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Fischer: Mahler – Symphony no.2 (24/192 FLAC)

Fischer: Mahler - Symphony no.2 (24/192 FLAC)
Fischer: Mahler – Symphony no.2 (24/192 FLAC)

HiRes FLAC

Composer: Gustav Mahler
Performer: Birgit Remmert, Lisa Milne, Hungarian Radio Choir
Orchestra: Budapest Festival Orchestra
Conductor: Iván Fischer
Number of Discs: 2
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Channel
Catalogue: CCSSA23506
Release: 2006
Size: 3.73 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

Symphony No. 2 ‘Resurrection’
CD 01
01. I. Allegro maestoso
02. II. Andante moderato

CD 02
01. I. In ruhig fließender Bewegung
02. II. Urlicht – Sehr feierlich, aber schlicht
03. III. Im Tempo des Scherzo

Stylistically, Fischer is right on the money. He has a keen nose for Mahler’s particular brand of the ebb and flow of the music, the way it speaks, or rather sings; the bucolic and melodramatic elements of the score are vividly conflicted; and best of all Fischer really breathes in the atmosphere of Mahler’s precipitous flight to eternity.
The second theme of the first movement, which Mahler requests enter tentatively, shyly, does exactly that – Fischer’s violins are barely audible, a rosy horizon briefly glimpsed through this bleak and forbidding landscape.


Few take this first movement to the edge of possibility that Mahler so clearly envisaged. Fischer does not shirk the often reckless extremes of tempo and dynamics but nor does he throw caution to the four winds in the terrifying stampede to its cliff-hanging climax. Leonard Bernstein is probably still alone in doing just that. But there are many other compensations here: a great sense of logic and line, a second movement whose homespun accenting belongs to a bygone era, likewise the close-harmony trumpets in the trio of the third movement so touchingly redolent of another time, another place.


But the crowning glory is, as it should be, the finale – and it is here that Fischer, his performers and his engineers, really excel. The ‘special effects’ of Mahler’s elaborate Judgement Day fresco have rarely been so magically realised.


The offstage horns are so breathtakingly remote as to suggest the world of the living left far behind. Moments of quite extraordinary stasis precede the sounding of the Dies irae and the hushed entry of the chorus. And come the peroration (resplendent with fabulous horns), Fischer knows that it is with that final crescendo of the chorus and only then that the heavens really open. Impressive.

The sound is distinctive, the music-making personal. … the crowning glory is, as it should be, the finale… The “special effects” of Mahler’s elaborate Judgement Day fresco have rarely been so magically realised. The offstage horns are so breathtakingly remote as to suggest the world of the living left far behind. Moments of quite extraordinary stasis precede the sounding of the Dies irae and the hushed entry of the chorus. And come the peroration (resplendent with fabulous horns), Fischer knows that it is with that final crescendo of the chorus and only then that the heavens really open. Impressive.

…Fischer… rarely pushes too hard. The orchestral sound is lean but not undernourished, allowing for even balance between contesting lines – outstanding in the funereal coda of the first movement – and a clearer than usual interplay between gleaming upper brass and woodwind.

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