I love the Staatskapelle Dresden. They have the clarity of the Berlin Phil., but without sounding nearly so slick as the BPO can sometimes sound. They also lack the excessive darkness and weightiness that the Vienna Phil. can sometimes be plagued with. It's probably the excellent acoustics, but the Dresdeners get timbres and balances just right. Here are some recent acquisitions that I whole-heartily endorse:
Dvorak sym's. 8/9 with James Levine (DG). I burnt a copy from a local library copy. This is now out-of-print in the U.S. The 9th is particularly good.
Elgar sym. #1/two Berlioz overtures (Profil) with Colin Davis. I got this cheap through Amazon. I'm not a big fan of E1 (I greatly prefer the 2nd), but the Stattskapelle play this as though it had just been written specifically for them. You'd think that all of England were located around Dresden. Seriously, this is far better than ANY British recording I've yet to hear of E1 (and that's not a put-down to England; the Dresdeners are THAT great).
Bruckner 9 with Fabio Luisi (Sony). This is an excellent live performance. I love the Bruckner 9th, and own a bunch of them. But this one is yet another keeper. Luisi really nails the big, dissonant climax near the end of the Adagio.
R. Strauss "Alpine" symphony with F. Luisi (also Sony). This is outstanding! The sound is excellent, and so too is the thoroughly idiomatic playing of the Dresdeners. This is easily the best "Alpine" in my collection. Completely outstanding.
I love Sinopoli's totally "decadent" sounding Mahler 9 from Dresden (Profil), but I'm greatly disappointed in his weird and excessively slow Mahler 4 (also Profil). The last movement is a total flop.
I also own the Beethoven symphonies with Herbert Blomstedt (Berlin Classics), and Schubert symphonies 6 -9 on a Philips "twofer", conducted by Sawallisch. Those are highly recommendable as well.
(And of course, there's the Bruckner symphonies with Jochum, as well the R. Strauss orchestral works with Kempe).
Barry