Interesting comments there Barry and John. Yes, comparing a live performance with a studio may be somewhat unfair, especially in the Mahler M3. But the VPO, with Boulez and Haitink, show their characteristic sound, and it still is interesting to hear the approaches of both Conductors.
Well, I just finished listening to the Haitink VPO M3 from the Mahlerfeest, and overall this is the strongest VPO M3 I've heard, and one of the most extraordinary M3's I've ever heard. A truly great Mahlerian experience. Haitink's Mahler intuition is true and liberating here. There is much sophistication but also wonderful risk taking from the orchestra. It's got everything I look for in a recommendable M3:
--The feeling of an unfolding structure that reveals a grand design over a large time span, carefully considered so as not to give everything away at the beginning...check.
--Details heard in the orchestration, such as timbre-mixtures, that serve to magnify the grand design in the making, and keep the journey interesting...check.
--A particular grace in the execution of orchestral details, with sophistication and risk going hand in hand...check.
--Tempos that are effortlessly felt, take your breath away, and work for the overall grand design the composer and the players are after...check.
--A general feeling of enthusiasm from the players, excited over the work and Mahler (heard on this recording in spades)...check.
--There is a feeling of completeness after the finish, a satisfaction that can't be explained or is difficult to explain, a gestalt, or unified whole that trancends the details...check.
Again, thanks for the heads up on this recording John. Another good thing about the Haitink CSO M3 is the Haitink M3 retrospective going on on here and the Mahler-list.
--Leo