Another recording of Erwin Stein's transcription of
Gustav Mahler's Fourth Symphony for chamber orchestra? First there was
Kenneth Slowik leading the Smithsonian Chamber Players and the Sante Fe Pro Musica on Dorian. Then there was
Peter Stangel leading
Die Taschenphilharmonie on Preiser. And now here is
Douglas Boyd leading the
Manchester Camerata on Avie. Is this a tendency, a movement, or wholesale revisionism?
Any one of these alternatives is possible, but it seems more likely that it is simply marketing. With a surfeit of Fourths on the market, including performances by
Mahler's friends
Mengelberg,
Walter, and
Klemperer, there is surely no need for new recordings of the work in its original form. But as re-imagined for chamber ensemble by Schoenberg's pupil Erwin Stein, there is, if not exactly a need, at least an interest in hearing the work again. Besides, hiring a chamber orchestra is cheaper than hiring a symphony orchestra.
The really remarkable thing is not that there are now three recordings of Stein's transcription, but that all three transcriptions are worth hearing. The warm expressivity of
Boyd and the
Camerata interpretation are matched by the technical excellence of their performance, which is as loving as it is lucid, always a good balance in
Mahler. If
Slowik and
Stangel's performances are ultimately preferable to
Boyd's, it is only because the sopranos in their finale are a bit more affecting and a little less arch than
Boyd's
Kate Royal and Avie's sound is a bit more distant and a little less clear than Dorian's and Preiser's. Still, for listeners who can't get enough of Stein's transcription of
Mahler's Fourth,
Boyd's recording will be welcome.