ABSTRACT

The New Bruckner provides a valuable study of Bruckner's music, focusing on the interaction of biography, textual scholarship, reception history and analysis. Dr Dermot Gault conveys a broad chronological narrative of Bruckner's compositional development, interpolating analytical commentaries on the works and critical accounts of the notoriously complex and editorial issues. Gault corrects longstanding misconceptions about the composer's revision process, and its relationship with the early editions and widely-held critical opinions. Bruckner's constantly evolving engagement with symphonic form is traced by taking each revision in due order, rather than by taking each symphony on its own, and by relating the symphonies to other mature works such as the Te Deum, the three great Masses, and the Quintet, and argues that Bruckner's music became more organic and less schematic as the result of his revisions. The book will be essential reading for those studying Bruckner's compositions, the complex history of their reception, and late Romantic music in general.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|16 pages

Tradition and Innovation

chapter 3|13 pages

Masses and Early Symphonies

chapter 4|20 pages

The Emergence of the ‘Bruckner Symphony'

chapter 5|39 pages

Consolidation and Revision

chapter 6|8 pages

Four Masterpieces

chapter 7|41 pages

Bruckner and his Disciples

chapter 8|29 pages

The Eighth Symphony

chapter 9|25 pages

The Final Decade

chapter 10|42 pages

Anomalies of History