...please post the timings. Thanks in Advance.
Here are the movement timings for the forthcoming CD release:
22:49
11:56
14:41
29:11
Erst scherzo, dann andante.The timings above come from the iTunes Store Website and seem perfectly reasonable for a performance
in which the first-movement repeat is observed. Because I have an aircheck recording of the van Zweden/Dallas live performance of M6 given on 28 February 2013 (just a week or so prior to the sessions for this recording) I thought I would check the timings on that one for comparison. They are:
18:10
11:43
14:16
28:38
On this live recording they
do not observe the first-movement repeat, which would exactly account for the difference in timing. Why van Zweden skipped the repeat at the concert yet observed it on the recording is anyone's guess.
I also found a review of the soon-to-be-released CD, written by Scott Cantrell and published in the
Dallas Morning News on 2 October 2013. Here's a link:
http://artsblog.dallasnews.com/2013/10/classical-cd-review-dsos-mahler-6-good-not-great.html/The following section of the review doesn't bode well at all for the audio quality of this release, although Keith O. Johnson has worked extensively in the Meyerson Center and is certainly capable of making a fine orchestral recording there or in any other decent hall:
* * *
"This time, rather than using the fine in-house recording engineers, Roy Cherryhomes and George Gilliam, the DSO brought in Keith O. Johnson, something of a cult figure in audiophile circles. Alas, Johnson may have been out of his league with such a vast and multilayered score. Sonic results are vivid, but strangely unnatural.
"The use of too many microphones tends to flatten the perspective, and instruments seem to exist in isolated spaces, not in the warm wash of the Meyerson’s acoustics. Individual instruments and sections advance and recede in sometimes arbitrary balances. Trumpets tend to sound as if playing through a table radio. The two (not three) hammer blows are awesome, but I never did hear the cowbells that are such a distinctive feature of the instrumentation."
* * *
It's hard to imagine the cowbells being completely inaudible.
James
EDIT: The cowbell "effects" in the aircheck recording are weak yet audible—but they don't sound anything like cowbells!