Hey thanks. I want to check this out. And now that Gatti is in Dresden, I wonder if we'll finally get some Mahler recordings with that team (?). I look forward to any possible Sibelius recordings from the Concertgebouw. It could be fun if they dived into Nielsen as well . . . or any lesser known Scandinavian/Finnish composers (we don't need "Peer Gygnt" or the Grieg piano concerto).
Later on: I've sampled some of the video and I have several quick observations. It's interesting that the Concertgebouw does sound a bit more like the Berlin Phil. in the Phaiharmonie. The point being that each hall contributes its own unique characteristics, acoustically speaking. Second, it appears that there's been quite a bit of turnover in the Concertgebouw - at least in comparison to the last time I watched them on video. First movement: interpretively, this is exactly the opposite of what I like. I'd prefer that the A-minor march be a tad slower, and that the contrasting 'Alma theme' come bursting out of the gate - not started with tons of 'feminine' padding (as here). As for Makala himself, I need to hear a much larger sample size to determine if the Concertgebouw made the right move or not. It's weird to have to say this, but Mahler is just so standard with them.
At 1:47:05 in the finale, why, oh why can't the bass drum player and tam-tam player look at each other and get that all important unison stroke exactly together! It's perfect on the Chailly recording. Here, of course, the bass sounds before the tam-tam. Wrong! . . . On the whole, this is very well played, which is to be expected. Interpretively, it strikes me as pretty 'run of the mill'. Regardless of correctness, I'm still not convinced of andante/scherzo order. . . . . . Also, I'm just not convinced that Saariaho is a truly great composer. I just don't see that.