For someone who's not in the music profession, doesn't play or sing in any amateur bands or choirs, and isn't involved in musical organisations in any way, shape or form, I have a silly number of M2 recordings! 7 on vinyl; 10 on CD; 12 as legal downloads; the Abbado/Lucerne dvd, and various tapes and dvd recordings from TV concerts (Proms, etc) over the years. However, of these comparitively few are from traditional 'big name' conductors: there are no Mehtas or Klemperers, the only Bernstein is the one I mentioned above, the only Rattles are from TV broadcasts of live concerts (including the wonderful one which was his last concert with the CBSO). That being said, in this M2-a-thon, I'm going to concentrate again on the less well known, oft less admired conductors and recordings. To start...
This one's a bit of a mystery...I have it in 3 incarnations, the one you see here, the same recording as part of a Slovenian box-set but with the orchestra cited as Slovenian Philharmonic and with Eva Novzak-Houzka replacing Ute Priew, and the Forum release which retains the Ljubljana orchestra, but omits to mention the soloists and replaces Horvat with Anton Nanut. Whatever - it's all the same live recording!
And it is absolutely wonderful!
The first movement is paced perfectly with just the right amount of urgency and menace coupled with beauty and some clear, lovely playing. When it needs the power, it's certainly there, when it needs gentleness that's there too. OK, the high strings are a little on the thin side but the woodwinds especially are delightful. The percussion is clear, precise and what a whopper of a large tam-tam! It all flows well with no eccentric changes in tempo
The second movement is again paced just as I like it, the pizzicato section as delicate as can be. The third movement is a little less polished maybe, and the triangle perhaps too pronounced, but again no real complaints- lovely deep final chord.
Urlicht - whoever it's sung by - is fine until the last minute or so when there are a couple of coughs in the audience and the movement tends to end just a little too abruptly. The finale opens with an understated tam-tam but a huge chord from the orchestra which dies down well. The march and subsequent explosions are handled really nicely and the off-stage brass-band are just distant enough, oh and the percussion crescendos are superb- I reckon the percussionist split the high tam-tam which might account for it's mysteriopus absense later! The entrance of the choir is really
ppp, but there's something really odd going on in the brass chorale after the first choral / solo 'verse'; something somewhere sounds very off - I think it's the tremolo woods / strings in the background. Anyhow, back comes the choir and all is well as is the second orchestral interlude prior to 'O Glaube', which has just the right amount of urgency. The soloists have a bit too much vibrato and the choir doesn't sound 'big' enough, but the ending is well handled with a superbly slow 'Aufersteh'n' with an organ you can actually hear, reasonable tubular bells but, oddly, no 2nd tam-tam at the close.
OK, this is a ridiculously cheap CD (an couple of quid I think), but the recording is spacious and clear and the performance well on a par with much more illustrious and expensive offerings. The version pictured is on single disc has no applause at the end, the 'Nanut' version spread over 2 discs does - it also has a most bizarre start to the 5th movement, not with the crash bang wallop after 'Urlicht', but with the first offstage horn calls.