Recording Information
The music of Mahler was a regular part of Solti's repertory both in the concert hall and in the recording studio and it was in the 1960s that Solti first made recordings of music by Mahler and this, his first account of the mighty Second Symphony was among the first. It is released here for the first time as a single CD and the original Gramophone review [by the eminent Mahler scholar and musicologist Deryck Cooke] greeted the release of the LPs very enthusiastically:
"... the new Decca stereo recording has special points of excellence all its own. The most striking thing in the whole performance, for me, is the first movement, in which Solti penetrates to the inner significance of the unusual structure with an insight I have never encountered before. The short movement for contralto is treated sensitiviely. Helen Watts sings beautifully. The vast finale ... usually comes off almost automatically ... Solti builds it up impressively ... chorus, orchestra and soloists leave nothing to be desired ... the stereo recording is one of Decca's best... bringing off perfectly all the different perspectives of the off-stage brass. The early unison calls are certainly "in the far distance"; the marching band music is indeed "scarcely perceptible" and then "getting nearer"; the later fanfares for the four trumpets are electrifyingly "much nearer"; ... we have surely the sound Mahler must have imagined, according to his meticulous indications."
Gramophone
Decca The Originals 4758501
This was my first encounter with the work and I still love it very much. Solti maximizes Mahler's three dimensional, theatrical effects by emphasizing every instrumental line in vivid details. He goes for diversified, rather than unified, sound in this work, and the result is a unique Resurrection symphony that sounds like no other version. The only downside is that I can't hear the organ at the end (well, if there was indeed organ I still can't hear it only old LP). Let's hope that Decca engineers have boosted the organ sound in this remastering.
John,
P.S> 6/11 is English release date.