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Reviews
GMCD 7306
Fritz
Brun (1878-1959)
AUDIOPHILE AUDITION
FEBRUARY 23 2008
FRITZ BRUN:
Symphony No. 9; From the Book of Job – Moscow Symphony Orchestra/ Adriano,
conductor – Guild GMCD 7306, 61:17, ***(*):
Fritz Brun is a Swiss composer who was born in Lucerne in 1878. He followed a
standard course of studies that included one Willem Mengelberg as a piano
instructor. He migrated to Berlin as private teacher and musician to Prince
George of Prussia. In 1903 he returned to Bern and settled for good, accepting
the invitation to become the city’s orchestra conductor, along with several
choral societies. He finally retired to the shores of Lake Lugano, and died near
the end of 1959. He wrote ten major symphonies, and if this one is anything like
the others then his neglect has been truly unjustified.
Aside from the symphonies there is a considerable catalog of works that include
several tone poems, a Piano Concerto, a Cello Concerto, songs, four Sting
Quartets, and three or four more significant chamber works. I notice that his
Symphony No. 3 and the string quartets have also been recorded, the former by
these same forces here.
The music is deceptive—you must give it a chance to unwind, but when it starts
(which is very soon), the sheer inventiveness and melodic inspiration become
blatantly apparent. Though his personality was said to be considerably gruff
(and with a temper to boot), this is not what we hear in this most joyous and
life-enhancing music. The sunny mood that he creates in this work follows
closely his own autobiographical instincts according to the events in his life
at the time. He initially delivered a program, very detailed, for the first
performance, wherein he speaks of scenarios involving friends, love, artistic
discussions, arguments about art and politics, and finally, in the fifth and
last movement, “I see the great magnificence and can’t behold enough of it…Then,
under the firmament, my heart tells me in my breast: there is something better
in the world than all its pain and pleasure”.
Not bad words to live by even today.
These words were quoted from the German poet Matthias Claudius (1740-1815), and
are from a very passionate poem about love for life and hope. The symphony oozes
these sentiments in every movement, and its late romantic, though tempered
musical expression is one that simply cannot be resisted.
The coupling on this release, From The Book of Job, is not terribly
different in tone from the symphony, even though it predates it by 41 years. It
is more of a young man’s take on a profound subject (suffering, redemption, and
its meaning), and is certainly more derivative, as young works always are. But
it is nevertheless an assertive and persuasive piece, entertaining in its own
right.
Guild provides some excellent sound for this release, and the orchestra comes
through with great dynamic ranges and a wide, clear soundstage. My only problem
is some of the playing—the Moscow Symphony sounds under-rehearsed in many
places, and there are some sloppy phrases and ragged ensemble. But overall this
is recommendable to those who desire to hear an authentic voice that has been
truly neglected—you will not be disappointed.
© Steven Ritter
Tempo V
Tempo Vol. 60 No. 238 OCTOBER 2006
FRITZ BRUN: Symphony No. 9;
Aus dem Buch Hiob (Symphonische Dichtung). Moscow
Symphony Orchestra c. Adriano. Guild GMCD 7306.
There are symphonic cycles on CD featuring several neglected
20th-century British composers. A similar project devoted to Switzerland's
foremost symphonist – only three of whose ten symphonies have been published –
was long overdue. In his lifetime Fritz Brun (1878-1959) found champions in his
Swiss conducting colleague Volkmar Andreae and in Hermann Scherchen, an
outspoken judge if there ever was one. But Brun's persistence in making time for
composition, even before his retirement from the concert podium, was not
accompanied by a talent for self-promotion, and his last works coincided with
the onrushing tide of Modernism. Others have gone before Adriano in committing a
Fritz Brun symphony to CD: there are two such recordings of the Second. But
Adriano's intention of recording the complete set reflects just the
whole-hearted advocacy that was needed.
In his booklet notes Adriano describes the Ninth as
Brun's magnum opus. The received opinion, however, is that Brun reacted to the
precedent of Beethoven with an atypically lighter work: a prelude, in fact, to
the weightier Tenth. This view, I suspect, is largely correct. Brun's hour-long
Eighth Symphony has an underlying 'programme' connected to the times of the day.
In his Ninth, the programme is indicated through the following five movement
headings: 'Vorspiel', 'Serenade', 'Liebesruf', 'Im Kreis der Freunde' and 'Glaube
und Zweifel – Lob Gottes und der Natur'. The key is a pastoral F major, and the
symphony ends benignly. The finale, at 15 minutes, comprises one third of the
whole. Dramatic and complex, it presents almost a tone poem in itself. Regarding
this finale, Brun quoted some poignant lines from a poem by Matthias Claudius,
'Die Sternseherin Lise'. In its breadth the movement invites comparison with the
first movement of Brun's Third Symphony (reviewed in Tempo Vol. 59 No.
233, pp. 80-2) or the Largo e mesto movement of his String Quartet in F.
The second most substantial portion of Brun's Ninth is
the central Andante sostenuto, for which the first two movements
pave the way. Here the listener is reminded of the impassioned slow movement of
Brun's Second Symphony. The fourth movement vividly portrays one of those
convivial artistic gatherings in which Othmar Schoeck figured prominently in his
earlier years. A quarrel breaks out; someone assuages it with a melody from
Flotow's opera Martha, and the group eventually disperses with a burst of
'Gaudeamus igitur'.
As Fritz Brun's orchestral oeuvre is gradually
disinterred, so his melodic gifts, his harmonic resourcefulness and singular
handling of polyphonic textures become more and more striking. How early in
Brun's career these powers began to develop is illustrated by Adriano's
compelling account of a 1906 symphonic poem inspired by the Book of Job. What
surprises is not the influence of Beethoven, Brahms or Bruckner but – repeated
listening confirms this – the stylistic independence that Brun's music was
already displaying. Further pieces of a fascinating jigsaw are eagerly awaited.
Peter Palmer
International Record Review, October 2006
Brun,
Symphony No. 9 in F. Aus dem Buch
Hioba.
Natalya
Voinova
(violin); Moscow Symphony Orchestra/Adriano.
At the turn of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Switzerland harboured two major symphonists
- major at least in the scope and aspirations of their symphonic output. Both of
them have been largely forgotten, even in Switzerland itself. The Basle-based
Hans Huber (1852-1921), a friend of Busoni, wrote at least eight symphonies. A
generation younger, Fritz Brun (1878-1959), whose activities were based in
Berne, wrote no fewer than ten. Also admired by Busoni, Brun trained with
Mengelberg and Brahms's friend Franz Wüllner, and as a pianist and conductor he
championed Brahms's works in Switzerland. Indeed he seems to have identified
closely with Brahms: in his long, close friendship with Othmar Schoeck he signed
himself in correspondence as “Johannes”, while Schoeck called himself `Hugo'
(after Wolf). And both works an this disc, though written over 40 years apart,
clearly reflect Brahmsian phraseology and orchestration, though other influences
are equally apparent - Wagner, Strauss, Bruckner, perhaps Schoeck - blended into
a late- or post-Romantic language of warmth and distinction. Unlike the Swiss
composers who came after him - Honegger, Frank Martin and so on - Brun never
dreamed of breaking away from the great Austro-German Symphonic tradition, and
so became something of an anachronism in his own time, though held in respect.
(I've seen him referred to as 'the Swiss Vaughan Williams', though folk-music as
such seems to have played little part in his musical language.)
Despite that esteem,
comparatively few of Brun's major works were published, and the two scores an
this disc have had to be edited from the manuscripts held at the Paul Sacher
Institute in Basle. There are Gallo CDs from the early 1990s of Brun's warmly
romantic Second Symphony and a set of
Variations on an
Original Theme
for piano and strings,
but this is the most notable Brun release to have come my way.
Aus dem Buch Hiob
is a deeply serious,
mainly meditative early tone-poem (1906) depicting the events of the Bock of Job
in the late-Romantic amalgam I've outlined above. The obbligato solo violin
(reminding us perhaps of Elihu's dance in Vaughan Williams's
Job)
has a comparatively
small role. But the major work here is the Ninth Symphony.
Conductor Adriano, who
supplies his own booklet notes, compares Brun to Furtwängler as a
composer-conductor - no doubt also in the conservatism of his Idiom - and Claims
the Ninth Symphony 'as his opus
magnum'. But
his music seems warmer than Furtwängler's, and conciser in its forms; and I'm
given to understand by others who know something of Brun's output that the term
opus magnum
should be
reserved for the Tenth. In fact the five-movement No. 9 is rather suite-like or
even serenade-like in conception, a kind of quasi-autobiographical reverie in a
pastoral F major, with which Brun may have been finding his own way of declining
the famous `Ninth Symphony' challenge. He described it as `a diary'. The first
movement, a bustling, good-humoured `Vorspiel' with a gorgeous second-subject
tune, is kept short; there follows, as second and third movements, a euphonious
Serenade and a romantically lyrical love-scene. The fourth movement is a
programmatic scherzo depicting a group of friends at a Zurich restaurant equably
discussing family matters and then becoming disputatious as the conversation
turns to art. Order is restored with a quotation from Flotow's
Martha
and the friends join in
a chorus of
Gaudeamus igitur.
The slow finale, longer
than any other two movements combined, is the most profound: entitled `Belief
and Doubt - Praise of God and Nature', it is almost a self-contained tone-poem
of sustained nature-meditation, with some dramatic minor-key irruptions but
rising to a coda of quiet ecstasy.
Of course for its
composition date of 1949-50 - it belongs to the comparatively large number of
works Brun composed beside Lake Lugano after he retircd from the conductorship
of the Berne Orchestra in 1941 - this Ninth Symphony's idiom is desperately
outmoded: as outmoded, that is, as that of its virtual contemporary, Strauss's
Four Last
Songs. But I
find it a beautiful and rather touching work which encourages me to get to know
more of this serious and idealistic composer. The orchestral mastery, great
polyphonic skill of the writing and the cleanness of the harmony - so much less
clotted than many of his post-Brahmsian contemporaries - are also impressive,
and Adriano (who refers to the considerable technical difficulties of Brun's
scores, and the unwillingness of orchestras to take the time to rehearse them
properly) directs the Moscow Symphony in what seems a thoroughly prepared,
understanding and warmly affectionate account of the piece. Guild provides a
beautifully balanced recording. Warmly recommended. I'm told this is the first
release in a near-complete Brun symphonies series from Guild (omitting only No.
3, which 1 understand is currently available on a Sterling CD). This can only be
good news.
Calum MacDonald
Schweizer Musikzeitung 10.10.2006
Fritz Brun: Aus dem Buch
Hiob
Fritz Brun: Sinfonie Nr. 9 F-Dur. Aus
dem Buch Hiob (Symphonische Dichtung).
Moskow Symphony
Orchestra, Dir.:Adriano.
Der Dirigent Adriano hat sich
vorgenommen, alle Orchesterwerke des einstigen Bernischer Musikdirektors
einschliesslich dessen zehn Sinfonien auf CDs zu bringen. Ob Fritz Bruns
ungedruckte Neunte als sein Opus magnum (so Adriano im ausführlichen CD-Booklet)
zu bewerten sei, bleibe dahingestellt. Man dürfte dieses 1949-1950
komponierte fünfsätzige Werk eher als ein bewusstes Intermezzo zwischen der
einstündigen Achten und der geläuterten Zehnten Sinfonie Bruns ansehen. Daher
der Serenadencharakter der Sätze eins bis vier; daraufhin freilich ruft der
relativ gross angelegte Finale-Satz (Andante) ernste Stimmen und Stimmungen
hervor.
Unter Bruns zumeist nach strengen
Formprinzipien gebauten Sinfonien ist die Neunte einmalig, insofern er das Werk
als ein musikalisches Tagebuch bezeichnete. Einem rüstigen Vorspiel (Vivace) und
der eigentlichen Serenade (Allegretto comodo) folgen ein passionierter Liebesruf
(Andante sostenuto) und der scherzhafte Allegro-Satz
Im Kreis der Freunde, worin
eine Melodie aus Flotows Oper Martha wie auch schliesslich ein Anklang an
Gaudeamus igitur auftauchen. Der fünfte Satz heisst
Glaube und Zweifel - Lob Gottes und
der Natur. Diesbezüglich
zitierte der Komponist in einer an Volkmar Andreae, den Dirigenten der Zürcher
Uraufführung, gerichteten Anmerkung einige Zeilen aus dem Matthias-Claudius-Gedicht
Die Sternseherin
Lise.
Wie schon bei der Dritten Sinfonie
Bruns hat Adriano eine recht ansprechende Wiederbelebungsarbeit vollzogen. Noch
dazu zeugt seine Einspielung der sinfonischen Dichtung Aus dem Buch Hiob
davon, dass Fritz Brun trotz aller Beeinflussung seitens der Spätromantiker
schon 1906 mit der Kristallisierung seines persönlichen musikalischen Stils
begonnen hatte.
Peter
Palmer
Release Date: 09/05/2006
Label:
Guild
Catalogue
#: 7306 Spars Code: n/a
Composer:
Fritz Brun
Conductor:
Adriano
Orchestra/Ensemble:
Moscow Symphony Orchestra
Number of Discs: 1
Recorded in: Stereo

How many times has this happened right in the middle of a
conversation or work the thought appears why can’t I find any Swiss composers
who remind me of Richard Strauss? This enterprising release should solve that
problem! In its style of orchestration, melodies and sheer exuberance, the
Symphony No. 9 by Fritz Brun comes strikingly close to such Strauss works as Don
Juan and the Symphonia Domestica. The attention being given to Brun’s music has
been growing in recent years, and we are particularly pleased to present these
first recordings of two of his major orchestral works. He was particularly noted
for his brilliantly-written orchestral music, and of his ten completed
Symphonies, written between 1908 and 1953, the Ninth is regarded as one of the
best. Completed in 1950, it is an impressive composition of inherent strength
and nobility. Coupled with it is one of Brun’s symphonic poems, From the Book of
Job, an equally masterful score of imagination and refinement. The performances
by the Moscow Symphony Orchestra under Adriano, whose specialty is the revival
of unusual music like this, are notable for their excellence and understanding,
with state-of-the-art engineering. ArkivMusic
LETTER FROM USA
Just read David Hurwitz's review. It's a classic example of
criticism that makes more of a statement about the writer's ego than about what
he is reviewing. I hope it is taken in that spirit and remains impervious to his
unwarranted venom.
FRITZ BRUN
Symphony No. 9; Aus dem Buch Hiob
Moscow Symphony Orchestra
Adriano
Guild- 7306(CD)
No Reference Recording

One may
recognize devotion without necessarily subscribing to the cause. For example,
I'm sure the members of the Flat Earth Society are sincere, but it's still
foolishness. So is the music of Swiss composer Fritz Brun, whose excruciatingly
dull Third Symphony has already been loving presented (on Sterling) by Adriano
and the Moscow Symphony Orchestra. These two works are no better. Both are
conventionally scored for a Mendelssohnian orchestra, employed with extreme
fastidiousness and restraint, and this in music dating from 1906 and 1950. From
the point of view of texture and color, you would think that the entire second
half of the 19th century had never occurred.
But that
isn't really the point. Expressively, Brun runs the emotional gamut from A to B,
or just possibly C. He has three modes of expression: mildly frisky, placid, and
mildly agitated. That's it. And he presents them, not as a linear or logically
related progression of ideas and events, but all jumbled up, seemingly at
random, lurching from one tepid extreme to the next. So everything sounds like
everything else, all the time. The Ninth Symphony has five movements and a
pretentious philosophical program about God and Nature and Faith and all of that
stuff, but it's the musical equivalent of the proverbial hair shirt: a punishing
collection of inhibitions and proscriptions devoid of meaning or clarity.
From the
Book of Job is, if anything, even worse, as it can't hide behind the symphony's
alibi of dealing in abstractions. I was reminded of Bernard Shaw's comment on
Parry's oratorio on the same subject, to the effect that there isn't a single
bar of the music that comes within ten thousand miles of the flattest line of
the text. This tone poem lasts nearly eighteen interminable minutes, and
nothing, but nothing interesting happens along the way. The performances are
devoted, to be sure, and the playing of the Moscow Symphony is pretty good,
aside from some typical scruffiness from the strings. Adding insult to injury,
this is very difficult music to present well: the parts are terribly exposed,
and Brun's spasmodic syntax must be as frustrating to the musician as to the
listener. For penitential souls only.
--David Hurwitz
Comments: Destructive criticism
Klassik Com
Sunday September 03 2006
Ein sinfonisches Tagebuch
Interpretation:
    
Klangqualität:
    
Repertoirewert:
    
Booklet:
    
Ganze zehn Sinfonien beinhaltet das Schaffen des Schweizers Fritz Brun
(1878-1959): Werke, an deren formaler Gestaltung, Besetzung und Ausdehnung die
Vorbilder Brahms und Bruckner deutlich abzulesen sind. Wer jedoch in der Mitte
des 20. Jahrhunderts so überzeugt an der als überkommen angesehenen Gattung der
Sinfonie festhielt und sich einer Tonsprache befleißigte, die als ‚rückständig’
angesehen wurde, dessen Schaffen musste nur allzu bald in Vergessenheit geraten
– dass die Kompositionen zu Lebzeiten Bruns durchaus gut aufgenommen wurden,
konnte daran nichts ändern. So sieht es auf dem Plattenmarkt in Sachen Fritz
Brun auch sehr dürftig aus; zum Glück gibt es aber immer wieder überzeugte
Künstler, die zu Unrecht (?) vergessene Meister wieder in das allgemeine
Bewusstsein zurückbringen wollen. In diesem Falle ist es Adriano, der in
Kooperation mit den Moskauer Sinfonikern bereits eine beim Label Sterling
erschienene Einspielung der dritten Sinfonie Bruns vorgelegt hat. Mit der
Neunten und einer sinfonischen Dichtung ging es nun weiter; erschienen ist diese
neue Einspielung beim Schweizer Label Guild.
Musikalisches Tagebuch
Gut
eine Dreiviertelstunde dauert die neunte Sinfonie in F-Dur, die Brun im Jahr
1950 fertig stellte. Zielpunkt der Sinfonie ist der ausladende Schlusssatz ‚Glaube
und Zweifel – Lob Gottes und der Natur’, der auf ein Vorspiel, eine zweisätzige
Liebesszene und eine turbulentes Scherzo im ‚Kreis der Freunde’ folgt. Das Werk
gehört zu den späten drei ‚retrospektiven’ Sinfonien Bruns; der Komponist hat
angesichts autobiographischer Bezüge von einem musikalischen Tagebuch gesprochen.
Die mit dichten thematischen Querbeziehungen aufwartende und in lichten Farben
und abgeklärter Stimmung dahinfließende Komposition wird den Ansprüchen an eine
‚Neunte Sinfonie’ durchaus gerecht. Die religiöse Tendenz im Finale legt die
Kombination mit der frühen sinfonischen Dichtung ‚Aus dem Buch Hiob’ (1906)
durchaus nahe. Hier ging es Brun mehr um die Schilderung der inneren Vorgänge
und der überzeitlichen Bedeutung Hiobs für den Gläubigen, weniger um
konkret-bildliche Schilderungen.
Spätromantik
Beide Kompositionen folgen in ihrer Tonsprache der spätromantischen Tradition,
angereichert jedoch durch einige mystisch angehauchte Akkordverbindungen; über
weite Strecken kann man sich an Richard Strauss erinnert fühlen, dessen
orchestrale Brillanz und Intensität Brun jedoch nicht erreicht, vielleicht aber
auch gar nicht erreichen wollte. Die zahlreichen Themenverknüpfungen der
Sinfonie machen dabei wiederholtes Hören nötig. Hier hätte Adriano jedoch, der
die beiden Werke eher in breitem Pinselstrich vor uns ausbreitet, durch klarere
Strukturierung des Geschehens dem Hörer durchaus entgegen kommen können. Die
Musik gerät manchmal etwas zu schwelgerisch, irgendwie zu ‚russisch’. Etwas mehr
abgeklärte Nüchternheit hätte der von dem ansonsten technisch auf hohem Niveau
musizierenden russischen Orchester dargebotenen Musik sicher gut gestanden.
Weiträumiger Klang
Die Tendenz zur Breite
wird auch von der Klangtechnik unterstützt; die 2005er Aufnahme ist im Klangbild
etwas weiträumig geraten – weiträumiger, als man es bei den im Prinzip durchaus
nicht überdimensioniert großen Orchesterbesetzungen erwarten würde. Der Klang
ist zudem etwas muffig, die letzte Tiefenschärfe fehlt, und auch die dynamischen
Ausbrüche vermitteln nicht die Energie, die man erhoffen würde. Den
ausführlichen Booklet-Text hat Adriano selbst verfasst; er wird neben dem
offenbar englischsprachigen Original auch in deutscher Übersetzung angeboten.
Für das Repertoire und den auf dem Plattenmarkt arg vernachlässigten Fritz Brun
ist diese Produktion sicher eine wertvolle Bereicherung. Eine umfassende
künstlerische Neubewertung des Schaffens dieses Komponisten steht freilich noch
aus; immerhin zeigt die neunte Sinfonie aber, dass ihr Schöpfer, trotz seiner
großen Traditionsverbundenheit, eine durchaus eigenständige Sprache gefunden
hat. Wer durchgeistigte Spätromantik mag, die auf Inhalte denn auf Effekte Wert
legt, sollte sich diese Produktion merken.
Christian Vitalis
A Letter to the maestro Tuesday August 01
2006
A belated thanks for your superb new CD. We
were both very favourably impressed by the music as well as by the quality of the
performance. Visually also, it's a most attractive production. All best wishes
for a long and productive association with Guild.
Brun's Ninth Symphony is a most appealing
work, and with repeated hearings it only gets more attractive. I love its
overall serenity and reflective quality. It's interesting how successfully he
incorporated a touch of the then prevalent neoclassicism into his post romantic
idiom in such a completely natural, unmannered way. And also how his basic
language remains romantic to such a late date without sounding old-fashioned or
outdated. And despite what critics may have said, I found the quiet ending
wonderful. The early symphonic poem also is very interesting, being very much a
product of the extravagant musical era, yet steering clear of its excesses. The
luminosity and consonance of the ending is especially effective. And to think of
the Symphonies that remain to be discovered! It will be a joy.
David Nelson and Joe Cooper
(former owners of Records International, Goleta USA)
A Letter to the Maestro - Monday July 17
2006
Dear Maestro,
Affectionate greetings, once again, from
Yokosuka! We hope that your birthday, a few days ago, was a very pleasant one,
and that this will be the start of a wonderful new year for you. We must thank you for
the wonderful recording devoted to the music of Fritz Brun. What a feast for the ears is
your dedicated performance of the expansive, achingly beautiful 9th symphony.
In time, your pioneering work will convince the musical world that Brun is a
late-romantic master, whose work deserves wide recognition beyond the confines
of his native country. While the Brahmsian influence cannot be denied -- and
Brun, of course, affection ally quotes the Meister in the symphony, Brun's
voice is really quite distinctive, and he is a fount of marvellous musical
ideas which he worked to perfection.
You bring out every subtle nuance of this
marvellous work, and are alive to its wit and gentle mystery. There is an
abundance of charm, as well, but, in your knowing hands, the effect is never
cloying. As for your rapport with the Moscow Symphony, it is, surely, at this
point, an intuitive, almost relationship which results in the most refined,
cultured playing. Of course, you deliver superb results with a variety of
European ensembles, but the chemistry between you and the Muscovites seems
very special. Thank you so very much for sharing with us these beautifully
rendered performances of such life-affirmative music. We shall return to them
very often! That these recordings were issued on the Guild label probably has
a story attached to it, but, whatever the reason, we are grateful to this
enterprising company!
Meanwhile, we hope that it is a productive, but,
also, relaxing time for you. Do take care, for now, and thanks again for so
much beauty!
US Marine Captain - Andrew Benson

Page revised Wednesday April 15 2009
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