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Bruckner: Symphony No. 7

Bruckner: Symphony No. 7

Cover ALPHA932
Label(s)
Genre(s)
Classical
Code
ALPHA932
Inlay available for download
Booklet available for download

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$22.00
  • Symphony No. 7 in E Major, WAB 107: I. Allegro moderato
    Composer(s) Anton Bruckner
    Artist(s) Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich Paavo Järvi

    Symphony No. 7 in E Major, WAB 107: I. Allegro moderato

    21:18
    $7.00
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  • Symphony No. 7 in E Major, WAB 107: II. Adagio. Sehr feierlich und sehr langsam
    Composer(s) Anton Bruckner
    Artist(s) Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich Paavo Järvi

    Symphony No. 7 in E Major, WAB 107: II. Adagio. Sehr feierlich und sehr langsam

    21:23
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  • Symphony No. 7 in E Major, WAB 107: III. Scherzo. Sehr schnell - Trio. Etwas langsamer
    Composer(s) Anton Bruckner
    Artist(s) Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich Paavo Järvi

    Symphony No. 7 in E Major, WAB 107: III. Scherzo. Sehr schnell - Trio. Etwas langsamer

    09:40
    $3.40
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  • Symphony No. 7 in E Major, WAB 107: IV. Finale. Bewegt, doch nicht schnell
    Composer(s) Anton Bruckner
    Artist(s) Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich Paavo Järvi

    Symphony No. 7 in E Major, WAB 107: IV. Finale. Bewegt, doch nicht schnell

    12:29
    $4.60
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Total running time: 64 minutes.

    Album information

    Nearly one hundred years after the first performance of Anton Bruckner’s Seventh Symphony took place at the Zurich Tonhalle, its music director Paavo Järvi now conducts this monumental work.

    The first performance of Anton Bruckner’s Seventh Symphony at the Zurich Tonhalle took place on 14 January 1924, to mark the centenary of the composer’s birth. Under the direction of Walter, Furtwängler, Klemperer, Böhm and Karajan (to name but a few!), the orchestra has since given many performances of this work which was its composer’s first great success and which the conductor Hermann Levi considered ‘the most significant composition since the death of Beethoven’. The orchestra’s Brucknerian tradition is perpetuated with this cycle conducted by its music director Paavo Järvi, which will continue with the Eighth and Ninth Symphonies until 2024, the year of Bruckner’s bicentenary.