None of these recordings are new or indeed new to the catalogue but until
now
  they have only been fitfully available and, as far as I am aware, not in a
single
  set. Previously the 9th had been split across two discs - here
it
  has been squeezed onto a single exceptionally full one. The impetus for
their
  re-release in this format is to mark the centenary of the birth of
conductor
  Kurt Sanderling and at a low-mid price they are worth consideration albeit
with
  some important caveats. 
    
  The booklet - in German and English only - makes several interesting and
important
  points about Sanderling’s approach to Mahler. The appreciation of
Mahler
  was significantly different between East and West Germany. When Sanderling
came
  to record this version of the 10th Symphony in 1979 it was only
one
  year after the first complete performance of the Cooke performing edition
there
  - also by Sanderling. Sanderling was evangelising this music at a time
when
  important members of the State intelligentsia could be found writing that
these
  late works were “filled with self-pity and nihilistic views of
himself
  [Mahler] ….. [they] can no longer be respected as ‘socially
true’”.
  This same author went on to say they ran counter to the demands of
Socialist
  Realism. When we know now the risks that Soviet composers took if they
worked
  contrary to such statements it is possible to see that Sanderling was
taking
  a brave stand not just musically but professionally and indeed personally.
All
  of these recordings were made by the same production team - albeit over a
period
  of years - and in conjunction with live performances. As that might imply
these
  do result in a sequence of performances with a very clear and cogent
interpretative
  style allied to committed playing from a clearly engaged Berlin Symphony
Orchestra.
  There are some small ensemble fluffs and intonation issues that one feels
would
  have been remedied today - the piccolo/string harmonics at the end of
Von
  der Jugend in Das Lied von der Erde rather made me twitch - but
conversely
  this element of roughness, which never degenerates into anything sloppy or
careless,
  gives these performances a conviction and sincerity other more cultivated
versions
  lack. 
    
  So far so good, but there are significant other factors to consider. The
recordings
  are all from analogue sources digitally re-mastered. For late analogue
they
  have a surprisingly high amount of analogue hiss. There are odd other
audio
  artefacts too. The great final Abschied of Das Lied von der
Erde
  is accompanied by faint but distinct birdsong! I found this strangely
charming
  and certainly more appropriate than the traffic noise that is audible on
the
  other two discs in the quiet passages. One assumes that the engineers of
the
  time believed that it would be below the sound floor of most domestic
sound
  systems. The biggest problem I have with this set is the recorded sound
itself.
  It is better - more natural in its perspective - in the song-cycle but
both
  the symphonies suffer to differing degrees from a very close, rather
synthetically
  spotlit, sound-stage. This has the effect of reducing the dynamic range
with
  the quiet passages in particular suffering from a lack of really hushed
intensity.
  Indeed when the strings play quietly one hears basically the front desks
with
  some filling in from behind. This works more to the detriment of the
9th
  Symphony particularly in the two great slow outer movements. As might be
expected
  the up-front and personal sound benefits the third movement
Rondo-Burleske
  with the sour humour played with biting impact. Next to it
Barbirolli’s
  famed account (EMI)
  from the other side of the Wall sounds almost good-humoured. What a
difference
  a few kilometres makes in other ways too. Sanderling’s horns have a
distinctly
  East European warmth quite unlike their Western compatriots and the DDR
woodwind
  have an edge that makes the music sound more modern than in other more
moulded
  wind sections. Indeed, if I had to characterise Sanderling’s
approach
  across all three works it would be as austerely modernist. Certainly he
avoids
  any accusations of these works being histrionic exercises in
self-absorption.
  On the other hand the deliberate plainness of his approach treads a narrow
tight-rope
  between austere and just dull. Here again the recording does not really
help
  the players sustain textures and tension through the extended chamber-like
passages
  of the Ninth. 
    
  Returning to Das Lied this plainness is again an issue … in
part.
  Not that the contribution of tenor Peter Schreier could be termed plain
for
  an instant. Given that Schreier’s career has been mainly associated
with
  Baroque, Classical and Lieder repertoire he is not the most obvious choice
for
  the tenor role in this cycle. Indeed he does seem to be forcing his tone
on
  occasion to ride the storm of Mahler’s orchestration. To my ear his
is
  a sensational and profoundly original reading of these songs; no texts
included
  - black mark to Berlin Classics. In Schreier’s hands these become
strangely
  disturbing - almost expressionist. Every note is phrased and every
syllable
  considered with extraordinary care. It would be foolish to say he makes as
sheerly
  beautiful a sound as Heppner with Bertini on EMI
  or Kmentt for Kubelik on Audite
  let alone the unsurpassed Wunderlich with Klemperer again on EMI
  but this is a version to make you reconsider how a work can be interpreted
on
  a fundamental level. I could imagine some would not respond to this
approach
  at all but for me it is one of the two main reasons to consider purchasing
this
  set. Unfortunately Schreier’s singing colleague is the Swedish
contralto
  Birgit Finnilä. Possibly after the neurotic excesses of
Schreier’s
  deeply personal interpretation we need something more objective but
Finnilä
  I find simply lacking. Perhaps, again, one has the sound of a Ludwig or a
Baker
  too firmly embedded in one’s ear but in that company I find that I
do
  not warm to the sound Finnilä makes. Her voice seems to suffer from
an
  unevenness of projection and tone that prevents Mahler’s long and
agonisedly
  arching lines pulling the listener relentlessly onward. I find her
interpretation
  generalised in the way Schreier is anything but. With Sanderling
accompanying
  her there are many felicities in the orchestral part but this is not
enough
  to rescue her movements from a sense of major disappointment. All of which
is
  a great shame when one realises that this is a score to which Sanderling
had
  an especial attachment - it was one of the few he carried with him when he
fled
  Nazi Germany in 1936. 
    
  Approaching the final disc things are rather in the balance with a
distinctly
  mixed Das Lied and a 9th Symphony rather undermined by
less
  than demonstration quality sonics. Not that, in many ways, the sound is
very
  different in the 10th Symphony - why should it be. They were
recorded
  only a few months apart by the same team in the same venue. Crucially the
10th
  is presented in Deryck Cooke’s performing version and even in its
fuller
  second reworking - as here. There is still a distinct evolution in
Mahler’s
  orchestrational vocabulary from the 9th that suits the chosen
recording
  style better. Additionally, this strikes me as Sanderling’s most
successful
  interpretation of the three offered here. The liner outlines the
adjustments
  Sanderling made to Cooke’s edition in conjunction with his friend
and
  fellow-editor of the score, Berthold Goldschmidt. Most notably he adds
extra
  percussion for the final movement’s cathartic climax. As mentioned
before,
  the playing is admirably committed throughout but that is raised several
notches
  here and Sanderling is more interventionist than elsewhere. Comparing this
again
  with the more prestigious Berlin Philharmonic - in Simon Rattle’s
award-winning
  EMI
  disc from 2000 - is very interesting. Let’s be clear, they are both
fine
  performances but I find I prefer the less elegant, pawky, less accepting
Berlin
  Symphony Orchestra version. Try the second movement Scherzo;
Sanderling’s
  heavy punchier tempo - here aided by the upfront and personal recording -
had
  me thinking of say Shostakovich’s Eighth Symphony in a way I had
never
  noticed before. As an aside; Ormandy’s unvarnished, sonically
unsubtle
  Mahler/Cooke ‘I’ (Sony)
  still impresses hugely by the sheer force of its zealous vision. Rattle -
a
  good two minutes quicker in this movement alone - presents a lighter
altogether
  more fluent interpretation but it is Sanderling who seems more modern and
questioning.
  It is worth remembering that at the time of its recording this was just
the
  second time - after Wyn
  Morris - that Cooke II had been recorded. Sanderling is especially
good
  at pacing the big paragraphs in the outer movements especially. Indeed,
the
  closing pages after the famous crisis/discord are as beautifully
controlled
  as any version I know. I do long in this passage particularly for the
sheer
  beauty of sound Rattle conjures from his Berlin orchestra but Sanderling
is
  marvellous as sustaining the sense of gently dying rapture. My only query
is
  whether or not he should have coaxed his string players into more
dangerous
  portamenti, they are here for sure but ever so slightly safely. To be fair
this
  is totally in line with the objectivity of his readings throughout the
set.
  With music like this the debate about whether it is or isn’t
real
  Mahler seems to me to fall away to irrelevance - the world is a richer
place
  for having it whatever the origin. 
    
  Mahler collectors are groaning under a burden of great performances of
every
  work. How can I get this far into a Mahler comparative review with no
mention
  of a Tennstedt, Haitink, Bernstein or Solti or indeed a host of others? It
is
  worth recalling that of the older generation of major conductors most
closely
  associated with Mahler only Sanderling seems to have embraced a completed
version
  of the 10th Symphony; I do not include Ormandy in that group
since
  his recorded Mahler legacy is relatively small. That being the case, and
with
  music so open to a host of valid and convincing interpretations this set
needs
  to be considered on its own merits. As a document of its conductor’s
consistent
  vision and in memory for his evangelical work in the Eastern Bloc it is of
great
  value. Whether or not it supplants other versions is far less clear. In
the
  10th Symphony it is up there with the best, in the song-cycle I
will
  be returning to the tenor movements but I’m not sure I will ever
listen
  to the performance as a complete whole again. The 9th is harder
to
  categorise and the listener’s response to it will depend upon their
own
  individual preference - a better technical recording might well have made
the
  case for Sanderling’s unmannered yet intensely musical approach more
compelling.
  As it is I did find myself hankering after a more dynamic approach but
will
  revisit this version as my listening mood dictates. Given that the
different
  elements of this set are available with a little searching at reasonable
prices
  I suspect the judicious advice for a collector would be to try and hear
samples
  first and/or pick and choose the performances that appeal. Each
performance
  contains passages or movements of great impact but that is balanced by
other
  issues both technical and musical. On balance and for the Mahler devotee I
would
  suggest the 10th and Schreier’s contribution to Das
Lied
  are mandatory listening.  
    
                  Nick Barnard  
    
  see also Tony Duggan’s reviews of Das
  Lied, Symphony 9 and Symphony 10 
Masterwork Index: Mahler 9 ~~ Mahler 10
Tony Duggan's Mahler surveys: Symphony
9 ~~ Symphony
10 ~~ Das
Lied