Sorry for coming in late. I heard Barbirolli's 1954 Free Trade Hall Ninth, and his revival of Das Lied with Richard Lewis and Kerstin Meyer, but by 1959 other things kept me away from most Halle concerts. However, just about the time of this Mahler Second I got out of Wellington Barracks, Bury, where I was doing basic training for National Service, and made it to the Free Trade Hall for the Mahler Second. But the conductor was Rudolf Schwarz and the orchestra was the BBC Symphony. Schwarz had credentials in this work - he'd learnt all the Mahler symphonies while under Nazi arrest in 1939-40, and performed it in Berlin in 1940 or 1941, for the short-lived Jewish Cultural organisation Goebbels had set up. The performance itself wasn't enormously earth-shattering but very well-prepared and delivered. I had not known of the Barbirolli performance until I found the CD and since then I have been looking for confirmation of the date of the Schwarz Manchester performance. Unless memory is playing tricks they must have been extremely close together. How could it have happened?
So far, no luck. I'd be grateful if anyone can pinpoint it. I did, however hear the Manchester performance of its companion on the CD, in the regular 1957 season - The Symphony of Psalms. I wouldn't like to comment on how good or bad the Halle was in 1959, but when I occasionally managed to get to the Free Trade Hall in the 1960s it was a different orchestra with an exceptionally good woodwind section. I think by then Barbirolli had also adopted the practice of getting the orchestra to respond on the beat, rather, as he tended to do in the 1950s, slightly after it. Ensemble in the sixties was much tighter. But it's a great loss that no recording of the Manchester or Edinburgh 1954 performances of the Ninth - the Edinburgh one was broadcast - has survived. Even Cardus admitted that there were rough edges in the Edinburgh Ninth, but he argued in Mahler they didn't matter. But after hearing the Manchester performance (which Cardus introduced with an analytical discussion) i've always found the Berlin recording a disappointment.