Well, my copy finally arrived and I got to listen to it twice this afternoon while I was bedridden because my back suddenly went out yesterday (some serious pain!!). I can't write too well so I hope I make sense.
I really like this M3 alot...not as much as my favorite Maazel M3, but still fine in terms of it's subtle bar by bar structuring that slowly builds to reveal a solid architectural beauty, an approach that pays much dividends in the finale, when there is a feeling of "fullness" and completeness. To my ears, the very opening is a little too low key than I like (Maazel's is more powerful and earth bound for better or for worse), but there is an "autumnal" feeling thoughout that I actually enjoyed. Make no mistake, the brass is powerful, but it's kept in line too, "micromanaged" almost but it's power deeply considered...at least thats how I heard it while my back was screaming in pain!! Haitink's subtle control was interesting though, and Barry is correct when he says this sounds like an older Mahler. Haitink plays the 3rd like it's a 9th or 10th symphony, which brings a different kind of sound that I could get into.
Haitink is a very interesting conductor for me...his sense of structure and control is very refined and subtle, but this isn't boring to me, rather it sounds stoic on top, with emotion on the bottom. I really like Haitink's instinct for structure in Mahler, which seems to tighten up this performance of Mahler's 3 quite a bit, but in a good way. In contrast, Maazel's M3 is the work of an uneducated "outsider" artist...sprawling, slow and quirky. In Haitink the strings have a hushed intensity too...actually everything is rather repressed until the last measures...but this M3 sounds rather quiet mostly. Aside from the intense climaxes, I think it's the quietest M3 I've heard. The highlight of the whole performance is the last movement...perhaps the best I've ever heard.
--Leo