Image This music have everything, its what the trombone is made for...beautiful!!

Leif
ttf_JimArcher
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_JimArcher »

One of my favorite composers, ponderous works, great brass orchestration.  I think I've read that he was an organist, that explains the "pompousity". 
ttf_BGuttman
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_BGuttman »

I wasn't aware of Anton Bruckner being a trombone player, which is what this board (Trombonists) is about.  I'm moving this thread to Music, Concerts, Recordings.

Hang on...
ttf_savio
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_savio »

Quote from: BGuttman on Aug 01, 2012, 05:20AMI wasn't aware of Anton Bruckner being a trombone player, which is what this board (Trombonists) is about.  I'm moving this thread to Music, Concerts, Recordings.

Hang on...

Sorry, its nearly so he could have been  Image In fact I did more mistakes  Image This is not a Bruckner composition, and I also forgot the link  Image Here it is:
Enrique Crespo Bruckner Etude:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECn_OzxiI_w

 Image

Leif
ttf_Matt K
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_Matt K »

Bruckner 8 finale. The introduction is my favorite clip of music of all time. So. Epic.

ttf_ronkny
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_ronkny »

Quote from: Matt K on Aug 01, 2012, 05:22PMBruckner 8 finale. The introduction is my favorite clip of music of all time. So. Epic.

Bruckner 9 first movement opening sequence is up there too although it is more horn intensive. I love horn.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dw377_TWHv8&feature=relmfu
Beginning of 5 also at about 1:30
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2HBZNgpbts&feature=related
Of course 8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6K1WbgJnDSk
ttf_boneagain
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_boneagain »

Quote from: BGuttman on Aug 01, 2012, 05:20AMI wasn't aware of Anton Bruckner being a trombone player, which is what this board (Trombonists) is about.  I'm moving this thread to Music, Concerts, Recordings.

Hang on...

Well Mr. Crespo IS a trombone player... so should this move back?  Image

(I LOVE playing that piece with all the parts covered, and this is my favorite Youtube version:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJ4_Cp85VlY
ttf_Edward_Solomon
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_Edward_Solomon »

I know it's maybe not the best quality recording (our recent British Trombone Society recording on CD is far better - buy it on the British Trombone Society website), but this was Trombonanza's performance in 2009: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oq5TUL3tPUo

Enrique Crespo's Bruckner Etüde für das tiefe Blech exists in two main variants, viz. quartet and sextet. The quartet version is significantly more difficult to perform, as it condenses material for six voices into four. The quartet version is available for four tubas or four trombones, while the sextet version is available for six tubas or six trombones, as well as two horns, three trombones and tuba. We've always done it with four tenor trombones, one bass trombone and one contrabass trombone, exactly as the New Trombone Collective.

If you're interested in original music for trombones by Anton Bruckner, check out Zwei Aequale für Drei Posaunen. I recently had the pleasure of performing these along with Afferentur Regi and Ecce Sacerdos Magnus on a set of German trombones and it was a really wonderful experience. The Aequale and Afferentur Regi are also, remarkably, scored for the alto trombone. I wrote the programme note for the concert, which may interest you:

QuoteIn the 18th century, equal or equale became established as a generic term for short, chordal pieces for trombone quartet. Old church music regulations from Linz in the province of Upper Austria, where Bruckner lived and worked in his early years, show that such pieces were used at funeral services in Austria. The performance of such pieces from towers on All Souls' Day and on the previous evening is associated with the funeral service, thereby underscoring the long-held ecclesiastical association of the trombone with funeral rites.
 
Notable examples of the genre are the Three Equale for four trombones of Ludwig van Beethoven (Drei Equales, WoO 30), written for performance in Linz Cathedral on All Souls' Day, 2 November 1812. Two of them were later performed, with the addition by Ignaz von Seyfried of words from the Miserere, at Beethoven's own funeral in 1827, and also as instrumental pieces at the funeral of William Gladstone in Westminster Abbey in 1898. In 1844, the little-known composer Wenzel Lambel (1788–1861) of Linz published ten equali for three or four trombones.
 
In January 1847, Bruckner's mother informed him of the passing of his aunt and godmother, Rosalie Mayrhofer, whose death apparently stimulated the composition of the Aequale for three trombones. In fact only the piece now identified as Aequal No. 1 (WAB 114) can be precisely dated, though as both works exhibit identical style, it seems reasonable to assume that they were written at the same time. The manuscripts consist of parts only without full scores and while it would appear that Bruckner was intending to write a series of such pieces, only the first is complete, the second consisting only of alto and tenor trombone parts in Bruckner's hand. The bass trombone part for Aequal No. 2 (WAB 149) has to be reconstructed for any performing edition and that used tonight has been specially prepared by Edward Solomon. These two short and solemn works are remarkable for the fact that the composer uses the alto trombone, an instrument that was rarely used by the mid-nineteenth century.

Apparently, Bruckner's Aequale and other similar music was performed at the outer gate to the abbey of St. Florian, near Linz, where the dead were placed until the priest could undertake the consecration. Although intended as funeral music, it is possible that Bruckner's Aequale express hope and comfort rather than grief. This is supported by the composer's harmonic choices. While both pieces are nominally in C minor, large sections of them are in the major mode and almost all phrase cadences end on major chords, bringing a serene, reverent quality to both works.
ttf_sfboner
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_sfboner »

The New Trombone Collective recording of the Bruckner Etude is outstanding - well worth buying.
ttf_reycraftian
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_reycraftian »

We (Trombones of the St. Louis Symphony) performed Bruckner's motet Virga Jesse a few months ago. Hear/watch it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-OFg21FkhA
ttf_boneagain
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_boneagain »

Quote from: reycraftian on Aug 03, 2012, 09:49PMWe (Trombones of the St. Louis Symphony) performed Bruckner's motet Virga Jesse a few months ago. Hear/watch it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-OFg21FkhA

I hope a lot of our less experienced players see this!  I have not heard a single clearer trombone example of displaying all the life Bruckner wrote into these things.  The control of dynamics and flow end-to-end are hard to notice... they make just listening to the music itself so compelling!

Thanks for posting this!
ttf_savio
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_savio »

Yes, thanks so much for this one. Beautiful!! I say the same as Dave.  Image

Leif
ttf_ronkny
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_ronkny »

Quote from: reycraftian on Aug 03, 2012, 09:49PMWe (Trombones of the St. Louis Symphony) performed Bruckner's motet Virga Jesse a few months ago. Hear/watch it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-OFg21FkhA
Nice!
ttf_SilverBone
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_SilverBone »

Beatiful playing.

For anyone who doesn't know, the Trombones of the St. Louis Symphony have a recording (which I enjoy very much):

http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/trombonesotsls
ttf_robcat2075
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_robcat2075 »

Noticed whilst researching something else...

"His music seems, in general, lacking in inspiration and individuality."

-Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians (1919)

Image
ttf_robcat2075
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Bruckner!!!

Post by ttf_robcat2075 »

Noticed whilst researching something else...

"His music seems, in general, lacking in inspiration and individuality."

-Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians (1919)

Image
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