Yes, Barry, you should have got a nice chunk of change. I just looked it up, and it cost me $105 in 2002, my winning bid on eBay.
The Bach Suite, on disc 2, was played by the Leningrad Philharmonic, conducted by Gennady Rozhdestvensky, recorded live in 1976. I suppose they added it to the Kondrashin pieces to fill out the disc. The Bach piece is 21:18; following it is the first movement of M 3, at 32:31.
Kirill did indeed whip the orchestra up to a full gallop, doing M3 in 90:35--eleven minutes faster than old Haitink's CSO performance of recent fame (but his Christmas live broadcast of 1983 was only 94:14). In looking over my holdings of M 3, I find that Neumann runs one second faster than Kondrashin, at 90:34. Then there is Schuricht and the Stuttgart band in 1960, coming in at 86:59. No, wait! There's Mitropoulos pushing the NYPO through at 78:16, a live performance in 1956. Looks like he's the speed champ.
Bernstein and Haitink share the loafer award in holding out for 106 minutes, although the Dutchman lingers 43 seconds longer.
Have I missed anyone at the extremes?
What fun.
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