Nott seems an honest professional, like a student that always comes to school only after having done his homework as best as he can. The problem is that his best is not always up to my expextations. He did very well in the field of contemporary music (among other things, I have some very good Ligety with BPO). He is currently conducting a (not complete) cycle in Bamberg (M3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10-Adagio, Das Lied) and perhaps we will see some of these performances on CD.
I think his connection with Mahler goes back to the establishment of a competition for conductors dedicated to Mahler, in 2004, in Bamberg (
http://www.bambergsymphony.com/dirigentenwettbewerb1.html?&L=gcerieiceexh). The three symphonies that he recorded until 2008 (the Fifth, the First and Fourth) were the same ones that had to be conducted by the candidates of the competition. I listened to these three symphonies, and I must admit that they have their moments (probably the musicians also benefited from their work with contest's candidates), but at the end of each it is like if I left the dinner-room with some residue of hunger.
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Speaking of faceless interpretations: in Japan they are going to reissue 3 among the Symphonies Dohnanyi did in Cleveland for Decca:
http://www.hmv.co.jp/en/search/index.asp?target=MUSIC&category=1&adv=1&keyword=Mahler+cleveland+Dohnanyi&site=&type=sr I admire Dohnanyi and his former band very much and my expecations were very high. Alas, the Fifth and the Sixth proved to be cold, almost soulless. Experiencing these two renditions and reading poor reviews about the First and the Fourth made me stay aloof from what I have not yet listened to. I read a positive review about the Second you can find in the Box-set dedicated to Dohnanyi at the end of his tenure in Cleveland. I never heard or read reviews about the Ninth, but I think that it does not deviate much from the rest, isn't it?
Luca