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  • Schubert Symphony no. 9 (The Great), Five German Dances
Schubert Symphony no. 9 (The Great), Five German Dances - Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra

31111

Schubert Symphony no. 9 (The Great), Five German Dances

Fischer, Ivan - conductor
Budapest Festival Orchestra

Schubert

Awards
Audiophile Audition 5/5 stars Audiophile Audition 5/5 stars Classics Today 9/9 Classics Today 9/9 BBC Radio 3 CD of the week BBC Radio 3 CD of the week BBC Music Magazine 5/5 stars BBC Music Magazine 5/5 stars Top Mezzo Classique Top Mezzo Classique
Politics and Prose: Best CD's of 2011 Politics and Prose: Best CD's of 2011
DFF 1bit 2822.4kHz CCS 31111 Schubert
FLAC 24bit 192kHz
FLAC 24bit 96kHz
FLAC 24bit 44.1kHz
MP3 320k 44.1

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Tracks: Listen and Download
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante - Allegro
1. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante - Allegro
13:11
Regular: $6.01 Special: $5.11
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante con moto
2. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante con moto
15:34
Regular: $6.86 Special: $5.84
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Scherzo, Allegro Vivace
3. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Scherzo, Allegro Vivace
14:25
Regular: $6.43 Special: $5.47
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Allegro Vivace
4. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Allegro Vivace
11:53
Regular: $5.15 Special: $4.38
Schubert Five German Dances (D89)
5. Schubert Five German Dances (D89)
14:38
Regular: $6.43 Special: $5.47
Total Time 1:09:41 
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante - Allegro
1. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante - Allegro
13:11
Regular: $5.36 Special: $4.55
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante con moto
2. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante con moto
15:34
Regular: $6.11 Special: $5.20
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Scherzo, Allegro Vivace
3. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Scherzo, Allegro Vivace
14:25
Regular: $5.73 Special: $4.87
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Allegro Vivace
4. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Allegro Vivace
11:53
Regular: $4.59 Special: $3.90
Schubert Five German Dances (D89)
5. Schubert Five German Dances (D89)
14:38
Regular: $5.73 Special: $4.87
Total Time 1:09:41 
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante - Allegro
1. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante - Allegro
13:11
Regular: $4.15 Special: $3.52
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante con moto
2. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante con moto
15:34
Regular: $4.74 Special: $4.03
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Scherzo, Allegro Vivace
3. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Scherzo, Allegro Vivace
14:25
Regular: $4.45 Special: $3.78
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Allegro Vivace
4. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Allegro Vivace
11:53
Regular: $3.56 Special: $3.03
Schubert Five German Dances (D89)
5. Schubert Five German Dances (D89)
14:38
Regular: $4.45 Special: $3.78
Total Time 1:09:41 
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
31111dsd Trk5
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante - Allegro
1. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante - Allegro
13:11
Regular: $2.82 Special: $2.39
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante con moto
2. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Andante con moto
15:34
Regular: $3.22 Special: $2.74
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Scherzo, Allegro Vivace
3. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Scherzo, Allegro Vivace
14:25
Regular: $3.03 Special: $2.57
Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Allegro Vivace
4. Schubert Symphony no. 9 / Allegro Vivace
11:53
Regular: $2.42 Special: $2.05
Schubert Five German Dances (D89)
5. Schubert Five German Dances (D89)
14:38
Regular: $3.03 Special: $2.57
Total Time 1:09:41 
: 
1

: 
2011

: 
Budapest Hungary

: 
Hein Dekker

: 
Hein Dekker, Jared Sacks

: 
69.41

: 
Microphones: Bruel & Kjaer 4006, Schoeps
Digital Converters: DSD Super Audio/Grimm Audio AD converter
Speakers: Audiolab, Holland
Software: Pyramix Editing, Merging Technologies
Mixing Board: Rens Heijnis, custom design
Mastering Room: B+W 803d series speakers, Classe 5200 Amplifier
Cables: Van den Hul

Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra
  • view profile
  • visit website
  • view concerts
Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra
Iván Fischer is founder and Music Director of the Budapest Festival Orchestra. The partnership between Iván Fischer and his Budapest Festival Orchestra has proved to be one of the greatest success stories in the past three decades of classical music.


: 
Budapest Festival Orchestra
Ivan Fischer - conductor

: 
A new dimension is added to the marvellous transition from the simple horn melody to a symphony when it is played on natural horns. Why did Schubert choose horns? Three notes sound open, the next stopped, the next stopped in a different way, like a melody roughly hewn from marble. Only when the oboe takes over is the unevenness polished away, removing limitations and barriers and transporting us into a magical realm of eternity. I must say that I find this transition most touching if the natural horn players do their best to equalize, to overcome their natural unevenness – like handicapped athletes do.

Small C-clarinets and narrow trombones give this symphony a special colour. The woodwinds have a leading role, playing all the Viennese songs, serenades, popular tunes and dances. Even if it is an orchestral work, here and there it feels like the seventh volume of Schubert’s Lieder.
Ivan Fischer

: 

Meester van de klassieke symfonie (...) opnieuw experimenteert Fischer met de opstelling en instrumenten van zijn orkest (...) Prachtig hoe Ivan Fischer zo vele details naar boven weet te brengen, en er tegelijk toch in slaagt om het evenwicht en de spanning van begin tot einde vast te houden. Hij toont Schubert niet als de aankondiger van de romantiek (zoals dat bij vele andere dirigenten in dit werk dikwijls het geval is), wel als de absolute, soevereine meester van de klassieke symfonie.
Cobra, Belgium


(...) One of the main reasons why it does work is that the players are all on Fischer's side. The performance standards here are exceptional, but more importantly, the conductor is able to communicate his unusual conception of the work to the orchestra in such a way that they are able to make it seem intuitive. (...) Fischer always keeps things light. Everything here is dancing and optimism. (...)The SACD sound quality is up to the usual high standards of Channel Classics.
Musicweb International


(...) There may be other performances for some, but I think this will be on the top of anyone's list (...) The recording itself is outstanding (...) Excellent in every way.
HIFI+


As so often with iván Fischer, it's the breath of insight that impresses here. (...)There's plenty of energy, yet the lines sing too (...) The recorded sound is likewise outstanding: warm and atmospheric but clear throughout the texture. (...)
BBC Music- orchestra CD of the month


(...) Was er ihnen – gerade in Schuberts 'schwierigen' Passagen mit Tempowechsel, insbesondere dem Übergang von langsamer Einleitung zum Allegro-Hauptsatz – an dynamischen Finessen entlockt, ist außergewöhnlich und zeugt von einer langjährigen, quasi 'blinden' Orchesterkommunikation, die im heutigen Jet-Set-Konzertstress der Pultmagnaten immer seltener anzutreffen ist. (...) Fischer ist kein Extremist, sondern ein Feinzeichner von seltenen Graden und Gnaden. (...)
RONDO


(...) Here is yet another winner from Iván Fischer and his superb Budapest Festival Orchestra. You will not find a more loving impeccable performance of Schubert's masterpiece than this splendid reading. The surround sound from Channel Classics is rich, warm and detailed, and the charming German Dances make an appropriate filler. Don't miss this one.
Classicalcdreview


(...) Fischer is technisch een betere dirigent dan Harnoncourt: hij kan de musici op kleinere schaal in tijd en ruimte aansturen, waardoor een ultiem niveau in wendbaarheid en kamermuziekkwaliteit wordt bereikt. Alweer een grote plaat van Fischer en co.(…)
Knack


(...)  Iván Fischer's beautifully judged and lucidly presented performance takes the work's length as something utterly inevitable and authentically Schubertian in its own right. The textures are wonderfully transparent, and by getting his players in the Budapest orchestra to use natural horns, narrow bore trombones and clarinets in C, he gives an extra buoyancy to the sound, so that every line has its own character and rhythmic profile. (...)
The Guardian


From the first notes the spectacular performance by the Budapest Festival Orchestra and Ivan Fischer sets itself apart from others. (...) As with their performances of Mahler and Beethoven symphonies - praised by Gramophone and winners of many awards - this one shows that Fischer and his Budapest Festival Orchestra have taken a place among the top orchestras of today’s world. The rich, detailed and sonorous sound provided by all of Channel Classics’ hi-res surround recordings makes this a winner.
Audiophile Audition


With every new release - and occasional reissue - Fischer's Budapest Festival Orchestra throw fresh light on the standard classical works.  Their recordings, invariably recorded live, sound like new encounters with the greatest and most familiar music of the concert platform, yet they are notable for their lack of eccentricities and the kind of interpretive quirks that draw attention to the personality of the conductor rather than the composer. Here, Schubert's "Great" seems so natural - every tempo judged to perfection, the balance between strings and winds an ideal equilibrium - and yet so utterly different from the classic interpretations on record. Fischer takes for granted the symphony's "heavenly length" - Schumann's famous accolade at a time when the music was thought impossibly long-winded and difficult - but he doesn't attempt to make the music sound like Beethoven's 10th. The Schubertian qualities of songful melodic lyricism, rustic dance, joy in the natural world and philosophical introspection are here played with a chamber-music-like clarity and intimacy. The Hungarian musicians recognise that Schubert was essentially a private composer. They certainly bring out his extrovert qualities (the sound of the natural horns have a lusty, al fresco quality), but it is the exquisite quality of the woodwind soloists that make such a deep impression. The German dances - light-hearted fare from the opposite end of Schubert's career - make delightful encores.
Sunday Times



‘Iván Fischer directs his Budapest forces in a performance of Schubert’s “Great” C major Symphony that has punch and impetus, with orchestral detail crisply delineated. Natural horns add bite to the lucid textures alongside his elegant phrasing of melodic lines. Five German Dances D89, originally for string quartet, form a delightful encore.’
The Telegraph



(...) Het Budapest Festival Orchestra is een van de beste orkesten ter wereld, en Iván Fischer is een groot dirigent. Elke cd van deze gouden combinatie is een genot om naar te luisteren. Liefde voor het detail, zorg voor de klank, perfect samenspel, het is er allemaal, en het wordt ook nog eens voortreffelijk opgenomen. (...)
Opusklassiek


 (...) In het orkest spelen atleten die niet alleen elastisch omgaan met klankvorming, maar onder Fischers baton de noten behandelen als organisch materiaal. (...) Of je nu wel of niet een Schubert Negen in de kast hebt: deze mag niet ontbreken. (...)
Klassieke Zaken


Iván Fischer's reading of Schubert's Great Symphony in C Major with the Budapest Festival Orchestra lends this glorious extrapolation of Beethovenian style an audaciously rich flavour with no loss of crispness. (...) The timbre is almost that of Dvorák – dark and herbal – while the sense of anticipation in the longest, broadest phrases is palpable. The architecture is magnificent, the detailing absurdly delightful. Silky and playful, the German Dances are best heard as an aperitif.
Independent.co.uk


The lightness of touch is an essential part of Fischer’s reading of the work. (...) Throughout, the playing has an ebullience that suits Fischer’s view of the work.
International Record Review


Iván Fischers Symphonie-Aufnahmen haben eigene Qualitäten. Sogar Schuberts Wunderwerk, die scheue Neunte, blüht bei ihm auf.
Spiegel On Line


 (...) Die Aufnahme zeigt markant, dass Fischer nicht nur ein Orchester von Null an die Weltspitze bringen kann, sondern auch ein origineller Interpret ist, der bei aller Sachlichkeit selbst bekannten Werken eine unerhörte Seite abgewinnen kann.
Peter Uehling, kulturradio


(...) The crisp and clear sounds of the winds are arresting, and the clarity of their lines and textures make the music transparent and ideally balanced with the strings. (...) Fischer’s  conducting is incisive, so the rhythms follow suit and push off the beat with considerable energy. (...) The sound of this SACD is excellent, with first-rate DSD reproduction, credible multichannel depth, and pleasant resonance.
www.allmusic.com


           
93
  • Date
  • Details
  • Aug 13, 2013
  • Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra
  • Rose Theater
  • New York
  • , USA
  • Aug 15, 2013
  • Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra
  • Rose Theater
  • New York
  • , USA
  • Sep 6, 2013
  • Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra
  • Lingotto
  • Torino
  • , Italy
  • Sep 8, 2013
  • Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra
  • Kultur- und Kongresszentrum
  • Luzern
  • , Switzerland

Details

Budapest Festival Orchestra Ivan Fischer - conductor

Additional Information

SACD or CD? SACD (plays on all cd players)
Year of release 2011
Recording Location Budapest Hungary
Main artist

Fischer, Ivan - conductor
Budapest Festival Orchestra

Performers Budapest Festival Orchestra Ivan Fischer - conductor
Introduction by artist A new dimension is added to the marvellous transition from the simple horn melody to a symphony when it is played on natural horns. Why did Schubert choose horns? Three notes sound open, the next stopped, the next stopped in a different way, like a melody roughly hewn from marble. Only when the oboe takes over is the unevenness polished away, removing limitations and barriers and transporting us into a magical realm of eternity. I must say that I find this transition most touching if the natural horn players do their best to equalize, to overcome their natural unevenness – like handicapped athletes do. Small C-clarinets and narrow trombones give this symphony a special colour. The woodwinds have a leading role, playing all the Viennese songs, serenades, popular tunes and dances. Even if it is an orchestral work, here and there it feels like the seventh volume of Schubert’s Lieder. Ivan Fischer
Composer Schubert
Producer Hein Dekker
Recording Engineer / Mastering Hein Dekker, Jared Sacks
Technical Specifications Microphones: Bruel & Kjaer 4006, Schoeps Digital Converters: DSD Super Audio/Grimm Audio AD converter Speakers: Audiolab, Holland Software: Pyramix Editing, Merging Technologies Mixing Board: Rens Heijnis, custom design Mastering Room: B+W 803d series speakers, Classe 5200 Amplifier Cables: Van den Hul
Inlay Symphony no. 9 (‘Great’) in C major [D 944] Five German Dances and Seven Trios with Coda [D89]
Awards
Awards:
• Audiophile Audition: 5 Stars
• BBC Music Magazine: 5 Stars/5 Stars
• BBC Radio 3: Disc of the Week
• Classical-Music.com: 5 Stars/5 Stars
• ClassicsToday: 9/9
 
 

 

Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra - Audiophile Audition 5 Stars
Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra - BBC Music Magazine 5 Stars
Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra - BBC Radio 3 Disc of the Week
Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra - ClassicsToday: 9/9

Quotes

Meester van de klassieke symfonie (...) opnieuw experimenteert Fischer met de opstelling en instrumenten van zijn orkest (...) Prachtig hoe Ivan Fischer zo vele details naar boven weet te brengen, en er tegelijk toch in slaagt om het evenwicht en de spanning van begin tot einde vast te houden. Hij toont Schubert niet als de aankondiger van de romantiek (zoals dat bij vele andere dirigenten in dit werk dikwijls het geval is), wel als de absolute, soevereine meester van de klassieke symfonie.
Cobra, Belgium

(...) One of the main reasons why it does work is that the players are all on Fischer's side. The performance standards here are exceptional, but more importantly, the conductor is able to communicate his unusual conception of the work to the orchestra in such a way that they are able to make it seem intuitive. (...) Fischer always keeps things light. Everything here is dancing and optimism. (...)The SACD sound quality is up to the usual high standards of Channel Classics.
Musicweb International

(...) There may be other performances for some, but I think this will be on the top of anyone's list (...) The recording itself is outstanding (...) Excellent in every way.
HIFI+

As so often with iván Fischer, it's the breath of insight that impresses here. (...)There's plenty of energy, yet the lines sing too (...) The recorded sound is likewise outstanding: warm and atmospheric but clear throughout the texture. (...)
BBC Music- orchestra CD of the month

(...) Was er ihnen – gerade in Schuberts 'schwierigen' Passagen mit Tempowechsel, insbesondere dem Übergang von langsamer Einleitung zum Allegro-Hauptsatz – an dynamischen Finessen entlockt, ist außergewöhnlich und zeugt von einer langjährigen, quasi 'blinden' Orchesterkommunikation, die im heutigen Jet-Set-Konzertstress der Pultmagnaten immer seltener anzutreffen ist. (...) Fischer ist kein Extremist, sondern ein Feinzeichner von seltenen Graden und Gnaden. (...)
RONDO

(...) Here is yet another winner from Iván Fischer and his superb Budapest Festival Orchestra. You will not find a more loving impeccable performance of Schubert's masterpiece than this splendid reading. The surround sound from Channel Classics is rich, warm and detailed, and the charming German Dances make an appropriate filler. Don't miss this one.
Classicalcdreview

(...) Fischer is technisch een betere dirigent dan Harnoncourt: hij kan de musici op kleinere schaal in tijd en ruimte aansturen, waardoor een ultiem niveau in wendbaarheid en kamermuziekkwaliteit wordt bereikt. Alweer een grote plaat van Fischer en co.(…)
Knack

(...)  Iván Fischer's beautifully judged and lucidly presented performance takes the work's length as something utterly inevitable and authentically Schubertian in its own right. The textures are wonderfully transparent, and by getting his players in the Budapest orchestra to use natural horns, narrow bore trombones and clarinets in C, he gives an extra buoyancy to the sound, so that every line has its own character and rhythmic profile. (...)
The Guardian

From the first notes the spectacular performance by the Budapest Festival Orchestra and Ivan Fischer sets itself apart from others. (...) As with their performances of Mahler and Beethoven symphonies - praised by Gramophone and winners of many awards - this one shows that Fischer and his Budapest Festival Orchestra have taken a place among the top orchestras of today’s world. The rich, detailed and sonorous sound provided by all of Channel Classics’ hi-res surround recordings makes this a winner.
Audiophile Audition

With every new release - and occasional reissue - Fischer's Budapest Festival Orchestra throw fresh light on the standard classical works.  Their recordings, invariably recorded live, sound like new encounters with the greatest and most familiar music of the concert platform, yet they are notable for their lack of eccentricities and the kind of interpretive quirks that draw attention to the personality of the conductor rather than the composer. Here, Schubert's "Great" seems so natural - every tempo judged to perfection, the balance between strings and winds an ideal equilibrium - and yet so utterly different from the classic interpretations on record. Fischer takes for granted the symphony's "heavenly length" - Schumann's famous accolade at a time when the music was thought impossibly long-winded and difficult - but he doesn't attempt to make the music sound like Beethoven's 10th. The Schubertian qualities of songful melodic lyricism, rustic dance, joy in the natural world and philosophical introspection are here played with a chamber-music-like clarity and intimacy. The Hungarian musicians recognise that Schubert was essentially a private composer. They certainly bring out his extrovert qualities (the sound of the natural horns have a lusty, al fresco quality), but it is the exquisite quality of the woodwind soloists that make such a deep impression. The German dances - light-hearted fare from the opposite end of Schubert's career - make delightful encores.
Sunday Times

‘Iván Fischer directs his Budapest forces in a performance of Schubert’s “Great” C major Symphony that has punch and impetus, with orchestral detail crisply delineated. Natural horns add bite to the lucid textures alongside his elegant phrasing of melodic lines. Five German Dances D89, originally for string quartet, form a delightful encore.’
The Telegraph

(...) Het Budapest Festival Orchestra is een van de beste orkesten ter wereld, en Iván Fischer is een groot dirigent. Elke cd van deze gouden combinatie is een genot om naar te luisteren. Liefde voor het detail, zorg voor de klank, perfect samenspel, het is er allemaal, en het wordt ook nog eens voortreffelijk opgenomen. (...)
Opusklassiek

 (...) In het orkest spelen atleten die niet alleen elastisch omgaan met klankvorming, maar onder Fischers baton de noten behandelen als organisch materiaal. (...) Of je nu wel of niet een Schubert Negen in de kast hebt: deze mag niet ontbreken. (...)
Klassieke Zaken

Iván Fischer's reading of Schubert's Great Symphony in C Major with the Budapest Festival Orchestra lends this glorious extrapolation of Beethovenian style an audaciously rich flavour with no loss of crispness. (...) The timbre is almost that of Dvorák – dark and herbal – while the sense of anticipation in the longest, broadest phrases is palpable. The architecture is magnificent, the detailing absurdly delightful. Silky and playful, the German Dances are best heard as an aperitif.
Independent.co.uk

The lightness of touch is an essential part of Fischer’s reading of the work. (...) Throughout, the playing has an ebullience that suits Fischer’s view of the work.
International Record Review

Iván Fischers Symphonie-Aufnahmen haben eigene Qualitäten. Sogar Schuberts Wunderwerk, die scheue Neunte, blüht bei ihm auf.
Spiegel On Line

 (...) Die Aufnahme zeigt markant, dass Fischer nicht nur ein Orchester von Null an die Weltspitze bringen kann, sondern auch ein origineller Interpret ist, der bei aller Sachlichkeit selbst bekannten Werken eine unerhörte Seite abgewinnen kann.
Peter Uehling, kulturradio

(...) The crisp and clear sounds of the winds are arresting, and the clarity of their lines and textures make the music transparent and ideally balanced with the strings. (...) Fischer’s  conducting is incisive, so the rhythms follow suit and push off the beat with considerable energy. (...) The sound of this SACD is excellent, with first-rate DSD reproduction, credible multichannel depth, and pleasant resonance.
www.allmusic.com

Running time 69.41
Number of cd's 1
: 
1

: 
2011

: 
Budapest Hungary

: 
Hein Dekker

: 
Hein Dekker, Jared Sacks

: 
69.41

: 
Microphones: Bruel & Kjaer 4006, Schoeps
Digital Converters: DSD Super Audio/Grimm Audio AD converter
Speakers: Audiolab, Holland
Software: Pyramix Editing, Merging Technologies
Mixing Board: Rens Heijnis, custom design
Mastering Room: B+W 803d series speakers, Classe 5200 Amplifier
Cables: Van den Hul

Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra
  • view profile
  • visit website
  • view concerts
Ivan Fischer, Budapest Festival Orchestra
Iván Fischer is founder and Music Director of the Budapest Festival Orchestra. The partnership between Iván Fischer and his Budapest Festival Orchestra has proved to be one of the greatest success stories in the past three decades of classical music.


: 
Budapest Festival Orchestra
Ivan Fischer - conductor

: 
A new dimension is added to the marvellous transition from the simple horn melody to a symphony when it is played on natural horns. Why did Schubert choose horns? Three notes sound open, the next stopped, the next stopped in a different way, like a melody roughly hewn from marble. Only when the oboe takes over is the unevenness polished away, removing limitations and barriers and transporting us into a magical realm of eternity. I must say that I find this transition most touching if the natural horn players do their best to equalize, to overcome their natural unevenness – like handicapped athletes do.

Small C-clarinets and narrow trombones give this symphony a special colour. The woodwinds have a leading role, playing all the Viennese songs, serenades, popular tunes and dances. Even if it is an orchestral work, here and there it feels like the seventh volume of Schubert’s Lieder.
Ivan Fischer

: 

Meester van de klassieke symfonie (...) opnieuw experimenteert Fischer met de opstelling en instrumenten van zijn orkest (...) Prachtig hoe Ivan Fischer zo vele details naar boven weet te brengen, en er tegelijk toch in slaagt om het evenwicht en de spanning van begin tot einde vast te houden. Hij toont Schubert niet als de aankondiger van de romantiek (zoals dat bij vele andere dirigenten in dit werk dikwijls het geval is), wel als de absolute, soevereine meester van de klassieke symfonie.
Cobra, Belgium


(...) One of the main reasons why it does work is that the players are all on Fischer's side. The performance standards here are exceptional, but more importantly, the conductor is able to communicate his unusual conception of the work to the orchestra in such a way that they are able to make it seem intuitive. (...) Fischer always keeps things light. Everything here is dancing and optimism. (...)The SACD sound quality is up to the usual high standards of Channel Classics.
Musicweb International


(...) There may be other performances for some, but I think this will be on the top of anyone's list (...) The recording itself is outstanding (...) Excellent in every way.
HIFI+


As so often with iván Fischer, it's the breath of insight that impresses here. (...)There's plenty of energy, yet the lines sing too (...) The recorded sound is likewise outstanding: warm and atmospheric but clear throughout the texture. (...)
BBC Music- orchestra CD of the month


(...) Was er ihnen – gerade in Schuberts 'schwierigen' Passagen mit Tempowechsel, insbesondere dem Übergang von langsamer Einleitung zum Allegro-Hauptsatz – an dynamischen Finessen entlockt, ist außergewöhnlich und zeugt von einer langjährigen, quasi 'blinden' Orchesterkommunikation, die im heutigen Jet-Set-Konzertstress der Pultmagnaten immer seltener anzutreffen ist. (...) Fischer ist kein Extremist, sondern ein Feinzeichner von seltenen Graden und Gnaden. (...)
RONDO


(...) Here is yet another winner from Iván Fischer and his superb Budapest Festival Orchestra. You will not find a more loving impeccable performance of Schubert's masterpiece than this splendid reading. The surround sound from Channel Classics is rich, warm and detailed, and the charming German Dances make an appropriate filler. Don't miss this one.
Classicalcdreview


(...) Fischer is technisch een betere dirigent dan Harnoncourt: hij kan de musici op kleinere schaal in tijd en ruimte aansturen, waardoor een ultiem niveau in wendbaarheid en kamermuziekkwaliteit wordt bereikt. Alweer een grote plaat van Fischer en co.(…)
Knack


(...)  Iván Fischer's beautifully judged and lucidly presented performance takes the work's length as something utterly inevitable and authentically Schubertian in its own right. The textures are wonderfully transparent, and by getting his players in the Budapest orchestra to use natural horns, narrow bore trombones and clarinets in C, he gives an extra buoyancy to the sound, so that every line has its own character and rhythmic profile. (...)
The Guardian


From the first notes the spectacular performance by the Budapest Festival Orchestra and Ivan Fischer sets itself apart from others. (...) As with their performances of Mahler and Beethoven symphonies - praised by Gramophone and winners of many awards - this one shows that Fischer and his Budapest Festival Orchestra have taken a place among the top orchestras of today’s world. The rich, detailed and sonorous sound provided by all of Channel Classics’ hi-res surround recordings makes this a winner.
Audiophile Audition


With every new release - and occasional reissue - Fischer's Budapest Festival Orchestra throw fresh light on the standard classical works.  Their recordings, invariably recorded live, sound like new encounters with the greatest and most familiar music of the concert platform, yet they are notable for their lack of eccentricities and the kind of interpretive quirks that draw attention to the personality of the conductor rather than the composer. Here, Schubert's "Great" seems so natural - every tempo judged to perfection, the balance between strings and winds an ideal equilibrium - and yet so utterly different from the classic interpretations on record. Fischer takes for granted the symphony's "heavenly length" - Schumann's famous accolade at a time when the music was thought impossibly long-winded and difficult - but he doesn't attempt to make the music sound like Beethoven's 10th. The Schubertian qualities of songful melodic lyricism, rustic dance, joy in the natural world and philosophical introspection are here played with a chamber-music-like clarity and intimacy. The Hungarian musicians recognise that Schubert was essentially a private composer. They certainly bring out his extrovert qualities (the sound of the natural horns have a lusty, al fresco quality), but it is the exquisite quality of the woodwind soloists that make such a deep impression. The German dances - light-hearted fare from the opposite end of Schubert's career - make delightful encores.
Sunday Times



‘Iván Fischer directs his Budapest forces in a performance of Schubert’s “Great” C major Symphony that has punch and impetus, with orchestral detail crisply delineated. Natural horns add bite to the lucid textures alongside his elegant phrasing of melodic lines. Five German Dances D89, originally for string quartet, form a delightful encore.’
The Telegraph



(...) Het Budapest Festival Orchestra is een van de beste orkesten ter wereld, en Iván Fischer is een groot dirigent. Elke cd van deze gouden combinatie is een genot om naar te luisteren. Liefde voor het detail, zorg voor de klank, perfect samenspel, het is er allemaal, en het wordt ook nog eens voortreffelijk opgenomen. (...)
Opusklassiek


 (...) In het orkest spelen atleten die niet alleen elastisch omgaan met klankvorming, maar onder Fischers baton de noten behandelen als organisch materiaal. (...) Of je nu wel of niet een Schubert Negen in de kast hebt: deze mag niet ontbreken. (...)
Klassieke Zaken


Iván Fischer's reading of Schubert's Great Symphony in C Major with the Budapest Festival Orchestra lends this glorious extrapolation of Beethovenian style an audaciously rich flavour with no loss of crispness. (...) The timbre is almost that of Dvorák – dark and herbal – while the sense of anticipation in the longest, broadest phrases is palpable. The architecture is magnificent, the detailing absurdly delightful. Silky and playful, the German Dances are best heard as an aperitif.
Independent.co.uk


The lightness of touch is an essential part of Fischer’s reading of the work. (...) Throughout, the playing has an ebullience that suits Fischer’s view of the work.
International Record Review


Iván Fischers Symphonie-Aufnahmen haben eigene Qualitäten. Sogar Schuberts Wunderwerk, die scheue Neunte, blüht bei ihm auf.
Spiegel On Line


 (...) Die Aufnahme zeigt markant, dass Fischer nicht nur ein Orchester von Null an die Weltspitze bringen kann, sondern auch ein origineller Interpret ist, der bei aller Sachlichkeit selbst bekannten Werken eine unerhörte Seite abgewinnen kann.
Peter Uehling, kulturradio


(...) The crisp and clear sounds of the winds are arresting, and the clarity of their lines and textures make the music transparent and ideally balanced with the strings. (...) Fischer’s  conducting is incisive, so the rhythms follow suit and push off the beat with considerable energy. (...) The sound of this SACD is excellent, with first-rate DSD reproduction, credible multichannel depth, and pleasant resonance.
www.allmusic.com



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