A Good "Consensus" Box
From the liner notes: (Comments in parentheses-mine)
"The Decca / Deutsche Grammophon catalogue of Mahler recordings is unsurpassed. A major contribution to the anniversary celebration in 2010 is this first-ever Complete Mahler Edition, a combined effort of Decca and Deutsche Grammophon in an 18-CD super-budget box (as low as forty dollars on some Amazon Marketplace sites)-- with the ten symphonies, Das Lied von der Erde, (a complete) Das klagende Lied, the song cycles, the Knaben Wunderhorn songs and early works in benchmark recordings by a great assembly of Mahler conductors, singers, and orchestras...." split up as thirteen CDs of symphonies, five CDs of vocal music.
"Each symphony gets a different conductor, (listed here in alphabetical order) and the list is awesome: (according to Universal) Abbado (No. 6), Bernstein (No. 5), Boulez (No. 4), Chailly (No. 10), Giulini (Das Lied), Haitink (No. 3), Karajan (No. 9), Kubelik (No. 1), Mehta (No. 2), Sinopoli (No. 7), and Solti (No. 8). The orchestras are the finest in the world: Berliner Philharmoniker, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, The Cleveland Orchestra, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra, and Wiener Philharmoniker."
One can never find agreement as to what is the "best" Mahler here, even among seasoned Mahler collectors who have admired the composer for decades. If you are coming to Mahler for the very first time, this is a splendid acquisition for you. "The list is awesome," but it is impossible to include historic recordings from the likes of a Walter and a Klemperer from other recording labels, and that is a big drawback. Universal might have considered a joint label venture here. This set would be best supplemented with the EMI set. For the symphonies, DG chose a lot of material which is already "out there" in very widely circulated complete sets which have long since been gobbled up by Mahler addicts long ago. They could not please all of the people with their selections, but I think that they have pleased most with their choices. So this is a consensus set, maybe a "politically correct" one in its way, reached by the general consensus of CD album sales or for those most likely to sell. A down side is that there is next to nothing historic in it. Most performances are good digital performances from orchestras with which I think Mahler himself would be pleased. The discarded "Blumine" movement is coupled with Kubelik's FIRST as an appendixes Track 5. Also included was the pleasant surprise of the rejected "Totenfeier" movement for Mahler's "Resurrection." About half of the movement was obviously reworked into the version which Mahler fanatics like me know today. Abbado in his SIXTH places the Scherzo (which is usually placed as the second movement of the SIXTH in the Erwin Ratz Revised Edition) as the third movement, after the Adagio (which is usually placed as the second movement). This was the original performing edition used by Mahler often in his lifetime. Quite often out of curiosity, just to hear the effect of it, I have programmed my compact disk player to play the symphony in this way on many occasions.
"Singers featured include Thomas Hampson (song-cycles, with Bernstein), Anne Sofie von Otter and Thomas Quasthoff (their Grammy-winning Knaben Wunderhorn lieder, with Abbado), Ileana Cotrubas and Christa Ludwig in the "Resurrection" Symphony, Maureen Forrester in the Third, Juliane Banse in the Fourth, Francisco Araiza and Brigitte Fassbaender in Das Lied von der Erde, and a starry array in No. 8. " Vocalists are not a problem, if there is any, with the set, only the performance choices as a whole, for some Mahler addicts.
"In addition, rarities like Das klagende Lied, rejected movements from the First and Second Symphonies, Mahler's early songs, and chamber music are included in the edition."
For me, the FIRST (a good but not the greatest Kubelik-would have preferred Solti here), FOURTH (an adequate Boulez-would have preferred Mehta`s Israel PO here), FIFTH an always angst ridden Bernstein), EIGHTH (the overrated and overly remastered Solti, again-I would have reluctantly preferred Abbado or Boulez, better yet, a reworked Lenny CBS here), and a complete DAS KLAGENDE LIED (a good Chailly) are duplicated with the set, but two thirds of the box are new performance acquisitions, so for me, I could not acquire the rest of the recordings for the price, so it was all a borderline steal. The Mehta analogue SECOND was at or near the top of its form, but I do prefer Walter and Klemper here, together with Lenny's earlier Sony effort with the NYPO. The Haitink THIRD was perhaps the best of his oeurve with Philips.
The prize of prizes in the box here for me is the von Karajan NINTH, perhaps equaled but not surpassed by the Bernstein BPO recording. And couple it with the missing incidental pieces like the Piano Quartet and Die drei Pintos fragment, (not easily to be had separately) and it is an additional incentive to buy for the missing material which I suspect many other people do not have.
And if the celebration isn't enough, there is a DG "People's Mahler Edition" (for some strange reason in a red colored box)coming soon to a music retail outlet near you. In this one, the final choices are still an open question, and you can go online and vote for your own personal favorite GM symphonies from 1-10! I think that the song cycles will remain the same.
Timings for the DG COMPLETE MAHLER EDITION are as follows:
CD 1: Mahler: Symphony No.1; "Blumine"
Symphony No.1 in D
1. 1. Langsam. Schleppend 14:31
2. 2. Kräftig bewegt 7:04
3. 3. Feierlich und gemessen, ohne zu schleppen 10:37
4. 4. Stürmisch bewegt 17:39
Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks, Rafael Kubelik
5. "Blumine". Andante allegretto 6:01
Boston Symphony Orchestra, Seiji Ozawa
Total Playing Time 55:52
CD 2: Mahler: Symphony No.2
Symphony No.2 in C minor - "Resurrection"
1. 1. Allegro maestoso. Mit durchaus ernstem und feierlichem Ausdruck 21:03
2. 2. Andante moderato. Sehr gemächlich 10:12
3. 3. Scherzo: In ruhig fliessender Bewegung 10:28
4. 4. "O Röschen rot! Der Mensch liegt in grösster Not!" (Sehr feierlich aber schlicht) Text from Des Knaben Wunderhorn: "Urlicht" 5:30
Christa Ludwig, Wiener Philharmoniker, Zubin Mehta
5. 5a. Im Tempo des Scherzos. Wild herausfahrend - 9:45
6. 5b. Maestoso. Sehr zurückhaltend - Wieder zurückhaltend - 7:33
7. 5c. Sehr langsam und gedehnt - 2:21
Wiener Philharmoniker, Zubin Mehta
8. 5d. "Aufersteh'n, ja aufersteh'n wirst du" (Langsam. Misterioso) - Text after F.G. Klopstock: "Auferstehung"6:39
Ileana Cotrubas, Wiener Staatsopernchor, Wiener Philharmoniker, Zubin Mehta
9. 5e. "O glaube, mein Herz, o glaube" (Etwas bewegter) Text after F.G. Klopstock: "Auferstehung" 7:39
Ileana Cotrubas, Christa Ludwig, Wiener Staatsopernchor, Wiener Philharmoniker, Zubin Mehta
Total Playing Time 1:21:10
CD 3: Mahler: Symphony No.3, Part 1
Symphony No.3 in D minor
Part 1
1. 1. Kräftig. Entscheiden 32:17
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Bernard Haitink
Total Playing Time 32:17
CD 4: Mahler: Symphony No.3, Part 2
Symphony No.3 in D minor
Part 2
1. 2. Tempo di minuetto. Sehr mäßig 10:22
2. 3. Comodo. Scherzando. Ohne Hast 16:53
3. 4. Sehr langsam. Misterioso: "O Mensch! Gib acht!" 'O Mensch! Gib acht' 8:45
Maureen Forrester, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Bernard Haitink
4. 5. Lustig im Tempo und keck im Ausdruck: "Bimm Bamm. Es sungen drei Engel" 4:03
Maureen Forrester, Boy's Choir Of The St. Willisbrorduskerk In Rotterdam, Women's Chorus Of The Netherlands Radio, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Bernard Haitink
5. 6. Langsam. Ruhevoll. Empfunden 22:04
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Bernard Haitink
Total Playing Time 1:02:07
CD 5: Mahler: Symphonies Nos.4 & 2 "Resurrection", 1. Mvt. Totenfeier
Symphony No.4 in G
1. 1. Bedächtig. Nicht eilen - Recht gemächlich 15:17
2. 2. In gemächlicher Bewegung. Ohne Hast 9:29
3. 3. Ruhevoll (Poco adagio) 20:02
4. 4. Sehr behaglich: "Wir genießen die himmlischen Freuden" 8:42
Juliane Banse, The Cleveland Orchestra, Pierre Boulez
Symphony No.2 in C minor - "Resurrection"
5. Totenfeier (REJECTED MOVEMENT) 25:09
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Pierre Boulez
Total Playing Time 1:18:39
CD 6: Mahler: Symphony No.5
Symphony No.5 in C sharp minor
1. 1. Trauermarsch (In gemessenem Schritt. Streng. Wie ein Kondukt - Plötzlich schneller. Leidenschaftlich. Wild - Tempo I) 14:32
2. 2. Stürmisch bewegt. Mit größter Vehemenz - Bedeutend langsamer - Tempo I subito
14:59
3. 3. Scherzo (Kräftig, nicht zu schnell) 19:01
4. 4. Adagietto (Sehr langsam) 11:13
5. 5. Rondo-Finale (Allegro) 15:00
Wiener Philharmoniker, Leonard Bernstein
Total Playing Time 1:14:45
CD 7: Mahler: Symphony No.6
Symphony No.6 in A minor
1. 1. Allegro energico, ma non troppo. Heftig aber Markig 22:48
2. 2. (3.) Andante moderato 13:57
3. 3. (2.) Scherzo (Wuchtig) 12:43
4. 4. Finale (Allegro moderato) 29:44
Berliner Philharmoniker, Claudio Abbado
Total Playing Time 1:19:36
CD 8: Mahler: Symphony No.7, Movements 1 - 3
Symphony No.7 in E minor
1. 1. Langsam - Allegro 24:36
2. 2. Nachtmusik (Allegro moderato) 17:04
3. 3. Scherzo 9:54
Philharmonia Orchestra, Giuseppe Sinopoli
Total Playing Time 51:34
CD 9: Mahler: Symphony No.7, Movements 4 + 5
Symphony No.7 in E minor
1. 4.
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