Given Tim's probability analysis it is really astonishing that I immediately can agree with the first two symphonies you list as admirable (even with their sequence). These symphonies are aw...rob wrote:Meanwhile - not being a HUGE fan of the percussion instrument you all adore - I will treat you to the three symphonies which I admire enormously and probably play on CD the most:Timtin wrote: I think that the statistical chance of anyone actually agreeing is incredibly small!
If there are 100,001 possible piano pieces to chose from, then the probability of
someone else selecting the above three (in any order at all) is a mere 1/((10^15)-(10^5)).
1. Mahler Symphony 10 (various 'completions' & performers)
2. Franz Schmidt Symphony 4 with Zubin Mehta and the Vienna Philharmonic
3. William Walton Symphony 2 with George Szell & the Cleveland Orchestra
But tomorrow my list might be different (apart from the Walton).

But I wouldn't be able to nominate a third one (this would change too often, some day maybe Shosty's 4th, another day a K.A. Hartmann symphony etc.). And frankly that is because I fully agree with Rob's aversion against this "best of"- and "most [insert adjective of your choice]"-mentality: to restrict oneself to the "top3" or "top10" (whatever this could mean) would be silly and misses the point of being a music lover.