This is probably the best modern recording of M7 on SACD. It has ideal timings {21.40, 15.13, 9.58, 13.13, 16.45 (w/o applause)}, excellent sound, and I love the overall conception. The orchestra has sharp, well-accented playing -- which is good in all Mahler, and especially M7. The brass section is glorious throughout. There is a bit of grunting by Jansons here and there.
Jansons takes a fairly aggressive approach in both outer movements. The first movement is one of the best I’ve heard, featuring a beautifully done moonlit interlude (although I’d like the harp to be a bit more differentiated). Jansons does an exceptional job of building and releasing tension. It is particularly noteworthy at the end of the movement, which is as dramatic as any I’ve heard.
The middle movements also have very sharp accents. Movement 2 is very musical, mysterious, and flowing – it also has excellent cowbells. Movement 3 is appropriately chilly and uneasy, with some excellent Timpani. Movement 4 is romantic – Jansons takes it at a perfect mid-tempo, getting slightly faster as it progresses. Guitar and Mandolin are superbly captured. I especially love the way the mandolin is strummed (I know there’s a term for how it is played, featuring a type of rapid vibrato/strum as opposed to a slow pick).
The final movement is brisk and exciting. Jansons seems to minimize the changes in tempi in the first 2/3’s of the movement, but is much more flexible towards the end. The Timpani seems out of sorts at one point (just past 8:00 or so IIRC), but it may be my imagination. The Coda is severely lacking in deep bells, although the cowbells are there. I’d prefer that the deep bells be fairly dominant at the coda (Tennstedt live, Lennie/DG, any Abbado, MTT/LSO). So this is my one major disappointment, but there is far too much excellence to let that detract from my overall favorable impression.
I give this recording an enthusiastic recommendation.