But only movements 3,4 & 5. Sorry guys, I haven't the time to do a reasonable review of the whole symphony by the variety of recordings I would prefer. So here is my take on the middle bits...
1. Zander / Philharmonia Orch / Telarc
Movement 3 starts with just the right confident delicacy at just the right tempo and bounces along jauntily with the feel of a fairy-world oom-pah. The full orchestra ‘da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da’… outburst is a massively powerful contrast compared with what has preceded. The big downer with this recording is the posthorn. Genuine it might be, but it’s been recorded from the far side of the moon! If it’s meant to be distant and offstage, then the effect is completely lost and it’s near impossible to balance the gentle winds of the orchestra with this faint, far-off wheezing - though to be fair in the parts where the orchestra and posthorn play together, its’ distance doesn’t seem quite so vast. Maybe there are engineering tricks happening here.
As everything drifts away, the muted military bugle summons back the fairy-world oom-pah stuff. As it builds, the brass is really big – tremendous horn sound on this recording – and then this section dies to the next inaudible posthorn part – really this must be pianissimo to the power of 8! The orchestral build up to the horn call that sounds like something from the 7th symphony is well handled, then the end of the movement isn’t rushed, but isn’t too slow. The fast (and difficult to manage) tam-tam hits are in keeping with the individual beats.
Movement 4 starts very eerily, and very quiet. My knowledge of singing soloists is not good but Lilli Paasikivi sounds fine to me, nicely balanced with the orchestra. The oboe / cor anglais ‘pull-ups’ are separated notes for all sets except for glissandi for the second.
It is a movement beautifully done with no sense of time, just lose yourself in the gentleness and melancholy of the mood.
Movement 5 has confident ‘bim-bams’ from the boys and a clear set of ladies. The dynamics seem to have particular attention paid in this movement and some of the bim-bams sound too clipped for my liking. The crescendo are big, indeed rather on the loud side, but it works really well and is a satisfying reading of the movement.