Free Anton Bruckner Music Downloads

(b. Ansfelden, 4 Sept 1824; d. Vienna, 11 Oct 1896). Austrian composer. He was the son of a village schoolmaster and organist, with whom he first studied and for whom he could deputize when he was ten. His father died in 1837 and he was sent at 13 as a chorister to the St Florian monastery where he could study organ, violin and theory. He became a schoolmaster-organist, holding village posts, but in 1845 went to teach at St Florian, becoming organist there in 1851. During these years he had written masses and other sacred works. In 1855 he undertook a counterpoint course in Vienna with the leading theorist, Simon Sechter; the same year he was appointed organist at Linz Cathedral. He continued his studies almost to the age of 40, but more crucial was his contact, in 1863, with Wagner's music - first Tannheuser, then Tristan und Isolde; these pointed to new directions for him, as the Masses in D minor, E minor and F minor, and Symphony no.1, all written in 1864-8, show. In 1868, after Sechter's death, he was offered the post of theory teacher at the Vienna Conservatory, which he hesitantly accepted. In the ensuing years he traveled to Paris and London as an organ virtuoso and improviser. In Vienna, he concentrated on writing symphonies; but the Vienna PO rejected no.1 as "wild", no.2 as "nonsense" and "unplayable" and no.3 as "unperformable". When no.3 was given, it was a fiasco. No.4 was successfully played, but no.5 had to wait 18 years for a performance and some of no.6 was never played in Bruckner's lifetime. He was criticized for his Wagnerian leanings during the bitter Brahms-Wagner rivalries. His friends urged him to make cuts in his scores (or made them for him); his lack of self-confidence led to acquiescence and to the formal distortion of the works as a result. Late in his life he revised several of his earlier works to meet such criticisms. Bruckner taught at a teacher-training college, 1870-74, and at Vienna University - after initial opposition - from 1875. Only in the 1880s did he enjoy real success, in particular with Symphony no.7; his music began to be performed in Germany and elsewhere, and he received many honours as well as grants from patrons and the Austrian government. Even in his last years, he was asked to rewrite Symphony no.8, and when he died in 1896 no.9 remained unfinished. Bruckner was a deeply devout man, and it is not by chance that his symphonies have been compared to cathedrals in their scale and their grandeur and in their aspiration to the sublime. The principal influences behind them are Beethoven and Wagner. Beethoven's Ninth provides the basic model for their scale and shape, and also for their mysterious openings, fading in from silence. Wagner too influenced their scale and certain aspects of their orchestration, such as the use of heavy brass (from no.7 Bruckner wrote for four Wagner tubas) and the use of intense, sustained string cantabile for depth of expression. His
Free Anton Bruckner legal music downloads
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Album: Symphony No. 3 Style:Romantic Classical Label:Naxos
Album: Symphony No. 7 In E Flat Major Style:Romantic Opera Label:Haenssler Verlag Gmbh
Album: Messen: Anton Bruckner - Te Deum, Psalm 150, Messe Nr. 2 Style:Romantic Opera Label:Haenssler Verlag Gmbh
Album: Symphony No. 8 (Disc 1) Style:Romantic Opera Label:RCO Live
Album: The Complete Symphonies Style:Romantic Label:Naxos
Album: Symphony No. 2 Style:Romantic Label:Naxos
Album: Symphonies Nos. 8 & 10 Style:Romantic Label:Naxos
Album: Symphony No. 7 Style:Romantic Label:Naxos
Album: Symphony No. 1 (1866, First Version ) Style:Romantic Classical Label:Naxos
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