Too much fun this! You've sent me back into a recurring (every two-years or so) Mahler Sixth bacchanalia. The real challenge was keeping it to commercial recordings!! AAGGH! Like cooking with one hand tied behind one's back. Gotta do a no-holds-barred list sometime, maybe it will start a file-sharing frenzy
Mitropoulos/Köln RSO (EMI 2-CD set GREAT CONDUCTORS OF THE 20TH CENTURY: DIMITRI MITROPOULOS, 1959 rec.) I find myself listening to this one more intently than his 1955 NYPO recording although both, or either, are just essential Mahler.
Mackerras/BBC SO (BBC Music Cover CD, 2002 recording): a whole bunch of details came clear with the way Mackerras lets the textures shine. It's a sleeper, given that it came as a freebie with the mag!
Kubelik/Bavarian RSO (Audite, live 1968 rec.) I prefer Kubelik's way with the M6 of the fleet-footed accounts, though the Bernstein/NYPO is a close runner-up. Lenny's gargantuan neon emotional signage distracts me out of the listening sometimes- "CRY NOOOOW!! FEEEEEEL THIS!!! Whereas a bit of the relative subtlety Rafael uses keeps my hatred of manipulation in check...
Thomas Sanderling/St. Petersburg PO (RS, 1995 rec.) There's been alot said about this one by everyone here and elsewhere, justifiably so. This is an exemplary recording of a performance that manages the tightrope between palpably -but barely- restrained emotional breakdown and formal cohesiveness.
Horenstein/Bournemouth SO (BBC Legends, 1969 rec.) Despite the lacklustre sound, this is as close to a Furtwangler M6 I'll get. It has all that frisson and delivers the patented Horenstein sonic meltdowns, large and small. Also common to all of this conductor's Mahler is that satisfying feeling that no one is on autopilot at any time.
No numbering, ask me tommorrow and upon revisit the whole list is liable to be different. Come to think of it, that's how Maestro Gustav rolls, too.
Guillermo
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