I know that both Barry and James Meckley have been wondering why I've been so quiet with all of the excitement going on about the issuance of this recording. The simple answer is that my own copy of the DG CD didn't arrive until yesterday (January 29, 2020), yet despite the fact that I made the initial announcement of the release of this performance in a similar thread back at the end of this past November, plus the fact that both Barry and I each ordered our own copies from Amazon.com Germany about the same time. I guess that since the first letter of both Barry's and James' last names come before mine, I figured that Amazon.com Germany decided to mail copies of the CD in alphabetical precedence. Also, I didn't want to comment until I had not only listened to the DG CD, plus also compare the original WRTI radio broadcast with the DG CD. That didn't happen until this morning, as I had to be elsewhere last evening.
Like Barry, I too am very excited about the resultant recording. I listened to both the DG CD and original WRTI broadcast recording before coming to write this. My system consists of a classic Dynaco PAT-5 Bi-FET preamplifier with Dynaco Stereo 150 power amplifier, with Definitive Technology tower speakers and Yamaha 450 Universal Format Disc Player.
Let me just say from the beginning that aside from the compression problem of the broadcast, I think both the DG CD and WRTI broadcast of Sunday, March 13, 2016 are quite likely sourced from different recorded performances, even down to each having a different source from different concerts for both parts of the symphony. I tend to believe that DG may have made four separate recordings from each of the performances. The DG CD seems to have shriller string sound in Part I, plus the soloists sound more distant in Part I than they do in Part II. The sound for Part II on the DG CD seems to settle more into a more normal sound pattern, with the soloists coming in for closer microphone placement. Indicative of the difference sources for Part I of the DG CD, the double fugue (track 6) takes on a faster tempo than does the WRTI broadcast. Since the CD itself is three minutes longer than the 80-minute maximum capacity of the typical CD, DG likely had to have found it difficult to squeeze those three extra minutes onto that one CD without going too far beyond what would be the absolute maximum before running out of CD space.
I won't bog myself down into commenting on the quality of performance delivery by either of the eight soloists, but the choral singing of both of the main choruses is probably the best I've ever heard. Even if the American Boychoir is few in numbers, they did an admirable job in making up for the lack thereof.
I do agree with James Meckley about the WRTI broadcast having a better organ/orchestra balance than in the DG CD. Michael Stairs, the organist, unfortunately passed away from cancer in August of 2018, so the Philly Orchestra lost a long-time musician for that instrument in his passing. I'm glad he was able to be part of this memorable concert recording. Bass drum rolls at the appropriate places in the score certainly made their impact felt on my system. Mezzo-soprano soloist Stephanie Blythe (Mulier Samaritana) was replaced by Elizabeth Bishop at the last minute due to illness.
Those of you who have the DG CD may want to know that the photo of the entire choral forces of the performance were cut out from the sides of page 2. So that photo ideally should be rectangular, not square. The lighting in the Kimmel Center Verizon Hall isn't that ideal, which left the photographic perspective of those singers off to the sides not visible. So there is some antiphonal effect to what you hear in the recording.
While listening to both of these recorded sources of a most memorable performance, it was great to relive my memories rereading the concert program and newspaper clippings of what will be one of the greatest concerts I have ever attended in my life. It was one of the best $68-dollar ticket investments I have ever made.
This 2016 M8 live performance should be placed up there along with Stokowski's historic 1950 performance and Horenstein's 1959 Albert Hall performances.
Wade