The Symphony in D minor, WAB 100, was composed by Anton Bruckner in 1869 between Symphony No. 1 and Symphony No. 2. In 1895 Bruckner declared that this symphony "gilt nicht" and he did not assign a number to it. The work was published and premiered in 1924.
Composition
Bruckner composed this symphony from 24 January to 12 September 1869. It was initially designated Symphony No. 2, while the C minor symphony of 1872 was called Symphony No. 3. According to the conductorGeorg Tintner, "How an off-hand remark, when directed at a person lacking any self-confidence, can have such catastrophic consequences! Bruckner, who all his life thought that able musicians knew better than he did, was devastated when Otto Dessoff asked him about the first movement: "But where is the main theme?" In 1895, when Bruckner reviewed his symphonies in order to have them published, he declared that this symphony "does not count". He wrote on the front page "annullirt" and replaced the original "Nr. 2" with the symbol "∅". The symbol "∅" was later interpreted as the numeral zero and the symphony got the nickname Die Nullte. In the words of David Griegel, "Like many other composers, I believe Bruckner was merely being too self-critical, and the unnumbered symphonies are also works worthy of our enjoyment". Because of the designation Die Nullte, the biographers Göllerich and Auer felt it was composed before Symphony No. 1. Contrary to this assumption, the autograph score is dated 24 January to 12 September 1869, and no earlier sketch or single folio of this work has been retrieved. The work, which is sometimes referred to as "Symphony in D minor, opus posthumous", but in English is most often called "Symphony No. 0", premiered in Klosterneuburg on 12 October 1924.
The score calls for a pair each of flutes, oboes, clarinets, bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani, and strings. It has four movements:
First movement
The work begins with a D minor ostinato in the strings:
Leopold Nowak suggested that the answer to Dessoff's question is that the principal theme is in the first movement of Symphony No. 3 in D minor, which also begins with an ostinato. The second theme group, starting in A major, features syncopated exchanges between the first violins:
The third theme group is in F major:
Second movement
Nowak places all markings of Andante for this B major movement in parentheses:
Unlike most other Bruckner slow movements, this movement is in sonata form. The second theme is introduced by the first violins, accompanied by the second violins and violas:
Third movement
Loud and rather ferocious, the theme has something of the qualities of the Mannheim rocket, but its chromaticism suggests the future music of Shostakovich.
Unlike later scherzi, this one has a separate coda for the reprise of the Scherzo.
Fourth movement
The movement begins with a slow introduction, fairly unique for a Bruckner Finale; the only other Finale with a slow introduction is in the Fifth Symphony. The theme in the violins is accompanied by semiquavers in the woodwinds, and will recur in the development:
This gives way to the main theme of the following Allegro passage, which does double duty as a third theme:
The second theme reminds of Rossini:
The symphony ends in D major with a coda marked Schnell.