The CD booklet starts well by eulogising that ‘Iván 
      Fischer is founder and Music Director of the Budapest Festival Orchestra. 
      This partnership has become one of the greatest success stories in the past 
      25 years of classical music. Intense international touring and a series 
      of acclaimed recordings for Philips Classics, later for Channel Classics 
      have contributed to Iván Fischer’s reputation as one of the 
      world’s most visionary and successful orchestra leaders.’ Unfortunately 
      the booklet doesn’t end so well because it misses most of the start 
      of the Immolation Scene in both text and translation. 
        
      To know how good they are in this repertoire you would need to have seen 
      Iván Fischer and the BFO perform one of their Wagner programmes during 
      their very well-received tours to European cities other than London. They 
      have not performed a major concert of this composer’s works in the 
      UK since, I believe, the two nights with Petra Lang at the Barbican in 2004; 
      she is also his soloist on this CD. In fact Wagner performances are often 
      more associated with the conductor’s elder brother, Adam, who has 
      conducted the 
Ring at Bayreuth and in Budapest where he is involved 
      in an annual Wagner Festival. 
        
      How many recordings of the exact same ‘bleeding chunks’ of Wagner 
      have there been - possibly only the ‘Ride of the Valkyries’ 
      is missing. Is there anything that makes this new release especially important. 
      Well, perhaps it is because it features Petra Lang’s Brünnhilde 
      for the first time on CD. Lang is already well known as perhaps the best 
      Ortrud and Kundry of her generation and though renowned - even if only nominally 
      now - as a 
mezzo soprano, she has recently started to perform Brünnhilde 
      on stage. She has also recorded this role with Marek Janowski and the Berlin 
      Radio Symphony Orchestra in both 
Die Walküre and 
Götterdämmerung 
      and these will be released on PentaTone as part of their forthcoming complete 
      
Der Ring des Nibelungen. There can have been few more womanly and 
      warmly sung versions of the Immolation Scene. Here, a great musical intelligence 
      is at work allied with a voice of astonishing range. Listen to how it goes 
      from top to bottom during the phrase ‘des hehrsten Helden verzehrt’ 
      (‘in splendour and radiance on high’) and the 
Lieder-like 
      intimacy she brings to the section ‘Alles, alles … Ruhe, ruhe, 
      du Gott!’ (‘All things, all things … Rest now, rest now, 
      O God!’). In this she shows her deep understanding of the text. In 
      the more heroic final sections, Lang’s feisty Brünnhilde hovers 
      on the edge of hysteria. She is very convincing as a transfigured woman 
      who will willingly commit 
Sati and immolate herself on her husband’s 
      funeral pyre. Someone utters Hagen’s desperate final ‘Zurück 
      vom Ring!’ (‘Give back the ring!’), the BFO’s conflagration 
      of the gods is incandescent, and these gripping final moments with the world 
      being cleansed and striving for peaceful renewal, pack quite a punch. 
        
      If this recording tries for the perfect balance between soloist and orchestra 
      in the ‘Immolation Scene’ and perhaps may not always achieve 
      it, there is no problem in their other purely orchestral items. There listeners 
      can wallow in the BFO’s luxuriant strings, the burnished unforced 
      brass and plangent woodwind. The ensemble plays throughout with a great 
      beauty of tone. The Prelude to 
Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg 
      is a perfect showcase for this wonderful orchestra and their conductor’s 
      joint Wagner credentials. It builds a joyous head of steam that makes me 
      eager to hear Fischer conduct the entire work in the opera house. The ’Siegfried-Idyll’ 
      is one of the most ravishing I have heard and at times - even in this version 
      for full orchestra - it is given a diaphanous, phantasmagorical performance 
      that brought to mind Mendelssohn’s ‘Midsummer Night’s 
      Dream’. 
        
      The rest of the tracks on this new CD are wonderful, with the over-familiar, 
      excerpts from 
Götterdämmerung played with no intervening 
      pauses. There is the traditional quick glimpse of ‘Dawn’ before 
      Siegfried sets off, seemingly on a speed boat, down the Rhine. Given that 
      it is so truncated this is an irredeemable ‘bleeding chunk’. 
      Thankfully ‘Siegfried’s Funeral Music’ (not really ‘March’) 
      builds to a powerful climax as Fischer and his wonderful musicians meld 
      the myriad motifs, including those associated with Siegfried, the sword 
      Nothung, and his task in the overall scheme of things, intoned by the brass, 
      into a musical eulogy for the slain hero. Notwithstanding the outstanding 
      ‘Immolation Scene’ that follows, this alone would be suitably 
      fitting for Wagner himself were Wagnerians honouring the 130th
anniversary 
      of his death rather than celebrating the 200th anniversary of his birth. 
      
        
      This is an outstanding Wagner CD on three incomparable counts: Iván 
      Fischer, Budapest Festival and Petra Lang. 
        
      
Jim Pritchard 
      Jim Pritchard’s reviews of concerts, opera and ballet can be found 
      at 
Seen 
      and Heard International. 
        
      This is an outstanding Wagner CD on three incomparable counts: Iván 
      Fischer, Budapest Festival and Petra Lang.