"Best" Beethoven 9 Symphonies Recording, Digital


Howdy,
I'm hoping to zero in on the combination "best" of sound/recording quality and, of course, performance.
I did a search here on Agon and the last posting was in 2003, so perhaps there's a new pressing, mastering or even performance. 
I've been a prog-rock, blues, grateful dead type of guy most of my life but have recently started appreciating the symphonic/classical genre. These guys, ie. Beethoven, Mozart, Bach, Vivaldi etc, were really something else, that two to three hundred years after their compositions, so many of the works are still so powerful. Remarkable.
I do most if not all my non-classical listening on a ARC Ref series tube amp set-up, with a Basis 2800 tt and Raidho C1.1s, but for classical I've gone digital with headphones. The truly awesome Stax Sr-009 electrostat headphones through a Blue Hawaii headphone tube amp running through a Schiit multibit dac, all I can say is wow. So seeking out the best recordings, because what else is there to do :)
Thanks!
128x128moryoga
A lot of choices.  Szell is excellent and dirt cheap.  The venerable Krips/LSO cycle was recorded on 35 mm (film) tape and sounds great in current remastering.  The Von Karajan 1963 cycle is a classic and sounds great on Blu Ray.
  More modern well recorded more modern cycles that I own are Vanska/Minnesota and Herrweghe with a Flemish Orchestra  both in SACD but if you have Surround Sound you really ought to sample the Tacet cycle with a Polish Conductor and Chamber Orchestra which unabashedly places the listener in the middle of the Orchestra and reveals fascinating details
I like the version from the Penguin guide recommended box set of Gunter Wand and the NDR Symphony.

Also Ferenc Fricsay’s version on DG with the Berliner Philharmoniker is enjoyable on vinyl.
Interpretations are very subjective, and all the above nominees have their devotees. Bernstein is another favorite, but the sound of his Columbia Records recordings are not so hot. Gunter Wand does the Beethoven Symphonies very well, sort of between the "romantic" version of Bruno Walter and the period "correct" ones by Gardiner and Herreweghe, both of which I have and love. Wand's recordings, on German Harmonia Mundi, are, as a bonus, pretty darn good.
Thanks for all the great insight and recommendations. Seems like I have some shopping to do :)
I have the Berstein and the Karajan. They are both great performances but, as mentioned, sq is not stellar.