The Herald

THE BEST EDINBURGH FESTIVALS COVERAGE

Latest reviews PLUS Ivan Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra, Jason Moran’s elegy for Fats Waller

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any politician,” he explains, “and that was a novelty for Hungary. We were a case study for how a different kind of institutio­n could survive – a model of how to penetrate a competitiv­e internatio­nal market with very limited financial resources. People in Hungary thought it was not possible, but we survived. We survived all the regime changes, all the financial crises.”

The BFO did not just survive. Three decades later, it is one of the best orchestras in the world, with a sound so warm, so vibrant and colourful, that it is one of the few ensembles still instantly recognisab­le when you turn on the radio. One major benefit of putting the BFO on stage for Figaro is the chance to revel in the plush and deeply charismati­c sound this orchestra makes.

In recent years, Fischer has been tackling various Mozart operas as double-duty director and conductor. The night before our interview in Budapest I went to see his take on The Magic Flute, another “concert staging” (or should that be “staged concert”?) with a story-book animated backdrop like some kind of pre-teen Goth fantasy. It looked pretty bad, but the sound of the orchestra – which spent the night wandering from pit to stage and back again – was breathtaki­ng.

“It really is nothing to do with ego or arrogance,” Fischer says about his decision to direct operas as well as conduct them. “I get that criticism all the time but I don’t really care. What concerns me is the unity of music and theatre.” He speaks of “a norm in today’s opera world where directors feel a responsibi­lity to be innovative while conductors are like high priests of conservati­ve values, doggedly sticking to the score”. By taking on both roles, he aims to make what he calls “an organic opera performanc­e where theatre and music express absolutely the same thing”.

We are speaking at his home in the Hungarian capital – a handsome old house on the Buda side of the Danube, not far from where Bela Bartok moved out to the leafy suburbs in the early 1930s. Fischer answers the door barefoot and ushers me into the kitchen, where he makes coffee and discusses the best local bath houses (his favourite is the oldest and simplest, Rudas). He is relaxed, unhurried, full of jokes; he spends a good 20 minutes showing me various Chinese instrument­s he is currently learning to play.

When we eventually settle down in the living room to talk, he pushes a box of Mozart-themed chocolates towards me – “one of those presents people always bring me from Vienna,” he says with an amused shrug. Later, his mobile phone goes off with the swooping sound of an ondes Martenot. “My Messiaen ringtone!” he beams, delighted that I noticed it, and jabs at the phone to make it play again. “Let me show you the app!”

Back in February when EIF’s new director Fergus Linehan announced his inaugural classical programme, he described himself “drawn to people who are having interestin­g conversati­ons about how classical music and opera can work in new ways”. Among the names he mentioned were pianist Jeremy Denk, soprano Barbara Hannigan, conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen, director Barrie Kosky – and Fischer.

Yet the notion of Fischer as a classical music pioneer is a bit of a paradox. His musical heritage is old-world, bred on core AustroHung­arian repertoire. The way he stages concerts is often eccentric, but his actual interpreta­tions tend towards the traditiona­l. And although the BFO structure was a novelty for communist Hungary, today it looks archaic. All decision-making power ultimately rests with Fischer, whether that is repertoire choices or hiring and firing musicians. Players put up with the lack of democratic process because the results are generally so good.

Another paradox: the idea that Fischer’s stripped-back opera production­s are a “new” take on the genre. “I have simply cut down visuals to harmonise with the music,” Fischer says, and he references centuries-old production models.

“Too much distractio­n is not good. For me it is not necessary for the singers to run around a lot during an aria. Recitative­s can happen in real time, but time stops in arias when somebody describes a mood, a feeling, an urge. This division of normal time and stopped time was a clear duality in Mozart’s age, so what I am doing now – cutting down to carefully guide the listeners’ concentrat­ion between seeing and hearing – well, it is not so different to what performanc­es looked like 200 years ago.”

Is there also a more prosaic financial factor at play here? One of Linehan’s major conundrums is how to fund opera, a vastly expensive art form, within EIF’s multi-arts portfolio, and Fischer’s approach is low on costly props and sets. Is his incentive to strip back partly about allowing opera to become more manoeuvrab­le?

If it is, he won’t admit it. He says it never crossed his mind to create budget opera, but instead stresses that he wants his production­s “to speak to all kinds of people. Many generation­s have said, ‘let’s do only the essentials and it will speak to a new audience’ – think of Brecht and Weill in 1920s Berlin.

“My main concern is getting the right balance between seeing and listening, but I also hope the approach will engage people who are puzzled by the present trend of complicate­d director’s opera. All those concepts and twists can be alienating. Simplicity, letting the piece speak for itself, is what will open the mind of new audiences.”

“Look,” he continues, “it does not really matter if you have a performanc­e with many props or nothing at all; it does not matter how minimal or rich the arsenal of tools. Figaro is a play – I have seen very successful performanc­es with one chair. It is the human aspects that matter. If you put on a hat, then it is fully staged.” He laughs: “But now we’re back to semantics!” Ivan Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra perform The Marriage Of Figaro at the Festival Theatre on August 13, 15 & 16 and Mozart’s Requiem at the Usher Hall on August 18. The BFO soloists are at the Queen’s Hall on August 14

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is nothing to do with ego or arrogance. I get that criticism all the time but I don’t really care. What concerns me is the unity of music and theatre

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 ??  ?? IVAN FISCHER: The way he stages concerts is often eccentric, but his actual interpreta­tions tend towards the traditiona­l. Picture: Marco Borggreve
IVAN FISCHER: The way he stages concerts is often eccentric, but his actual interpreta­tions tend towards the traditiona­l. Picture: Marco Borggreve
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