You know, I will place this recording among my 5 top choices (upon hearing in a better format, I might place it even higher):
Bernstein/RCO/DG
Levine/PO/RCA
Oue/NDR/Exton
Ozawa/BSO/Philips
Maazel/NYPO/NYPO
Maazel is very faithful to the score. For instance, in I. there is no Pesante or a like at the second climax and he is one of few who observes it. Except for "Etwas Frischer (somewhat livelier)" there is NO sign to speed up at the start of the first one, i.e., the fanfare-like passage that leads to the development section. MOST conductors, e.g., Abbado, Barenboim, just rush from the start, but Maazel waits until the Ewig motif is uttered in the brass and from that point on gradually picks up the speed all the way to the climax. Along with the Ozawa, Maazel is best in the passage marked "Leidenschaftlich" (passionately) that follows the second allegro-like climax, in which the doom leaden second theme is varied in different forms in strings. In my memory, nobody comes close in terms of the vigor, intensity, and grim bitterness in this passage.
Overall, the ebb and flow that Maazel imbues throughout the whole movt. is just incredible.
John,