Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Contemplating Resurrection

 Mahler's Resurrection is one of those pieces that hooks you to classical music forever, and once you've heard it a hundred times, you dread hearing it another hundred. When i listen to earlier Mahler, when i listen to late Mahler, when i listen to works as diverse as the third, the fourth and the seventh, there is never a moment when I feel as though I'll get tired of it, because there is no getting to the bottom of emotional meanings that ambiguous. When you hear the funeral march from the Titan Symphony, when you hear the end of the 9th and Das Lied, the finale of 7, the opening of 3, there is no saying what music like this means. It's as though every emotion hurtles toward you all at once and you can't possibly feel them all every time you listen.

This piece practically got me through three years of high school, but at some point, Mahler's Resurrection gets retired from lots of music nuts' daily listening. There is no second guessing the meaning of poetry like this:
"O Sorrow, all-penetrating!
I have been wrested away from you!
O Death, all-conquering!
Now you are conquered!
With wings that I won
In the passionate strivings of love
I shall mount
To the light to which no sight has penetrated.
I shall die, so as to live!
Arise, yes, you will arise from the dead,
My heart, in an instant!
What you have conquered
Will bear you to God."
It's not quite as embarrassing in German, but even in English, it's no worse than Wagner, and next to Tippett or Ellington this is downright eloquent, but as poetry, it ain't great art. There's no need to ponder this to figure out what it means, and even if you pondered it, it's not like you'd come up with any brilliant new interpretation.
As with all great music, what makes it work is the music.... Mahler makes the listener earn that trip to E-flat Major heaven. Heaven for Mahler was in the key of E-flat just as E-flat was the key of heroism for Beethoven and the key of the deepest sublimity for Mozart. The Symphony of a Thousand begins where the Resurrection leaves off, and the moments of the sixth symphony's deepest happiness are in E-flat Major, the key most distant from that horrific work's home.
Indeed, Mahler sets up the whole musical argument of the symphony at the beginning by pre-figuring the final resurrection chorale, only for it to trip up into a moment of diminished chord fortissimo abyss that sounds to me like nothing so much as Satan falling from heaven through the Kingdom of Chaos (I never understood those small luftpausen there, it sounds so much better to me as one uninterrupted jumble). Just think of that quote from Paradise Lost: "Where eldest Night / And Chaos, ancestors of Nature, hold / Eternal anarchy amidst the noise / Of endless wars, and by confusion stand;" And then listen to this failed first attempt at Resurrection:
It's hard to believe that Mahler read Milton. He certainly wouldn't have read Milton in the original: he struggled with English even after living four years in America. But Milton was a formative influence on both Goethe, the Shakespeare of every German, and Klopstock, who, of course, wrote the Resurrection Ode intoned whisperingly by the choir upon their entrance.
The musical goal of resurrection, the very germ of the symphony's finale, was already in his head from the time he wrote Todtenfeier. It's entirely common in Mahler for material from one symphony to show up in the next, and he carries them forward from work to work like leitmotifs. People have often referred to Mahler as the most 'novelistic' composer, and you'd have to be deaf not to hear why. Like in Wagner's Ring, every theme so clearly represents an idea. We may not know what that idea is, but the theme itself is so emotionally resonant in such a specific way that there is often no mistaking the meaning of Mahler's themes, even if it is impossible to describe the contexts and permutations through which Mahler puts them. Think of how the major-minor modal shift at the end of the Resurrection's first movement shows up all through the sixth symphony. The Resurrection has a very brief quiet moment in the celli and basses, right at the moment before the choral entrance, that is present in the 'paradiso' section of the first symphony's finale. There are all kinds of moments like this all through it. Hell, if you squint your ears really hard, you could see the 'summer marches in' of Mahler 3's opening as the happy version of the horrifying 'march of the dead' in the finale of Mahler 2.
And that's just the intertextuality within Mahler's own work. If you look at the DNA of Mahler's resurrection and see it in the context of other music, the similarities are so striking that you have to at least wonder if Mahler intended a coded language of allusion that gives away the program. I doubt Mahler meant something so conscious, but I also doubt such associations were absent from his head.
Just think of the opening of the Resurrection Symphony and compare it to the evocation of a storm in the Prelude of Wagner's Die Walkure. The tremelos in the upper strings seem to sound like rain coming in sheets. In Wagner, the lower strings seem to be pulsing at running speed, as though to indicate Siegmund running through the woods. In Mahler, it's at a slow walking pace, like the 'notes inegales' at the beginning of a French Baroque Overture, figures so beloved of Handel. It seems to indicate some sort of state grandeur, and Mahler even writes in his program note that he's burying the hero of the first symphony.
It was when I heard Semyon Bychkov conduct it at Carnegie Hall in 2018 that I realized that the first movement sounds uncannily like a state funeral. Not a low class funeral like in the fifth symphony, but a dignified, solemn, ornate funeral of an absurdly pompous monarchy: precisely such a kingdom as the Austro-Hungarian Empire of Franz Josef which birthed Mahler and so much other classical music. If it's a state funeral, you can hear 21 gun salutes [https://youtu.be/tb1KISFyx7c?si=4OYBpif13TRF9zei&t=244](https://youtu.be/tb1KISFyx7c?si=4OYBpif13TRF9zei&t=244), you can hear the marching of troops and changing of guards (assuming they do it up to speed: [https://youtu.be/RkLIKptIqGo?si=U3L94iEDVz4h7q6C&t=618](https://youtu.be/RkLIKptIqGo?si=U3L94iEDVz4h7q6C&t=618), you can even hear the hearse driving by a public of onlookers https://youtu.be/Oi6ZjkXFlcU?si=F2E8KQVHSPC4_Doe&t=1260. And let's not forget: the whole thing is in C-minor: the key with which Beethoven buried the hero of the Eroica. To me, the whole movement has become about the burial of hope. I'm too young to know what it's like to lose the Kennedys and MLK, but I am old enough and Jewish enough to remember what it was like to lose Rabin. The whole thing had that feeling of knowing that all your hopes for what your life would be like were shot to shit. In that moment, most of us knew that suddenly, our lives were cast into a much bitterer lot than they would have been just a few days earlier. I doubt Mahler could experience all the political assassinations of his own day and not intuit something similar about his own generation. And let's go back to that 'kingdom of chaos' moment: as Richard Taruskin points out, the diminished chord on which it lands, however well concealed, is basically the exact chord as what Wagner termed the 'horror chord' at the beginning of the finale of Beethoven's Ninth.
Is the Resurrection a political work? No, of course not, but it isn't entirely removed from politics either. Think of the St. Anthony scherzo. Objectively it's the most elegantly composed movement of the work in an extremely inelegant work. No one ever wrote better scherzo's than Mahler: every scherzo of his is a masterpiece, but along with 9 and 5, this may be the masterpiece among them all. The story tells of how St. Anthony finds the church empty, so he goes and preaches to the fish in the stream. The fish are pleased by his sermon, and then they go on living exactly the same lives as before. Everything about this movement seems to be about the inability of Christians to live a virtuous life. And yet... Mahler sets it in what we Jews call the 'freygish' scale, the Jewish mode ('freygish', I guess, means Phrygian? I guess the two scales sound alike?). It is so clearly supposed to sound like Klezmer music. [https://youtu.be/s2_8oFNwZU0?si=OlmHlGk6Vn3UsOND&t=2228](https://youtu.be/s2_8oFNwZU0?si=OlmHlGk6Vn3UsOND&t=2228) Is Mahler trying to tell his audience something? Well, I don't know, but what I do know is that suddenly, amid all these gefilte fish, the music suddenly turns into a Christian hymn. [https://youtu.be/oUBx_Q-xw2M?si=UjmU-yuimiuNiuWo&t=2305](https://youtu.be/oUBx_Q-xw2M?si=UjmU-yuimiuNiuWo&t=2305) And then comes the inevitable moment when the Christian music turns violent and the cry of despair that accompanies it.... [https://youtu.be/tb1KISFyx7c?si=qGdOPCQ7tU8kI0Ua&t=2409](https://youtu.be/tb1KISFyx7c?si=qGdOPCQ7tU8kI0Ua&t=2409)
Once you hear the Jewish/Christian divide in this music, I don't think it's possible to get the image of a pogrom out of your head.
And then consider some of the words of the next movement, Urlicht:
Man lies in direst need,
Man lies in direst pain,
Is Mahler intuiting the future of Jews and Europe and war and oppression? Probably not, and yet somewhere it's there, in his head, in his nervous system, something is intuiting a world gone well off a path it was never firmly on to begin with. Somewhere it's also there in the heads of the listeners that rejected his music. And somewhere it's in our heads whose ancestors lived and died through all that soon came. And just in case we're unclear that there is something Jewish about this message comes these three lines of text:
I then came upon a broad path,
An angel came and sought to turn me back,
Ah no! I refused to be turned away.
I am from God and to God I will return,
This is so obviously referencing Jacob wrestling with the angel and renamed Israel. Those the angels would turn away, we too demand salvation. We too demand acceptance. We too demand all rights which you Christians take for granted.
And then comes the 'cry of despair' again, even more despairing, followed by... C-Major? It's as though the earthly cares of C-minor are dispelled.
....
I'd like to finish this but the last movement has enough material to cover that it needs to be its own post. If I don't get to it, remind me to tell you all about how Mahler might have been inspired by looking at Renaissance art:

Friday, March 13, 2026

Sibelius and the Score

 Question for you all: how much does fidelity to the score matter for you in a performance: adherence to tempi, dynamics, rhythmic and ornamental articulation, and transparency? The latter is the toughest question because it often requires subverting the exact score markings.

The reason I ask is because I'm listening to a bunch of Sibelius 5s right now, and different performances do it very differently. Saraste and Salonen basically ignore every score nicety, Lintu is not much better (but then in Sibelius 3 he follows everything...). Ollikainen occasionally follows it. Most faithful of all are of course Vanska and, to my shock, Segerstam. Segerstam follows nearly all of it, he just does it at very slow tempos along with some rubato to capture every nuance. It's a lot... Vanska on the other hand is very streamlined and compressed. Both are extraordinary, but these extremes are why I'm a little unsanguine on being faithful to the score. Another which follows it extremely closely is Kristiina Poska, who perhaps blunts the climaxes a little for clarity's sake, but nails so much of the quiet dynamics, those hundreds of hairpin markings which show how to phrase, and even some of the louder passages. She's a genuine great talent. Blomstedt follows it pretty neatly of course, and it's great, and goddamnit... so is James Levine.
The performance that enrages me is Paavo Berglund in Helsinki. I'm going to commit sacrilege here and say that it's a mostly awful performance. He basically doesn't do any of Sibelius's markings until it's time to make his own interpolations. The interpolations make very good sense, but every place where there aren't any interpolations is monodynamic vanilla: even climaxes pass by with barely an event.
But then there are those who engage the score without following it slavishly. Dalia Stasevska in Frankfurt follows quite a bit, particularly of course in the loud parts and interprets the 'moderato' at that climactic B-major halfway point at half the speed of everybody else, it's shocking but it's a perfectly legitimate interpretation. But she also does all sorts of things contravening the score that make the performance truer to her more romantic spirit. Of the more unsubtle maestri of today, Stasevska is quickly becoming a favorite: she begins to remind me of John Barbirolli. Thomas Sondergard, on the other hand, a gentler, subtler sort of conductor, follows everything on the piano end and generally blunts a lot of the climaxes for the sake of clarity: the soft passages are truly breathtaking.
But then there's my dear Paavo Jarvi, who follows most of it, then disregards it when it's time for one of his magnificent rubato flourishes, which are never dramatic departures, and to clarify moments like the climax of the first movement. To me, this is what real mastery is. It finds the golden section between fidelity and individuality, and balances the difference between them. For great musicianship to continue, generation to generation, for perhaps classical music to continue itself, this is what we need: for musicians to express themselves, but not impose themselves. That's what's done in a real culture.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrBCSAlWcl0

Colin Davis does what a great artist does. It's not that he doesn't follow the score, but like a lot of the greats, he 'simplifies' it. Realistically speaking, if you want a performance to take wing, if you want the players to act as though possessed, they can't worry about every single instruction. You preserve the macro ones, where a score calls for extended pianissisimo or fortissisimo, it damn well means it, in between, you vaguely get them to phrase the way Sibelius notates, but then you leave the rest to the moment's impulse. Would I ideally like the general tone of the first movement to be a little quieter? Would I ideally like those weird horn syncopations to be more raucous? Sure, but when the whole thing is done with the freshness and conviction of the Boston Symphony, who should complain? Davis used to say 'you don't follow the score, you follow the music.' There are moments when I recalled that adage and thought it just a byword for laziness, but then Davis gives a performance like this granitic monument to Sibelius's art.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Boston Symphony Music Director Tier Ranking

 My favorite orchestra needs a director. May it see better times.


S Tier Picks:

Hannu Lintu: Everybody agrees he's extraordinary. Is he perfect? No. 50% Mitropoulos, 30% Horenstein, 20% Karajan - just enough Karajan to make good playing a priority. A little slick sometimes, a little self-serious others, not known as the friendliest or most compromising guy, but he more than matches the weaknesses with a serious darkness that is almost expressionist. What can sound cold on recording is red-hot live. Go to Bachtrack or Seen and Heard, wherever he goes, he gets the kind of raves you expect for Petrenko, and for plenty more than Sibelius. Technically brilliant, musically curious, passionate and deep. Whoever gets Lintu will be absurdly lucky. Is he completely right for Boston? Maybe not, but it's worth finding out. If Salonen's too busy but they want someone who can do just about everything Salonen can but better, there he is.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nDBReeU_QY

Vladimir Jurowski: He is almost a legend at this point. Unfortunately he is in the shadow of Petrenko and Rattle in both Berlin and Munich, and he needs his own place. He'd do great in Boston, but he needs a little more warmth for the traditional Boston profile. He should be the next director of the Cleveland Orchestra: seriously, he'd be perfect for them, but his commitment to modernism, his Markevitch-like precision, electricity and musicality, and his incredible programming make him one of the greatest of our time.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ODdzJKe4400

Joana Mallwitz: I don't know for sure, but again, go to Bachtrack or Seen and Heard. She can't get a bad word said about her. This is a major talent who steps in front of the podium to give lectures as well as perform. Is she old enough to teach other musicians yet as a credible mentor? I don't know, but I do know she has as much talent in her as Petrenko, or maybe even, in her way, Leonard Bernstein.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KcWIdZz4C44

Stephane Deneve: Has everything necessary: French music, pedagogy, new music champion, beloved of many orchestras, even does all sorts of Pops programming. Any orchestra would be lucky to have Deneve. He's a true maestro who probably should have gotten Boston the last go around. If other candidates are on his level, it's only because dark horses are around who are just that extraordinary. He's in St. Louis and Miami already, but Boston has a time honored tradition of poaching other people's MD's (somehow a lot of the people being mentioned already have two jobs...).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fyRkfmeMj2g

S- tier:

Esa-Pekka Salonen: He's too old, even if he looks like a silver haired high school freshman. I don't particularly care for a lot of his performances (outside Stravinsky, where he's the master of masters), but he has ideas, he has experience, he has teaching experience, he has a stunningly innovative blueprint for what he wants to do. The problem is that he's back to his LA commitment and Paris besides. Maybe there's a way to scale it back and come to Beantown. If he scales back, he automatically goes to S tier.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QyZPt7GqNA8

John Storgards: If Lintu is perhaps the closest we have to a modern Mitropoulos, Storgards is perhaps the closest we have to Horenstein or even Klemperer. Restless musical curiosity, slow tempos and a dark, visceral palette that is incredibly un-Finnish. Again, look up any live reviews. The guy can't do wrong. The only reason he's not quite as high as Lintu is that he's nearly five years older and already has two appointments (at least?). He'd be nearly sixty-five when he took over. Some Finns are all flash, but a few of their veterans are pure substance.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Vm9RMR80D0

Sakari Oramo: Hasn't been back to Boston since that unforgettable Busoni piano concerto recording with Kirill Gerstein. If he has chemistry like that, what the hell is he doing away from them? Oramo's music is friendlier sounding than his fellow Finns above, more like Jansons or Steinberg (maybe he should go to Pittsburgh?), a classicist with the warmth of a romantic. He doesn't do quite as much new music as the other Finns, but he does some and in its place, lots of older unfamiliar repertoire. As wonderfully as he's apparently done in London and Stockholm, he deserves a capstone.

Sakari Oramo conducts Saariaho and Mahler - ARTE Concert

Karina Canellakis - I think it's probably gonna be her. I'm not a fan of Canellakis. I find her cold as steel, like a younger Zweden. But the skill, intelligence and excitement is obvious. She does everything: the whole rep from Mozart to premieres. The skill with which she does it is flawless and the electricity is ever-present. Her parents are eminent music teachers so she probably knows how to teach. She strikes me as musically that opera guy we don't talk about anymore.... No denying the musical values, but there's something about the coldness of the style I don't like.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZ3j3xWPMbI

A:

Marin Alsop: America's musical politician has genuinely gotten much better over the years at the musical side of things. The time in Europe has done her much good, and she's clearly worked like a dog to improve. Even if she's not a master of the standard rep, she's very good in it now. She always was good in new music, but most of the new music she does is getting a little long in the tooth. The truth is, were she 15 years younger and doing the work she does now, she'd be nearly ideal, but the 70s are the 70s.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NjIduF3equQ

Dalia Stasevska: A Russian-style romantic who could recall Koussevitzky, though she does not get Koussevitzky's aristocratic tone. She does all the new music anybody could possibly ask for. Everything's a little heavy-handed, but nobody can accuse her of lack of enthusiasm or passion. I'd take her over Canellakis any day. The problem is that everything flies apart under her. When you're risking that much, there is so much potential for the orchestra to lose itself. Someone who gives that much in performance well may burn out in ten years and be as tired as Nelsons.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y-BVtqm-188

Cristian Macelaru: In terms of pure excitement, he stands pretty much alone among today's podium artists, neither Canellakis nor Stasevska can equal him, not Honeck, not Jurowski, not the Jarvis, not Gergiev or Dudamel or YNS. Nobody else raises the pulse like that, but unlike certain stars, he does it while staying entirely in the bounds of musical values: dynamics, balance, rhythm, vocal line, they're all impeccable. If he were a worse musician he'd be a bigger star. He has a massive repertoire and does massive amounts of new music, is fantastic in the Russian and French rep Boston is famous for and respectable in a lot of the Germans. He reminds of no one so much as Antal Dorati, but there is something about him that even seems Toscanini-ish. As much as Jurowski, he might be perfect for Chicago or Cleveland, and he's ready, but he's starting in Cincinnati just now, and he has yet to show he can completely get along with an orchestra, has he?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Ney_ofUv2o

Susanna Malkki: Not a huge fan. Another 'overcontroller' who gets relatively marginal results in standard rep, but does so much service to new music that she has to be taken seriously. She was basically brought in as Principal Guest in LA to do all the progressive stuff, but Dudamel got the credit for it while still doing basically the standard rep. She is one of those truly 'cold Finns', but she is a real force for progress and has more than earned the right to be taken seriously.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0hPMKRDzvw


Robert Trevino: Another 'not favorite' but you gotta recognize game. Huge rep, lots of new music, gets the most unbelievable standard of playing, brilliantly articulate and funny speaker, what the hell is he doing in Romania?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzu6G3Se3xs

B:

Dima Slobodeniouk: Russo-Finn of great electricity and little warmth. In twenty years as he warms he may emerge like Mackerras or Blomstedt as one of the great conductors of all time, but as of yet, he's just another Finnish machine: but a good Finnish machine. In the meantime, he should be an honored guest everywhere, who does exciting performances throughout the standard repertoire and some new music besides, but put him in front of the BSO and he'll be another Leinsdorf. 

 
Gianandrea Noseda: A frustratingly consistent musician who is always good, but almost never great. He works so hard with results so consistent that he deserves the world. His position at the NSO was terribly misunderstood, and he admirably waited out what would come next during a period when the NSO could easily fold. He may have saved the orchestra. He deserves the moon for that. The Big Five could do so much worse than him, and he is obviously a particularly good hand in the Russian rep for which both he and the BSO are so known.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGF22S0qqf4

C:

Juraj Valcuha: My favorite among today's 'middle generation' now that FX Roth is... well... never mind... The most probing podium musician under 50: a modern Klemperer, E. Kleiber, Jansons, Giulini, whatever Apollonian you want to name. He does everything, and he does it as music, not excitement. I have no idea about him as a communicator; I have no idea about him as a teacher. Let him concentrate on music, let him get something in Munich or Berlin, he'd be wasted in Boston. Soon he'll be one of the greatest musicians on earth.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6UMfL8wMALg

Daniel Harding: The modern Reiner. Intelligence and frost everywhere, the most amazing technical results to no purpose, emotionally arid, and has trouble getting along with the people in front of him. But he does champion all sorts of modern music and can do many different styles. Musically, he would do well should he so choose, but it often seems he chooses not to do well.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIWi6zfFvXU

Nathalie Stutzmann: Listed by Lebrecht as the favorite, one of the most talented all-around musicians in the world has not gotten better over the years on the podium even as her career took her nearly to stardom. When she was just another journey(wo)man, she was very nearly a master of the standard rep, but not now, and has little new music to supplement it. Whereas she had a wonderful light touch in earlier years up there, she now approaches with an incredibly heavy hand: ponderous when heavy, driven when light: half Celibidache, half Norrington. Atlanta apparently has trouble with her already. If she can get the old mojo back, it'll be great, but if she doesn't, it'll be awful.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7MZ7HwV-SA

Tugan Sokhiev: He's a perfect guest conductor. He can do the adrenaline repertoire from any country and find the music in it, but is his repertoire even as big as Gergiev's?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nkxt3_81gU

Mirga Grazynite-Tyla - She certainly has the charisma and warmth for it, and her musicianship is growing exponentially. But her repertoire is terribly small.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQkvU1n_7aE

Philippe Jordan: Many others find him one of the greatest podium musicians. I'm always a bit flummoxed by his reputation. He draws a beautiful sheen from orchestras, and yet all that refinement feels rather pompous and lacquered. Those who love Karajan can find much to love in Jordan. The refinement usually doesn't preclude excitement, however it precludes is sincerity and involvement. Everything always feels a bit inhibited. He's considered a master of standard repertoire by everyone else, not by me, and there doesn't seem to be much new music besides.


D:

Petr Popelka: We need to guard our old school romantics like eggs. What they do is so hard and they burn out so easily: Nelsons, Gergiev, Gatti, Thielemann, Barenboim, Dudamel, YNS, think of the expectations on them, the sheer electricity at the beginning of their careers relative to now. Whatever the accomplishments, they're all disappointments. Popelka, like Honeck or the Jarvis, can be a golden age throwback, but only if he comes up slowly and no outsize expectations are placed.


Jonathon Heyward: He is so clearly the future of American orchestral life. He's going to be the biggest thing since MTT, potentially since Leonard Bernstein. His best performances show that his potential is infinite, worthy of the greatest names of all time, but his worst are still abysmal: as he is the director of my local, I can say that the quality is unpredictable every week, going from Tennstedt-worthy to first year conducting student. As of yet, he is much more than flash, much less than substance. To his credit, much of his work goes into new music and goes well out of his way to sponsor African-American composers and others from minority demographics. He's an extraordinary talent who should be a serious contender for the next time it comes around, but he's not ready. Put him in the spotlight now and he'll wilt like Nelsons.


Santtu-Mattias Rouvali: Similar, but shallower, I've already written him off.

F:

Klaus Makela: Let's face it, he'd go for a fifth orchestra.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Who will get it: Once again, Salonen will be offered first. If not him, probably Deneve. If he turns it down (possible), then Canellakis. Both Salonen and Deneve have two appointments, so my best guess is it'll be Canellakis.

Who should get it: Probably Lintu. But Deneve would be a superb pick. If they'd value their tradition properly they'd seriously look at Thierry Fischer. In ten years, Marie Jacquot might be perfect.

In a better world: Francois-Xavier Roth would have it in the bag, but he couldn't keep it in his pants.

In a perfect world: Markus Stenz would get the attention he deserves and get this as the career capstone. It's not worth writing about him if nobody's mentioning him, but if Lintu, Mallwitz and Deneve are S+, Stenz is S++.


Would be nice but too old: 

Simon Rattle (man did they **** that one up...)

Semyon Bychkov

Osmo Vanska 

Riccardo Chailly 

Franz Welser-Most (not quite too old but seems to be sick)

Michael Schonwandt (has STILL never made a US debut...)

Antonio Pappano 

Manfred Honeck 

Ivan Fischer 

Donald Runnicles

Daniele Gatti (well, it wouldn't be nice...)



Whom else they should look at:

Krysztof Urbanski (!) (apparently he's nice now...)

Thierry Fischer (!)

Markus Stenz (!)

Jonathan Nott

Mikko Franck 

Markus Poschner 

Antonello Manacorda

Roberto Gonzalez-Monjas (might not be ready)

Maxime Pascal (might not be ready)




One last thing: STOP TAKING MULTIPLE JOBS! WHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YOU ALL YOU MONEYGRUBBING EGOMANIACS!?