I attended the CSO concert this past weekend with Klaus Mäkelä conducting the Fifth, and it was really quite good. I had high expectations for the kid –– as one should –– and for the most part he knocked it out of the park.
The first movement was steady with wild outbursts, hampered only by a slight crack in the trumpet introduction (the note that is paired with the opening cymbal clash before the first tutti chord, so not as big of a deal is one might think).
Mäkelä went attacca into the second movement, a wise choice. This movement reminded me of how Bernstein does it: the fast parts are quick, wild, and spontaneous, and the softer bits are very solemn. Some messy moments in playing had to be forgiven for how exciting things were here, and when conductors pay too much attention to getting every note perfect this movement can come off as sounding micromanaged. The movement ended with an extremely loud thud on the timpani, a very jarring move. It was probably and accented sff note, as opposed to the fp in the score.
Mäkelä took about a minute before the third movement, which went off the best I've ever heard it in my life save for the horn soloist entering two bars early at one point (not a big deal to me).
The famous adagietto was mostly splendid, I would guess somewhere around 10.5 minutes. The middle section had some nice motion to it which kept things flowing lyrically as I believe Mahler intended. I didn't like the way Mäkelä micromanaged the final climax, and he precisely dictated every note in the final bars, impeccably cuing each section to build the last chord. It just felt a bit inorganic.
The finale was fantastic (and no, he didn't slow down before the big chorale). The final bars were a bit sloppy and I don't know whether to blame the CSO or Mäkelâ's erratic Mahlerian conducting, but it was exciting as all hell.
All in all, Mäkelä has got some true Mahlerian spirit in him. I cannot dismiss him based on any issues I have since he's only 27; I'm thrilled to hear how good his Mahler will be later in his life. I think the Concertgebouw is in good hands, though we should be skeptical of his inexperience.
It's weird, for the first time a major Mahler conductor is younger than myself. Life goes on...