Gustav Mahler – Symphony No.1 (Part 2)
This continues "Gustav Mahler — Symphony No.1 (Part 1)"
Symphony No.1, Walter / Columbia SO Sony UK | DE | FR Symphony No.1 (+ Adagio, Sy.10), Bernstein / NYP Sony UK | DE | FR |
Symphony No.1 + B., Judd / Florida Ph Harmonia Mundi Musique D'Abord [mp3]) UK | DE | FR |
Symphony No.1 + B., Zinman / Tonhalle Orchestra Zurich RCA UK | DE | FR |
Zinman has flexibility and idiom, a generally warm and round approach, less militaristic. He’s generally rather ‘soft’ and awfully gentle in the third movement, his timpani muted. (No sense of dread among the basses, either... his first bass playing with way to much ease and skill to ever be pushed to his limits.) He’s stately bordering tame in the finale, but helped by the excellent depth of the burnished, dark RCA sound that gives even this less abrasive and ‘never in your face’ approach (just) enough heft.
Symphony No.1, Kondrashin / NDR SO EMI UK | DE | FR |
Der Titan, A.Hermus / Phil.O.Hagen Acousence UK | DE | FR |
Symphony No.1, Suitner/ Stakap.Dresden Berlin Classics UK | DE | FR |
Symphony No.1, Jansons / RCO RCO Live UK | DE | FR Symphony No.1, MTT / SFS SFS Media UK | DE | FR Symphony No.1, Gergiev / LSO LSO Live UK | DE | FR |
Mariss Jansons has been recorded in Mahler’s First three times. Live with the Oslo Philharmonic in 1999, in concert with the Concertgebouw in 2006, and again in 2007 with his Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra—also live. (The latter isn’t commercially available, so not as to compete with the RCO recording, even as Bavarian Radio has—finally—launched its own record label.) The description of Jansons’ Mahler will occur more often throughout this overview: “Impeccable and well mannered”. Far too good to be outright boring. But never quite exciting, either, which is deadly in Mahler.
Much more involving versions can be had by Michael Tilson Thomas (SFS Media ) and, brand new, Bernard Haitink (the above mentioned CSO Resound issue). Although no speed-demon himself, MTT is a little quicker, a little tighter of the two. Both, in any case, nail the symphony; the best version on SACD need only be sought among those two and I’d hate to choose.
The First (and the Sixth) Symphony would seem most suited to a gruff, unkempt, and wild-eyed style that one could well imagine Valery Gergiev (LSO Live ) to bring to his Mahler. The First isn’t an outright disappointment, but ultimately the impression is flabby-flimsy rather than bristling with personality and the sound lacks presence.
The font used in the title is “Arnold Boecklin Regular”
Mahler 1 Choices
1. Rafael Kubelik, BRSO, Audite
2. Rafael Kubelik, BRSO, DG
3. Pierre Boulez, CSO, DG
4. Otmar Suitner, Staatskapelle Dresden, Berlin Classics
5. Bernard Haitink, CSO, CSO Resound
5. Michael Tilson Thomas, SFS, SFSMedia
Mahler 1 SACD Choice
Bernard Haitink, CSO, CSO ResoundAppropriate Oddity Prize Winner: Bernstein, RCO, DG
1 comment:
Just a small correction, James Judd is not from New Zealand, he's British - although he was principal conductor of the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra at one point.
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