I finally received the Blu-ray disc from HMV.CO.JP, along with Haitink/VPO/Philips Bruckner 8th CD.
After checking the package with my Geiger gauge(^^), I gave a spin.
The following is what I posted on
www.hmv.co.jp:
"The sound heard on this Blu-ray disc is amazingly clean, warm and vivid, although it is not in DTS or any discernable digital format. There is a (very) slight dynamic compression, being originally recorded for TV, but it is never distracting or bothering my ears.
The BSO is phenomenal giving their best performance of this piece for their departing music director. The Boston string is incredibly rich and has a warmly resonating quality, the brass golden and appropriately heavy, while Everett ’Vic’ Firth’s timpani is everything I can ask for - accurate and crisp, justly loud and authoritative. Ozawa’s reading had ripened over the years (the Finale clocks over 27 min.). It is grand in scale, minute in details, but also extraordinarily cogent. Surpassing his earlier recordings with BSO and SKO, it’s his best M9th to date and one of his finest achievements in Boston.
This Mahler Ninth ranks with Bernstein (1965, 1979 Tanglewood, 1985), Levine (analogue, PO), Karajan (digital, BPO), and Solti (analogue, LSO).
A must for anyone who loves this great work.
Timings of the four movements are,
I. 27’02”
II. 15’53”
III. 13’14”
IV. 27’20”
P.S. Don’t worry about the infamous audience coughing in the Finale - the Japanese engineers cleverly attenuated the noise without a noticeable glitch."
John,
P.S. I watched DVD version as well. I must say the Blu-ray disc is the clear winner here; not only it has better picture quality the audio has more details, more high and low ends, and cleaner sound stage. Maybe it has to do with the remastering gone for the Blu-ray format. It's pretty darn good stuff.