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Published: Thursday, 10 October 2024 at 09:00 AM


Read on to discover why Bruckner’s works are either loved or hated by listeners… and how the music of this deeply troubled composer helped the author through a mental health crisis

Bruckner… a deeply divisive composer

There’s a conversation I’ve had regularly, with slight variations, throughout my career. It runs something like this:

Other person: ‘You like Bruckner, don’t you?’
Me: ‘Yes.’
Other: ‘I can’t stand him – those interminable/heavy/boring symphonies…’
Me: ‘What about the choral music: the masses and the motets?’
Other: ‘Oh, those are rather beautiful. I like those.’
Me: ‘Then it isn’t Bruckner you don’t like, just one aspect of him.’
Other: ‘Well, I suppose so…’

Strange, isn’t it? I can honestly say that I’ve only ever met one person who said he hated Bruckner’s choral music, and that seemed to me more for reasons of anti-religious prejudice than because he disliked the sound of it. And let’s stress one thing right now: despite Bruckner’s shift in emphasis towards symphonies later in his career, the church music is just as significant an aspect of this intensely devout composer’s output as his purely orchestral works. 

Bruckner… an intensely devout character

The E minor Mass, for eight-part chorus and 15-part wind band, is one of the most breathtakingly original religious works written in the 19th century. Like two of his most striking motets, Os Justi and Pange Lingua, it grew partly out of Bruckner’s involvement with the Cecilian Movement, a Roman Catholic society which espoused a ‘back to basics’ attitude to church music: stress on its function within the liturgy and a determination to reconnect with purer stylistic elements found, allegedly, in Baroque and Renaissance music – Palestrina, in particular, was a name that was often cited. 

The 19th century saw several attempts to get away from what the poet-philosopher Friedrich Schiller called ‘sentimental’ modern thinking and re-engage with something that had been felt to be lost. In the UK, we had the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in art and the Gothic Revival in architecture. What is extraordinary about Bruckner’s Cecilian works, though, is that there’s absolutely nothing ‘neo-’ about them. They don’t sound like the work of a man nostalgically yearning for some notional lost Eden. Beautifully contrived counterpoint, Palestrina-like in its elegance and ecstatic purity, can draw in harmonies from the worlds of Schubert or Wagner without a hint of incongruity or artifice.

Solace in church buildings…

It makes sense when you know about Bruckner’s life. The composer who, from early teens, found sanctuary and solace in some of the most beautiful gothic and Baroque church buildings in Austria seems to have imbibed something of their spirit, even their numerical proportions, in his own thinking and feeling. The Schubert authority Richard Capell wrote that Bruckner arrived at his musical forms ‘by instinct, if not by design’, but the fact is that Bruckner was one of the most design-conscious composers in the whole of the 19th century. It’s one of the reasons why his church works, even when they express the anguish of penitence or tremors of doubt – take, for instance, the wonderful Christus factus est – still feel marvellously ‘contained’. Troubled we may be, but we are in a ‘safe space’, as the chapel of the monastery of St Florian or Vienna’s St Stephen’s Cathedral were for Bruckner.