Your guide to classical music online

Fischer’s Brahms Second Symphony: Too Beautiful?

David Hurwitz

Artistic Quality:

Sound Quality:

For the first three movements, this is as lovely and smart a performance of Brahms’ Second Symphony as you’ll ever hope to hear. Fischer opens the work at a perfect, flowing tempo, full of latent energy. He shapes the exposition’s broad musical paragraphs masterfully, with the lead-back to the repeat so subtly phrased that you may not realize that it’s happening until it has already occurred. The Adagio, too, has such poise and nobility, with string playing of superhuman purity and woodwind chords so luminously balanced you’d think they’re coming from another world. In the Allegretto grazioso third movement, “graciousness” is what you get, but not without effortless athleticism in the quick trio sections.

Then comes the big letdown in the finale. It’s flat, underplayed, with a coda singularly lacking in excitement. You don’t have to step on the accelerator here (though it’s better if you do, at least a bit), but the music demands some boost in energy. Fischer sounds mechanical, excessively controlled, almost embarrassed by the music’s high spirits. What a shame! The same observation applies to the Tragic Overture, a performance without the necessary fire in its belly. The program concludes with a jolly, rollicking Academic Festival Overture, and it’s all recorded with Channel Classics’ typically warm and natural fidelity in stereo, SACD stereo, and SACD multi-channel formats. But with so many great Brahms Seconds around, what is the point of this three-quarters wonderful version? A disc primarily for Fischer fans.

« Back to Search Results


Recording Details:

Reference Recording: Symphony: Jochum (EMI); Levine (RCA); Tragic Overture: Ancerl (Supraphon)

Search Music Reviews

Search Sponsor

  • Insider Reviews only
  • Click here for Search Tips

Visit Our Merchandise Store

Visit Store
  • Ideally Cast Met Revival of Gounod’s Roméo et Juliette
    Metropolitan Opera House, Lincoln Center, NY; March 19, 2024—The Met has revived Bartlett Sher’s 1967 production of Gounod’s R&J hot on the heels of its
  • An Ozawa Story, November, 1969
    Much has justifiably been written regarding Seiji Ozawa’s extraordinary abilities and achievements as a conductor, and similarly about his generosity, graciousness, and sense of humor
  • Arvo Pärt’s Passio At St. John The Divine
    Cathedral of St John the Divine, New York, NY; January 26, 2024—When one thinks of musical settings of Christ’s Passion, one normally thinks of the