One of the best...but with a major flaw!
John Grabowski | USA | 04/19/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)
"This is the greatest *conception* of DSCH's Fifth I've ever heard. But the disc gets (barely) four stars anyway, and maybe just three (three-and-a-half would be perfect), simply because the Berlin Symphony (and NOT, note, the Berlin Philharmonic, in whose hands this would have been a five star disc) simply isn't up to the challenge technically. They are a weak orchestra, and in the fierce, savage sections they cannot do the work justice, especially the anemic brass. But Sanderling makes up for it in THE most stunning, spooky slow movement this symphony has ever received. I was actually creeped after hearing it for the first time, and kept looking over my shoulder. I suddenly understood the meaning of this enigma: the ghost of Stalin haunts Dmitri everywhere in this movement; there is no respite, no escape. I was made aware for the first time how terrifying it must have been to live in Russia during those mad years. Shostakovich had to live that way every day. This movement demonstrates the strain that inevitably caused. Hurwitz's above comments about the ending are correct, but I will add that that is hardly "news" and most people who come to this symphony will probably be aware of the "meaning" of the coda. In short, no duh, Dave, do you ever have an insight? For people who know this work through the loud and fast (but ultimately, I think, shallow and showoffy) Bernstein will find a whole new world here, one deeper and more "inward" than in the Lenny recording. This and Haitink's magnificent collaboration with the Concertegebouw are the two top recordings of this work for me. Haitink doesn't quite penetrate the depth like Sanderling does, but he is gifted with a far better orchestra and recording venue. Both discs are worth having in any collection of Shostakovich's music."