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To me (and many others), the biggest issue with Karajan's Mahler is that he didn't delineate many polyphonic lines clearly enough. Take a listen to his M5th and M9th and you'll see what I mean. For Karajan, well blended and homogenized sound was everything that mattered to him. Unfortunately, Mahler's music requires a conductor who can see all the trees in the forest as well as the forest itself.
Is it still in print?
Quote from: mahler09 on August 26, 2010, 01:19:33 AMIs it still in print?Yes - and it is also pretty cheap used via Clamazon vendors if you partake.........
If you do go after a used copy of the 1982 recording, be absolutely certain you're getting the "Karajan Gold" reissue, and not the original non-gold set. The difference in audio quality is astonishing—probably the biggest improvement I've ever heard in a remastering job.James
Quote from: chalkpie on August 26, 2010, 01:26:31 AMQuote from: mahler09 on August 26, 2010, 01:19:33 AMIs it still in print?Yes - and it is also pretty cheap used via Clamazon vendors if you partake.........If you do go after a used copy of the 1982 recording, be absolutely certain you're getting the "Karajan Gold" reissue, and not the original non-gold set. The difference in audio quality is astonishing—probably the biggest improvement I've ever heard in a remastering job.James