I am very happy with this disc. When I decided to buy it, I had listened to the Finale on headphones in our local Classical CD shop. Just that. Boy, what a finale. A powerful dramaturgy.
There certainly are just as much types of drama as there are interpreters, but there is a sort of distinction to be made, and it depends at which point of the Finale's course hope breaks down and the idea that all could end well is given up. Stenz is one of the few who keeps hope up until just before the last breakdown in full energy and glowing beauty. The result of the neck-breaking hammerblows isn't rising until the final appearance of the major-minor fate motif. The lucid A-major episode just before could also beluevably lead into a triumphal breakthrough. (The constructive strategy that denies that possibility is because it is already in A - a penultimate coda episode that could stride powerfully in a triumphal conclusion would rather come from a different key).
For me, the Andante-Scherzo has proven to have some advantages:
The immediate logic of thorough-composition (as in Schumann's fourth symphony) that Mahler originally had intended, is broken up and each movement keeps more independent weight of their own:
The first movement is a drama of its own, not only one of three preludes to the finale.
The Andante is an otherwordly dream of much more serenity than it would be as third movement, where it is more nostalgicly back-looking before the final fight.
The scherzo is much more sinister, bitter and venomous played after the Andante moderato.
Now,
listenig to the surround layer for the first time. Incredible clarity. Such a depth of perspective. What an orchestra! Wonderful Horns, solo trombone, tuba lines, shattering tamtam, beautiful bassoon,..... and the hammerblows....
Highly recommended.