In my time as
                    a classical music listener, a fifteen-year journey that I’m
                    sure is short compared to some of my fellow reviewers, I’ve
                    haven’t quite decided what to make of Bernard Haitink. At
                    the time the Mahler bug bit me, he was recording a cycle
                    in Berlin. I quite liked what I had the opportunity to hear
                    on the radio, but the project was cancelled and the issues
                    were out of print before I had the chance to pick up any
                    of them. It now looks like some have reappeared on CD: 4
                    and 5 on Philips 475445; on DVD: 1 and 2 on Philips 000654009;
                    and 1, 2, 3, and 7 on ArkivMusic’s print-on demand system.
                    More generally, I’ve found Haitink sometimes renders very
                    compelling and sonically gorgeous accounts of various works
                    in a straight-ahead style that lets the composer’s voice
                    shine through. At other times he renders something so prettified
                    and inoffensive that it seems one has stumbled across an
                    album of Muzak. I had this Jeckyll and Hyde experience just
                    this week — discovering that some of his Tchaikovsky symphony
                    recordings are surprisingly good, while his recent Brahms
                    cycle with the London Symphony (LSO0070) is unconscionably
                    bad. So what was I to expect from the SACD reissue of his
                    1970s Concertgebouw Mahler Fifth?
                  
                   
                  
                  
Something that
                    Haitink gets right is the 
Adagietto. Often reviewers
                    treat this as a question of tempo, or total time for the
                    movement. While this can be a helpful indicator, the question
                    really is: is this movement integrated into the architecture
                    of the piece, or is it being lovingly caressed or put on
                    display because of its beauty and fame? Haitink does an excellent
                    job of the integration here. Another plus, a result of both
                    good conducting and good engineering, is that every little
                    detail, every line of musical argument, can be heard clearly.
                    This effort of transformation, putting nearly forty-year
                    old quadraphonic sound into SACD format, doesn’t quite create
                    a twenty-first century recording, but still, it’s very good
                    1970s sound. The Eighth is the only other symphony in Haitink’s
                    cycle that was recorded quadraphonically and is being released
                    in SACD by PentaTone.
                   
                  
A place where
                    Haitink gets things wrong is with his brass timbres. When
                    working with the top Middle European orchestras, there’s
                    the temptation to make the beautiful sounds these orchestras
                    are so notably capable of. This can go wrong — it’s not the
                    appropriate sound. In Mahler’s Fifth and Sixth Symphonies
                    the brass needs to snarl and occasionally bray. In Haitink’s
                    hands they have much more of a tendency to purr.
                   
                  
                  In the end, this
                    release will be of interest to two groups: ardent Haitink
                    fans who want a copy of this recording in the best sound
                    possible, and for audiophiles for whom the draw of experiencing
                    a quadraphonic transfer is irresistible. For the rest of
                    us, it is not necessary. There are several excellent performances
                    of the Fifth in contemporary, though not SACD, sound: Bernstein’s
                    DG recording, Chailly, and Gielen. Zinman’s SACD series to
                    date augured well for what he might accomplish with the
                    Fifth, and Dan Morgan's very recent 
review bears
                    this out, so audiophiles are spoilt for choice.
                  
                   
                  
                  
Brian Burtt