"Tintner's Bruckner cycle has, for me, proved to be a hit and miss affair, marked by illuminating performances and lackluster mediocrity. This recording is most certainly in the former category! Nowhere on record have I found a recording that so brings out the grandeur and majesty of the 4th symphony. In respectful disagreement with one of the other reviewers, I must say that I find the brass to be fine toned and superbly played. Indeed, the clean brass sound here pleases the ear more than many competeing versions, especially because the digital recording helps to take any distortion off of the tone.Tintner's main attribute here is his extraordinarily sensitive tempos. The phrases in the first movement are stretched out just long enough to truly bring out a sense of awe and wonder, and if his style is perhaps a bit slower than usual, he certainly makes a case for it. Going back to the Jochum after listening to this CD, I was almost depressed at the lack of space-and Jochum's was previously one of my favorite recordings, period.Naxos has done also wonders with the sound here, creating a beautiful, clean, digital recording. The dynamic range holds up well-perhaps a little too well for some listners, who may find themselves adjusting the volume level to avoid being blasted away. For an introduction to Bruckner or anyone interested in late romantic symphonies, this bargain disc can't be beat-and Tintner's revelatory conducting makes this recording a must for collectors as well."
Seems too good to be true!
Kenneth Fung | Hong Kong | 11/07/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Honestly, Bruckner has not been my favorite composer until I listened to the wonderful cycle by Tintner on Naxos. There are more warmth, more expressions, more phrasings, more direction, more energy....simply put, more music! I played this one alongside the famous Berlin Philharmonic/Karajan reading and Tintner is a clear winner. Even the recording sounds clearer and warmer. And we have to bear in mind we only pay a bargain price for this superlative CD. Bravo, Naxos!Highly recommended. (And the recommendation is for the whole Bruckner cycle, not limiting to Sym #4.)"
THE MOST WONDERFUL INTERPRETATION OF THE 4th Synphony
Karl W. Nehring | 12/30/1999
(5 out of 5 stars)
"It's a Recommended CD Titner had a EXTRA-VISION of This Symphony, all the Sounds are heard, every note is amazing!"
Comparative Review
Karl W. Nehring | Ostrander, OH USA | 07/16/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)
"This review compares the Tintner Naxos recording against a recording by Salonen on Sony. Bear with me a moment as I start this comparison with a gripe about the cover art on the Sony CD, which features glamorous closeups of Salonen, some of which show him either trying to look angelic and profound or else trying to look like opera/pop superstar Andrea Bocelli, who at least has an excuse for posing with closed eyes (Mr. Bocelli is blind). The Naxos CD by comparison is a model of taste and functionality (it is much easier to tell at a glance what the heck you are looking at when you come across this one in the CD rack, that's for sure).
I did not purchase these two CDs at the same time. I first picked up the Salonen version, and when I listened to it the first few times, I thought it was nicely recorded, nicely played, but lacking something. It was rather boring, actually. I much preferred my old favorite Chailly/Concertgebouw recording on London.
When I finally picked up the Tintner, my first reaction was, "now, this is more like it." Tintner took the opening movement quite slowly, but he seemed to have everything thought out in such a way that the music always seemed fresh and exciting. The orchestra did not seem quite as polished as the LA Philharmonic, and the recording seemed not quite as refined, but the end result just seemed to be a better rendition of what I would suppose Bruckner's musical intentions to be.
Just for fun, I decided to do my final comparison of the two versions in a "blind" fashion. I stuck the two disks in two players and switched back and forth between them. On the piece of paper I had in front of me to write comments upon, I marked off columns for "A" and "B."
As I listened, I began to take notes. I noted that in recording A for example, the sound of the horns--in terms of both sound quality and musical phrasing--seemed much more rustic and atmospheric, while the bass in recording B seemed a bit firmer, and the overall sound quality seemed a bit more refined.
One of the fascinating puzzles growing out of this comparative process was that it was hard to decide about recording B whether the refined sound made the orchestra sound more refined, or whether it was rather the more refined sound of the orchestra that made the engineering seem more refined. Chew on that one for a while...
I also noted that the violins in recording A were spread across the stage, but in recording B they seemed relegated to the left side. I preferred the resulting sound of the old-fashioned arrangement of violins in A, which seemed to fill out the "sound picture" nicely.
Overall, recording A just seemed to offer a more vivid and more convincing musical interpretation of Bruckner. Although I thought recording B was a very good recording, I found myself more entertained and delighted by A, and it seemed to me that A presented a much more convincing Bruckner performance. Recording B was pleasant, but it wasn't quite Bruckner. It is recording A, then, that became my pick from this comparison.
Yes, I of course had realized after a minute or two of listening--not even that long, probably--that recording A had to be the Tintner recording, because of what I had heard of the two recordings before comparing them in this fashion. (I may have been blind for this comparison, but I was not deaf.) At about ten bucks less than the Sony disk, then, the Naxos is a genuine bargain, and I recommend it highly."