I’ve been an Idagio customer for over a year now. The Bychkov CPO M4 and M5 are on the service, as is (apparently) just about all of the BIS catalog, including the Vänskä Mahler released thus far.
For those who may be unfamiliar, Idagio is a classical streaming service that is available in free, standard, and premium accounts. The standard account is 9.99/month. The premium adds access to live concert recordings. The entire catalog, which is vast, is available with a free account, though you’ll often hear a tasteful promo for a paid account between tracks. I’m on the standard account.
Idagio claims to be more fair to artists than other streaming services because they pay by the second, not by track. Makes sense for classical since one track may be 30 minutes or an hour, depending on the recording.
I’d guess the income to artists is still quite small, but if I buy a used CD, they get $0. Idagio has cut my classical CD budget down to a small fraction, though I still buy jazz and bluegrass/acoustic string CDs (almost all used). In the interest of full disclosure, I just ordered the Nott/Bamberg Mahler set because I had credit card bennies that paid for it all.
You can listen to Idagio on a web browser, a Windows executable, or on an Android or iOS device. The executable looks and works just like the browser, and I just use the latter, which never nags for updates. On mobile, you can download for offline listening.
One gotcha is that playback is gapless on mobile OSs, but not on desktop. Obviously, hiccups in music that is supposed to be uninterrupted is a problem. While I usually listen from a Linux PC, I’ll switch to mobile when necessary, such as in M8 II, which is almost always divided into a number of tracks.
With all that out of the way, I listened to Vänskä’s M6 the other night and found that it’s a strong performance that checks just about all of my boxes—a 24-minute first movement that moves with granitic power instead of sounding rushed, atmospheric cowbells, second violins on the right, top-level orchestral execution and sound quality, and so on. My high regard for this recording surprised me, because I heard M6 live in Minneapolis before the recorded cycle started and found it a noisy mess. I bought the FLAC download of their M5 but didn’t care for it. I’ll be revisiting that and exploring the others in the cycle.