I respect Mr. Hurwitz's opinions, and I actually own most of his books. HOWEVER (and that's a Dave Hurwitz "HOWEVER"), like Barry, I just don't agree with him on most of his Mahler opinions. Sometimes I do, and to my surprise. I was pretty shocked when he picked Gielen and Chailly as the two best Mahler cycles of all time, and not Bernstein DG or something (because he ALWAYS refers to them as the reference recordings, and I for one find them abhorrently overrated, egotistical, melodramatic, and so on; just my opinion of course). My two favorite cycles are Chailly's and Kubelík's. But like most normal people, my opinions are evolving over time. This is just where I'm at in my understanding of Mahler's music.
Now to the topic. I personally found the Adam Fischer M2 and M9 to be the weaker installments in the cycle, but unlike Hurwitz I don't think it has anything to do with the Düsseldorfers. In fact, I don't often care how 'perfect' and 'amazing' the big name orchestras sound. These are ALL professional orchestras, and either they sound good, or great. These Düsseldorfers sound better than New York, Utah, and possibly the BRSO did in the pioneering Mahler cycles of the 60s, and Hurwitz rates those very highly (let's be real, the Concertgebouw is king). Who cares if it's a big, famous city like Vienna or Berlin? Listening to the Berliners and Viennese play Mahler today is a bit boring for me because they hardly need to try while performing this music anymore. It all sounds too perfect and uninvolved, and that's not Mahlerian. Mahler is dirty, rustic, and full of character. If we want to return to a time where the orchestra has to play their hearts out and 'discover' this music anew like in the 60s, we have to turn to folks like the Düsseldorfer Symphoniker and the Bamberger Symphoniker and the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, and we have to turn to fresh minds and youthful conductors like Jakub Hrusa and Yannick Nezeelfresezldorf who are discovering this music and not treating it like another day at the office. Though I will admit that I'll always love the BRSO and the Concertgebouw in Mahler; it's just in their blood and you can tell they always care.
I'm surprised that Hurwitz doesn't understand this about provincial orchestras, and then goes on to rate 60-year old recordings near the top of the list. Don't get me wrong, those are still great recordings, but they're historical. My rebuttal to Hurwitz's snobby comment of "who wants to hear a provincial orchestra do this music" is "who wants to hear, YET AGAIN, the Vienna Phil or the Berlin Phil do this music with a guy like Haitink or Abbado or Maazel (random examples)? What NEW ideas are being brought to the table?" I want to hear Mahler like I've never heard it before.
You know what I want? I want a Mahler cycle of Adam Fischer conducting the Concertgebouw, and I want a Mahler cycle of Chailly conducting Düsseldorf. How will Fischer's ideas with this music transfer to the Concertgebouw, and what kind of playing will Chailly coax from Düsseldorf? Food for thought.
I could rant about this on and on, but I think you all get my point. In short, Shawn I agree with you. Hurwitz's thoughts on Mahler performance today are elitist and out of touch.