I don't think it's snarky one-ups-mans-ship at all. I think it's a fact. What Bush did (and didn't do) directly effected the lives of hundreds of thousands of people, if not more. It effected their health, welfare, livelihood, mortality - you name it. You accused Boulez of more or less ruining music ("worse effect", I think were the words). Even if that were true, how would that possibly compare? Have you listened to Top 40 radio lately? - I'm not even sure there is such a thing anymore. Were you FORCED to listen to Boulez as a conductor? Did a teacher make you do it? What about people who actually like some of his compositions? They exist, you know (and I'm one of them). Have other musicians been forced to conduct just like Boulez does? Frankly, I've seen darn few conductors imitate what he does at all (and I'm sure you're glad for that). Frank Zappa came about the closest. And, as a point of irony, Dave Hurwitz of Classicstoday is, to some extent, in your camp regarding Boulez. I've been very good friends with Mr. Hurwitz over the last several decades, but this is one musical point I happen to disagree with him about. That doesn't mean that we would come to blows over it, because we both know that it doesn't matter in relation to what politicians and lawmakers do. In fact, it hardly matters at all. Why is that not an obvious point?
So yes, I will certainly agree to disagree with you. And, as a coincidence, I just happened to pick up a spare copy of Boulez's VPO Mahler 6 just today. It was a used copy in perfect shape, and I've been wanting a back-up copy for a while now. I own many different versions of Mahler 6, but I happen to like the Boulez one very much (I liked his earlier BBC S.O. one even more). I think his Vienna M6 and M3 are very good, as well as the shorter song cycles disc that he also made in Vienna (frankly, I would take it over the Bernstein one, made with the oft over-wrought Thomas Hampson). I also enjoy his Staatskapelle Berlin M8 much, MUCH more than the greatly bally-hoo'd MTT/SFSO one, in spite what few faults it may have. So yes, I do disagree. I think it has very little to do with "objectivity", or "subjectivity".
I think it has to do with judging each recording separately - regardless of who the artists are (that hardly matters to me) - and judging them in relation to what the composer actually penned down on paper (otherwise, what standards are there?), as well as judging them in relation to the already recorded competition. Otherwise, all we're doing - as critics - is imposing our own emotional responses on to others. In my opinion, a good critic describes what a recording sounds like in the most tangible means possible, and then allows the reader to make up their own mind whether or not that particularly recording is for them (or not). That doesn't mean that a critic shouldn't have an opinion - it just means that a critic should at least attempt to adhere to some comparative standards. And believe me, I'm not saying that I've always been a great critic (or something more than a flawed person). But I do think I'm better than many of them. For one thing, I stick to what little I truly know.
Let's just take Boulez's Bartok as an example (which you claim to be so poor). Are there better recordings of the "Concerto For Orchestra"? Of course there are. I think Reiner, Kubelik, and Dorati are hard to beat (among a few others too). But certainly Boulez's is serviceable enough; but - and more to the point - it comes with a pretty darn good performance of the "Four Orchestral Pieces" - a work I really like. So why should I get rid of it? I happen to really like the Boulez/CSO recording of "The Wooden Prince", which is Boulez's second recording of it. It's a work he really likes, and I think it's a very good one also. Have I been duped? . . . If so, explain how. Explain to me how that makes me naive (again, you called it).
Are there better recordings of the "Music For Strings, Percussion, and Celeste"? Yes, I believe there are. But the differences aren't that huge, are they? I happen to really like having that work coupled with "The Miraculous Mandarin". I like listening to them together. Is that a problem? I think Boulez's Bartok piano concertos disc - the one with the three different pianists involved - happens to be a really great disc. Yes, I have the Ivan Fischer recording as well, which has Zoltan Koscis on the piano. I like them both! I own most of Ivan Fischer's Bartok, as well as Boulez's cycle. Perhaps that does make me a naive fool. But if so, explain how!?! Better yet, don't bother. And what about the recent disc that has the viola concerto? . . . have you truly heard a better one of that piece? I haven't.
Yes, I would say that the "Sonata For 2 Pianos & Percussion" is better in its original sonata version. But it's just nice to also have the concerto version of that work - penned by Bartok himself, after all. And, Leonard Bernstein - someone who certainly wasn't afraid to let his music making be just chalk full of "personal emotions" - recorded the concerto version of the sonata too. Was Bartok naive as well - not knowing that two such polar opposites would someday want to record his own bastardized version (D.H. thinks very little of it)?