Thought I'd resurrect (pun intended) this thread.
I have looked numerous times at the multi-segmented posts of this performance at YouTube, but have put off buying the DVD until now. Compared to all of the rest of the other M2 performances posted there, I find this the best. Yes, there are nits to pick, but what M2 doesn't have them? I will agree with others that the conclusion is rushed, but then again, many other conductors often draw the ending out. Though the sound is overall compressed, I can live with that. Though I was in the chorus for M2 for three performances in an earlier part of my life, and have seen/heard several live performances since (yes, one of them was with Kaplan conducting
), I consider this one of the better ones (live or recorded) I have heard. I hear/recall some bits and pieces of Bernstein, Klemperer, and Walter in this performance. I'm surprised I haven't seen/heard Anna Larsson elsewhere in the contralto solos. Anyone seen/heard where she has been as of late?
One thing no one else has mentioned about this performance is that the chorus has their music committed to memory. When I was with a choral group in the mid-seventies, we did twelve (count 'em, 12!) performances of the Beethoven 9th in one season! By the 12th performance, the chorus director felt we would be able to do the 12th performance without music (with Antal Dorati and the Royal Philharmonic at Royal Festival Hall in London), but out of fear of the newer members not having performed the work as many times as I and others had done, he got cold feet. Darn!
I occasionally find someone who knows nothing about Mahler. Since a lot of people seem to thrive with seeing as well as hearing their music, I'll use this performance to convince them of Mahler's greatness as a composer.