Why do all Mahler recordings seem too bright?


Yes - I may be exaggerating but I haven’t yet found any recordings of his symphonies that properly balance the extra treble energy that are often part of the dynamic swings.  Part of the problem may be that I’m not sure I yet actually “like” Mahler’s music though there are moments that are exquisite.  But, I can’t get through a whole piece because the recordings hurt my ears.  

As a side note - I have been on both sides of a microphone - having been a musician in the past and also having recorded/mixed a number of orchestral concerts at a performing arts center.  Pre-pandemic I would go to orchestral concerts regularly. So - I do have at least some reference.

I have some recordings (they were given to me) that are positively unlistenable (a DG recording of his 5th may be singularly the worst recording I’ve heard).

I thought the hi res versions of San Francisco by MTT might be the ticket.  While better, they still seem too bright and harsh to me.

Perhaps it’s my system that’s too bright, or perhaps something else is going on but I’ve plenty of other classical music that sounds better. We’ll recorded jazz and acoustic, too. 

Of course I can find poor recordings in any genre, but I’d welcome recommendations from my fellow forumites of some Mahler recordings that I might try.  I’d love to be able to listen to the closing moments of the 2nd at reasonable volume - without cringing.  

 

 

mgrif104

@antigrunge2 thanks for the smile!

@kr4 thanks for the recommendations!  I just listened to the Vanska/Minnesota and it’s much better!  I should have tried that one without prompting because I’m often surprised at how much I enjoy both their playing and recordings.   

 

@jasonbourne52 I never listen at enough volume to approach clipping.  In this system, it’s a relatively small listening area

What is the source for these in your system? Digital or vinyl? Good recordings of Mahler symphonies are a challenge on the grand scale of things. Lots of things going on and big dynamic shifts and crescendos. That is the unique thing about them compared to many. Lots can go wrong anywhere from source to speakers. Could easily be multiple factors. Need more info to be able to properly assess case by case.

If your setup isn’t cutting it I would seek out a dealer who can demo a system that can. Then you are in a position to assess what’s different and what might to done to correct it.

 

off the cuff, I love those KEFs but they are small and will be challenged to deliver live symphony SPL levels with something like Mahler #2. Also 100 watts on the amp is not bad but probably also not enough to do the whole job cleanly with those speakers with the most challenging large scale symphonic recordings. Off the cuff I would advise more power (to better handle dynamic peaks) or more efficient speakers (most likely a good bit larger) and add a powered sub or two to the KEFs and cross over at 60 hz or above to remove the low end from the small monitors. This assumes your source phono setup is up to the task. If digital less of an issue there, more personal preference addressed by choice of dac.

A good Mahler symphony recording will separate the men from the boys. Everything needs to be going exactly right with your hifi. There is perhaps no tougher challenge for a hifi to reproduce.

if your hifi does Mahler well, it will do most anything. It’s a very good litmus test!

we’re it me, first thing I would try is throwing a good quality Class D amp at the problem. 250 watts per channel or more. Very feasible these days without breaking the bank .  Most Class D amps soft clip like a tube amp and that alone might help.   

Cheers and Happy Thanksgiving.