"The playing of the final work, Haydn's Symphony No. 104 (the London Symphony), sparkled with intimate detail not often heard so clearly in the many available performances of this 18th century favourite. Gueller's pacing and management of the flow in this music were right on the mark, neither over controlled nor understated, but, with the sensitive responsivity of the players, done in a way to lead to a perfect understanding of the music.
The final movement capped it with a very lively, very bubbly, and very colourful performance that tickled the ears as champagne tickles the nose."
CHRONICLE HERALD, HALIFAX, March 2007
"The touch and effect was remarkable, and was made possible by Gueller's control over the orchestra. At their best, Gueller and the orchestra filled every nook and cranny of the hall just as Wagner's spirit filled the performance. "
THE TENNESSEAN, NASHVILLE, November 2006
"One symphony which separates the men from the boys - artistically, technically and emotionally - is Berlioz`s Symphonie Fantastique. It comes perhaps as no surprise to hear the worst ever and the most inspiring live performances done by the same orchestra within a short period of time.
That worst was in 2003; but now in 2006, by far the most imaginative rendition I have personally ever heard by any South African orchestra. Gueller is a master in organically interweaving the programmatic and symphonic elements of this work."
SA JEWISH REPORT, June 23, 2006
"Gueller was an utterly enthralling figure on the podium, unleashing prodigious power and dramatic urgency in Mussorgsky's Night on Bare Mountain, James Ledger's new fanfare, In this Day and Age, and most of all in Tchaikovsky's Fifth Symphony. Tempos were fast, contrasts rugged, but more than anything else there was a sense of the orchestra being pushed to a higher purpose. The ASO responded in big measure, but seemed unaccustomed to direction as commanding as this. The answer is simple: invite him back..."
THE AUSTRALIAN
"Bernhard Gueller led the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra, playing as if unleashed, in a performance of Bruckner which in terms of urgency and artistic merit could hardly have been be surpassed. It is a long time since we have heard this orchestra play with such strength and unity. Gueller succeeded in maintaining continuous tension throughout the enormous arches of Bruckner's music, something which few conductors succeed in doing. Each thematic climax and new surge of tension was made to seem, and was heard as, part of a larger development... A few seconds' silence in the Beethoven Hall marked the end of this performance. Unexpectedly, we had been shown what music can mean. We can only hope that we will have the chance to experience Bernhard Gueller at the helm of this orchestra again..."
STUTTGARTER ZEITUNG
"Having already conducted Casablanca's music so effectively, Gueller gave of his best in the second half with 'Pictures at an Exhibition' - that explosive mixture of Mussorgsky's inspiration and Ravel's masterly orchestration. This completely orthodox interpretation possessed all the required strength and spectacle. It was a noteworthy performance on the part of the Barcelona Symphony Orchestra, both in terms of brilliant sound from the full orchestra and in terms of individual playing. At the end, after the monumental Great Gate of Kiev, the audience rose to its feet in a standing ovation..."
EL PAIS, BARCELONA
"Gueller, as ringmaster, had no need of a whip. A gesture, a look, a momentary infusion of energy for a new entry was all he needed to articulate his sure and detailed musical intentions."
HALIFAX HERALD
"Gueller's programming, let alone his masterly leadership from the podium, gave us one of the most strikingly interesting concerts in years."
HALIFAX HERALD
"The famous New York Times critic Harold Schonberg told me in a 1978 interview: 'There are no bad orchestras, only bad conductors.' In this instance, the orchestra's performance was superlative, just as its superlative conductor Bernhard Gueller directed it."
DIE BURGER, CAPE TOWN
"Conductor Bernhard Gueller controlled the mighty volume resonating from the large ensemble under his baton, giving it the requisite expressiveness – no small achievement, especially in the boisterous last movement. …. the orchestral playing was irreproachable, with tight ensemble and no cues missed."
CAPE TIMES, CAPE TOWN
"Among the performance's assets were a precise, robust string sound, idiomatic wind playing
and, perhaps, more than anything, the vigour and intelligence of Gueller's interpretation."
Richard Todd, THE OTTAWA CITIZEN, April 29, 2003