I already told John about this, but I thought I'd let the board know too.
The Kobayashi M9 also sounds good on SACD. I listened to it last week in SACD for the first time, and immediately noticed a difference. In particular, I think the SACD layer shows the limitations of the string players more than we hear on the CD layer, which actually brings an added urgency to the performance...the difficult score brings out the best they have. This could be why Kobayashi keeps a solid tempo throughout the 1st movement--Horenstein style--because perhaps it helped the orchestra "sing" better. I wish I had the score in front of me, but there are some moments when the french horn(s) eloquently turn a phrase so full of feeling that I think of Mile Davis.
This M9 continues to get better on each listen. It is very much like a Horenstein M9 conception...and like Horenstein it takes time to appreciate the finer points. Yes, as you know, this is not the LPO or VPO, but what this performance lacks in virtuosity it gains with wonderful instrumental detail and a grand, solid architecture on the level of Horenstein. Kobayashi is very much his own man though...where Horenstein is "negative" in outlook, Kobayashi is "postive" and life affirming. The strings suddenly shine in the final adagio...they really sound like they're weeping. It is really something to behold. This performance reminds me of Horenstein's M9 with the Orchestre National de France, except that the playing is much better.
--Leo