List of organ compositions by Anton Bruckner

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Although he was a proficient organist, Anton Bruckner left few compositions for the organ.[1][2]

Bruckner has mainly made his name because of his organ playing during his journeys to Nancy, Paris, London and the states of imperial Austria. His celebrity as organist was mainly based on his improvisation skill. The compositions Bruckner left for the organ are of secondary significance in his portfolio. With the exception of the later Perger Präludium with its romantic chromaticism, the few organ works date from his earlier lifetime and are mainly based on the baroque tradition.[3]

Compositions

The Bruckner-Orgel, St. Florian Abbey

Only five pieces and two sketches are indubitably autograph compositions:[4]

In addition:

  • Adagio für Orgel (Adagio for organ) - a sketch in B major, which was found in 1953 in a catalog of the Musikautographen-Sammlung of Louis Koch. It is a first draft for the main theme of the Adagio of the Symphony No. 9Gesamtausgabe, Band XII/6, No. 7[5][12]
  • Seven short organ preludes, WAB 127 & 128, written in c. 1835. Doubts have been cast on their authenticity. They are presumably copies of compositions by Johan Baptist Weiß or other organists – Gesamtausgabe, Band XII/6, No. 8 (Addendum).[5][13][14]
  • Präludienbuch, WAB 334 – a 58 pages manuscript with 159 short organ pieces, which are presumably transcriptions of works of other composers. Twenty-two of these pieces were issued by Louis Dité in his Vademecum für Organisten, Weinberger Verlag, 1947, and Festliche Präludien, Weinberger Verlag 1948.

Selected discography

A few "complete editions" of the organ works have been released. Even if one includes the "apocryphal" preludes WAB 127 and 128, the playing time only slightly exceeds half an hour: 33 minutes for Horn, 26 minutes for Schaller, who does not include these preludes.
In addition to the seven preludes WAB 127 and WAB 128, there are other short organ works, that are assigned to Bruckner in obscure collections. Franz Haselböck has recorded some of them on harmonium - very interesting as a curiosity, but unfortunately they were not released on CD. With all the necessary critical restraint, a collection of such curiosities would be desired.[3]

  • Franz Haselböck, Brucknerorgel der Piaristenkirche Wien, 19th-Century Austrian Organ Music: Anton Bruckner Complete Works for Organ / Simon Sechter Selected Organ Works – LP: Musical Heritage Society MHS 1972
  • Augustinus Franz Kropfreiter, Bruckner-Orgel (St. Florian Monastery), Verein der Freunde der Oberösterreichischen Stiftskonzerte – LP: ORF/Lesborne L 2955, c. 1973. A digitalisation of the LP can be heard on John Berky's website: Organ works by Augustinus Franz Kropfreiter (items 5 to 9)
  • Heinz Lohmann, Klais-Orgel of the Jesuit Church, Mannheim - LP: RBM 3004, 1974; reissued as CD: Klassic Haus KHCD 2012–008, 2011
  • Erwin Horn, Klais-Orgel of the Frauenkirche, Nuremberg, Bruckner Orgelwerke – CD: Novalis 150 071–2, 1990 - with the Improvisationskizze Bad Ischl (improvisation on the finale of Symphony No. 1)
  • Erwin Horn, Bruckner-Orgel (Sankt Florian), Was mir die Liebe erzählt - CD: MOT 13551, 2007 - with the Kaiserliche Festmusik (improvisation on the four themes of the sketch)
  • Klaus Sonnleitner, Kaleidoskop - Die Brucknerorgel in St. Florian - CD: Spektral SRL4-12107, 2011 (except the preludes WAB 127 & 128)
  • Gerd Schaller, Eisenbarth-organ of the Church of the Ebrach Abbey, Bruckner – Mass 3, Psalm 146, Organ works – CD: Profil Hänssler PH16034, 2015 (except the preludes WAB 127 & 128)

A recording by AMuSicScoRe of the 22 issued pieces from the Bruckner Präludienbuch can be heard on YouTube:

Note: a transcription in D-flat major of the Andante in F major, WAB 334/10, is a popular piece by horn quartets.[15]

A few other not issued pieces from the Bruckner Präludienbuch by AMuSicScoRe can be heard on YouTube:

A few pieces from Bruckner's Kurze-General-Baß-Regeln, WAB 258 can by AMuSicScoRe can be heard on YouTube:

References

  1. ^ a b c C. van Zwol, p. 676
  2. ^ a b c d C. Howie, Chapter II, p. 30
  3. ^ a b Hans Roelofs, Anton Bruckner Diskographie - Werke für Orgel
  4. ^ Frühe Orchesterwerke und Instrumentalstücke
  5. ^ a b c d e f C. van Zwol, p. 677
  6. ^ Bruckner online - Quellenbeschreibung
  7. ^ C. Howie, Chapter III, p. 120
  8. ^ U. Harten, p. 210
  9. ^ "Festmusik" by Klaus Sonnleitner (1996)
  10. ^ a b Critical discography of the Improvisationsskizze Ischl 1890, WAB 242
  11. ^ Max Auer, Anton Bruckner, der Meister der Orgel, in: Die Musik 16/12, p. 884 (1924)
  12. ^ U. Harten, p. 43
  13. ^ C. Howie, Chapter I: p. 12
  14. ^ Werkverzeichnis Anton Bruckner - Drei Präludien, WAB 127, Vier Präludien, WAB 128
  15. ^ Preludes from the Orgelbuch

Sources

External links