Thanks for the tip on Oue. I've just listened to it again. The 1st movement is great and, like you say, has powerful contrasts and has a "Bergian" type, dark, intellectual quality. And yes, he continues with this in the inner movements, as he must, but they are long and dry and the concept doesn't hold (in the inner movements) for me. I don't hear the same style in the adagio though, it's quiet and resigned and zen-like, plus it's minimalistic and doesn't follow the intellectual, driven powerhouse of the first three. So after the first movement, the rest is pretty much a let down (for me). Anyway thanks. I"ll check out the Giulini again.