Here is an exciting new recording for you by the Symphonie-Orchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks, conducted by Mariss Jansons.
The “Great” C major Symphony was the last symphony that Schubert composed, and it was “Finished” to follow his “Unfinished” symphony.
Schubert began this composition in August 1824, or possibly even as late as March 1825. Most of the work on it took place in the summer of 1825, during the longest journey of his life. It took him from Vienna via Linz, Steyr, Gmunden (where he found the scenery “truly heavenly”), Salzburg and then up to Bad Gastein, where he saw some magnificent alpine peaks. The first page of the score manuscript is dated “March 1828” – possibly the month in which he finally completed the work. On November 19 of that same year, Schubert died at the age of only thirty-one.
The symphony was premiered posthumously on March 21, 1839 in the Leipzig Gewandhaus, and conducted by the Gewandhaus Kapellmeister at that time – the 30-year-old Felix Mendelssohn. This is a star-studded and outstanding interpretation of one of the most important compositions of the Romantic symphonic repertoire.
Here is the Symphony number 9 by Franz Schubert, as conducted by Eloit Gardiner: