Annie Fischer, the 
                great Hungarian pianist, who died in 
                1995, was in her mid-forties when these 
                superlative performances were committed 
                to disc. She was at the height of her 
                powers, and had as her collaborators 
                in Wolfgang Sawallisch and the Philharmonia. 
                In Sawallisch she had a conductor who 
                could respond whole-heartedly to her 
                aesthetic and as for the Philharmonia 
                this was certainly one of the best orchestras 
                in the world at that time. 
              
 
              
The trick with Mozart’s 
                concertos is to be subtle without ever 
                being twee, and Fischer knew exactly 
                how to do that. As the liner-notes point 
                out, her first entry in the C major 
                concerto is masterly, sidling in almost 
                apologetically amidst the woodwind conversation. 
                The middle movement of each concerto 
                is probably quite a bit slower than 
                we have come to expect of a Mozart Andante 
                these days. But that’s no bad thing, 
                for Fischer and Sawallisch are able 
                to give the music space and time without 
                undue indulgence. This performance of 
                the ‘dream Andante’ of the C major, 
                long before Elvira Madigan was 
                thought of, is perfection; the dreaminess 
                is there, captured with ineffable beauty, 
                but so are the uncomfortable twinges 
                of realism that keep intruding. The 
                finale of K.467 is again on the slow 
                side of Mozart’s prescribed Allegro 
                assai vivace, but has everything 
                you would want in terms of wit and élan. 
              
 
              
K.482 is one of the 
                very finest of the Mozart keyboard concertos, 
                with its majestic opening Allegro, 
                its surprisingly dour Andante, 
                and the serenade-like episode that interrupts 
                the jolly finale. Fischer is devastating 
                in the profoundly emotional solo passages 
                of the Andante, and Sawallisch 
                and the orchestra, particularly the 
                fine woodwind soloists, respond magnificently. 
              
 
              
The recording was in 
                the absolute top class for its day, 
                and this excellent transfer job by EMI 
                means that it has come up sounding fresh 
                as a daisy, and completely natural. 
                An issue for which the word ‘great’ 
                is in no way misplaced. 
              
Gwyn Parry-Jones 
                 
              
EMI 
                Great Recordings of the Century
                An issue for which the word ‘great’ 
                is in no way misplaced. ... see Full 
                Review