FREE UK SHIPPING OVER £30!

Schubert - Symphonies No.8 & No.9  | Brilliant Classics 94243

Schubert - Symphonies No.8 & No.9

£9.05

In stock - available for despatch within 1 working day

Label: Brilliant Classics

Cat No: 94243

Barcode: 5028421942438

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Orchestral

Release Date: 22nd August 2011

Contents

Artists

St Petersburg Symphony Orchestra

Conductor

Vladimir Lande

Works

Schubert, Franz

Symphony no.8 in B minor, D759 'Unfinished'
Symphony no.9 in C major, D944 'Great'

Artists

St Petersburg Symphony Orchestra

Conductor

Vladimir Lande

About

After completing his 6th symphony in 1818, Schubert struggled to complete another symphony. Nos 1-6 display a deep knowledge of the symphonies of Haydn and Mozart and his hero Beethoven – especially his 2nd symphony. The influence of Rossini can also be detected in the early symphonies. But Schubert was attempting to find a symphonic voice that was his own.

The years 1818-25 saw him commence 5 symphonies, and abandon 4 of them. Immediately after the 6th he started work on a D major work D615, but left only two unfinished opening movements. 1820 saw a more adventurous project, again in D major. The expansive and nearly complete scherzo looks forward to the Great C major’s scherzo. The other movements are fragmentary. The E major No.7 from 1821 is in a different league. Calling for the largest orchestra in any Schubert symphony, the four movements have the word ‘fine’ scribbled at the end of the score. Schubert only partially scored this work, but it provides a fascinating view to what was to come.

The following year, the B minor No.8 ushered the new symphonic style Schubert had been striving to find. Dramatic and highly emotional, it is a mystery why he never completed the work. The scherzo lacks a trio, and the finale cannot be traced. It is possible that the outsized (and identically scored) entr’acte from Rosamunde was intended as the finale – it certainly resembles the finales of his earlier symphonies. The two-movement torso had to wait until 1865 for its premiere.

The 9th Symphony was fully completed in 1825 – the only symphony Schubert completed in the last decade of his life. His long journey to create a ‘Great’ symphony had been achieved. The 9th is one of the towering masterworks of the repertoire. A gap of 11 years elapsed before the premiere, conducted by Mendelssohn, in Leipzig.

This recording provides a convincing answer to the bias that only Austrians can play Schubert well!

Error on this page? Let us know here

Need more information on this product? Click here