Yes, fair enough. It's not as though we're in need of another really good 8th - there are plenty of them. I think there ARE good voices out there, but it's near impossible to get them assembled together for a single concert or opera. I just don't want to be disappointed by Fischer's M3, and I have a gut feeling that I'm going to be.
I suspect that Fischer clipped the fourth movement to less than 9 minutes for the simple reason that Gerhild what's-her-name isn't good enough to bother going any slower with. Trust me, I want to be wrong about this.
Thanks to Dave Hurwitz getting the ball rolling, people have been slinging the moniker "Mahler lite" at Nott, Stenz, Jansons, Zinman and others. If you ask me, that moniker best fits Fischer's cycle in more recent times. I sense a change in him (Fischer) and I'm not liking it. If it weren't for Channel Classic's outstanding sound quality, I don't think anybody would be heaping much praise on the last few releases. Again, I'm hoping that this M3 will turn things around - that there will be some genuine visceral impact, and that the finale's big brass chorale will truly amount to something. We'll see.
Mahler doesn't need to be loud and vulgar from beginning to end a la Georg Solti. But it does need to get some dirt under the finger nails and display a willingness to dig in and make some earthy and powerful noises, the way that Honeck and Pittsburgh have so clearly accomplished. I'd add Levine to that thought, except I can't stand Levine's penchant for ultra-loud timpani from one end of a piece to the other (opera house vulgarity).
Frankly, I'm really enjoying Haitink's recent BR Klassik M3, in spite of some passages needing more forward propulsion. He and they - the BRSO - get a 'rustic' quality without any inaccuracies, combined with excellent sound quality (albeit two-channel).