Budapest Festival Orchestra, Iván Fischer, Edinburgh International Festival 2025 review - mania and menuets

★★★★ BUDAPEST FO, IVAN FISCHER, EDINBURGH FESTIVAL Mania and menuets

The Hungarians bring dance music to Edinburgh, but Fischer’s pastiche falls flat

Fresh from their triumph at the Proms, the Budapest Festival Orchestra arrived at the Edinburgh International Festival with a programme that centred on dance, and culminated in as fine a performance of Bartók’s Miraculous Mandarin (the complete score, not the suite) as you’d hope to hear. This is music that the Budapest players have in their blood, and you could tell that in the way they conjured up sound that managed to be grimy and nasty but lush at the same time. 

BBC Proms: Láng, Cser, Budapest Festival Orchestra, Iván Fischer review - idiomatic inflections

★★★★ BBC PROMS: LANG, CSER, BUDAPEST FO, IVAN FISCHER Idiomatic inflections

Bartók’s heart of darkness follows Beethoven’s dancing light

“Some are born to sweet delight, some are born to endless night,” quoth Blake. Beethoven and Bartók knew both extremes, but Iván Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra led us from the most dancing of Seventh Symphonies to the endless night of Duke Bluebeard’s Castle, from explosive A major to quietest C sharp minor. If not everything along the way was perfect, or even in one major case present, the outlines were bold and engaging.

Levit, Budapest Festival Orchestra, Fischer, RFH review - anger unleashed, fantasy finessed in Prokofiev

★★★★ LEVIT, BUDAPEST FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA, FISCHER, RFH Instant communication from Berlin-based pianist and Hungarian army of generals

Instant communication from Berlin-based pianist and Hungarian army of generals

A showstopper for starters followed by dark depths, a quirky compilation after the interval: it’s what you might expect from Iván Fischer and his 42-year-old Budapest Festival Orchestra. All Prokofiev, too: the sort of thing we used to get from Valery Gergiev and visiting Petersburgers. Yet while Gergiev’s alliance with Putin means he’ll not be here again, Fischer has balanced criticising Orbán and keeping his Hungarian orchestra on the road.

Classical CDs: Snow, shards and swinging oars

Contemporary choral works, revamped lieder plus piano music from Ireland and Scotland

 

Snow Dance for the deadSnow Dance for the Dead: Choral Music by Seán Doherty New Dublin Voices/Bernie Sherlock (Voces8 Recordings)

Blu-ray: Merry-Go-Round (Körhinta)

★★★★★ BLU-RAY: MERRY-GO-ROUND Iconic, multi-layered Hungarian love story returns

Iconic, multi-layered Hungarian love story returns

There’s a lot to unpick in Zoltán Fabri’s 1956 film Merry-Go-Round (Körhinta). Take leading man Imre Soós’s disarming resemblance to a young Peter O’Toole, and a central love story which plays out like a Hungarian take on Romeo and Juliet with some post-war agrarian politics thrown in for good measure.

Aimard, Concerto Budapest SO, Keller, Cadogan Hall review - lords of the dance

Old friends with a Hungarian spring in their step

The Zurich International series at Cadogan Hall has turned into a horizon-expanding stage on which to catch those visiting orchestras that don’t always claim top billing in bigger venues. The hall’s welcoming acoustic shows off the sound and style of its guests as the grander barns might never do.

Prom 38: Audience Choice, Budapest Festival Orchestra, Fischer 2 review - true democracy or tricksy referendum?

PROM 38: BUDAPEST FO, FISCHER Audience choice: true democracy or tricksy referendum?

Ambitious aim to make up a symphony of four different movements doesn’t quite succeed

It would be worth travelling a long way to hear the Budapest Festival Orchestra giving such a lithe, athletic performance under its founder and Music Director Iván Fischer of Glina’s Ruslan and Lyudmila Overture. That was the Radio 3 and Proms Audience Choice from 19 overtures and preludes whittled down to three. What happened next, despite some equally lustrous playing, didn’t always work so well.

Schiff, Budapest Festival Orchestra, Fischer / Emmanuel Ceysson & Friends, Edinburgh International Festival 2023 review - Hungariana and harp

★★★★★ SCHIFF, BUDAPEST FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA, FISCHER / EMMANUEL CEYSSON & FRIENDS, EDINBURGH INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL Hungariana and harp

Magyar magic in the Usher Hall, intimate theatricality in the Queen's Hall

You’d feel short-changed if an orchestra like the Budapest Festival Orchestra came to the Edinburgh Festival and didn’t play some Hungarian music, so why not put together a whole concert of the stuff?

Blu-ray: Twilight (Szürkület)

★★★★★ TWILIGHT (SZURKULET) György Fehér's sombre detective story finally appears on disc

György Fehér's sombre detective story finally appears on disc

Early editions of Swiss novelist Friedrich Dürrenmatt's 1958 novel The Pledge carried the subtitle “Requiem for the Detective Novel”, the writer’s point being that murder cases can take years to solve (if at all) and that those doing the investigating make mistakes. The story has been filmed several times before, Sean Penn’s starrily-cast version (released in 2001 with a weather-beaten Jack Nicholson in one of his last decent roles) the best known.

Ligeti Day; Kolesnikov/Tsoy, Aldeburgh Festival review - 14 musicians, 16 premieres and 100 metronomes

ALDEBURGH FESTIVAL 2 More boundaries dissolved in Snape and Blythburgh

More boundaries dissolved in Snape and Blythburgh

To give the first performance of a dazzling fantasia in the context of a rangy sunny-evening-to-night concert, as pianists Pavel Kolesnikov and Samson Tsoy did in glorious Blythburgh Church, merits a gold medal in piano-duo enterprise. To premiere 15 new works in a single programme and adapt perfectly to the various styles, the Ligeti Quartet’s crowning glory of three events celebrating their namesake’s centenary, is simply superhuman.