I Read the review - as much as I could stomach of it - and don't agree with it in the slightest. Note that he holds Abbado's first M3 - the one with the VPO - in very high esteem. There are some terrific moments in that performance, no doubt, but there are also a number of less than stellar ones too. To give but one example: the brief percussion soli - located just before the start of the trombone solo - is a messy disaster on the Abbado (if you listen to it loud on headphones, you'll even hear somebody drop the tambourine). On the Zinman, it's perfectly audible. Beyond all that, the sound on the Abbado/VPO M3 has an ubsurdly exaggerated dynamic range, due to it being an early digital recording.
It was recorded rather close up. Yet, the soft parts fall almost completely below the radar screen. That was a characteristic of bad digital recordings in the ealry 80's. Try listening to the double basses at the beginning of the vocal movement without running up to your stereo to turn up the volume. It also was lacking in richness in the lower mid-range. The upper midrange sounded nearly as shrill and harsh as the top notes. You know, the funny thing is, this Zinman M3 incorporates some of the things that I really like about that first Abbado recording; particularly the intensity in the horns. Previoiusly, I've often times complained about the kettle drums being too loud in the last thirty seconds of the entire symphony (two sets, going back and forth on the tonic and dominant notes) - sounding as though someone were trying to build a garage. But on the Abbado/VPO one, they're soft and "spongey" sounding; to the point of almost being inaudible. I think that Zinman gets the timpani balance just right, as well as observing Mahler's description of what he wants from the brass there ("with a noble, saturated tone"). I also find Abbado's VPO "bim-bam" movement lacking a bit in joyeousness. Make no mistake, he really gets his muted brass to snear in the central passage. But so does Zinman. On the whole, I'll take the Zinman anyday.
Barry