Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) was a German composer, pianist, organist and conductor of early Romanticism, and many of his works are popular among the Chinese people. To commemorate his 210th birthday, NCPA Orchestra will perform some of his masterpieces in the 2019/20 season, including his second and fifth symphonies, violin concertos, and the Midsummer Night's Dream Overture.
What kind of composer is Mendelssohn? Schumann had apropos comments on him. He named Mendelsohn "the Mozart of the 19th century" and "one of the most brilliant musicians who clearly understood the contradictions of the times and the first to reconcile these contradictions." The "contradiction" refers to the disagreement between the classical formality and the romantic passion. Such a contradiction was found in many works of Romantic-era composers, but was especially prominent in Mendelssohn's. To him, Bach and Mozart were the most important masters from the Classical era. Like Mozart, he was a music prodigy who died young (Mozart died at 35 and Mendelsohn 38). Mendelssohn's music often bears the elegance and structural perfection as Mozart's.
Mendelssohn was born on February 3, 1809 in a wealthy Jewish family in Germany. His grandfather, Moses Mendelssohn, was a famous philosopher in the German Enlightenment era, who advocated religious tolerance and the integration of the Jewish into the mainstream German culture. Mendelssohn's father later converted to Protestantism and became a banker. Mendelssohn was the second child out of the four children in the family. Mendelssohn's mother was responsible for the early music education of Mendelssohn and his sister Fanny (who was also a talented musician). Mendelssohn studied piano, violin and organ. He and his sister joined the choir conducted by the German composer Zelter, a music consultant for the great writer Goethe and a close friend of the Mendelssohn family. He taught Mendelssohn music composition and introduced him to Goethe. He adopted the teaching materials developed by Kirnberg, a student of Bach who was determined to spread Bach's teaching method, and helped Mendelssohn tremendously in composition. At the age of 17, Mendelssohn wrote the famous A Midsummer Night's Dream Overture, inspired by Shakespeare's play (NCPA Orchestra will play this masterpiece on July 20 and 21 this year). In addition to music, his father hired a private tutor to teach him classical literature, history, geography, mathematics, and French, making him have mastery of classical culture.
Mendelssohn lived in an era when Germany was not yet unified. After the Napoleonic Wars, European powers re-divided their regimes at the Vienna Conference. The German Confederation also began to promote a conservative culture during the Restoration period (restoring the old order before the French Revolution). Mendelssohn formed his own musical style in such a social environment. There were four major accomplishments in his short life span. The first accomplishment is that his attention to the early music in history prompted him to perform Bach's St. Matthew Passion in 1829 (at the age of 20). Mendelssohn diligently studied Bach's sheet music, rehearsed, and finally accomplished what even his teacher, Zelter, had thought impossible. The second accomplishment is that he embarked on a Grand Tour, traveling to the UK, Italy and France, for fun and for educational enrichment since he was 20 years old. His ten trips to the UK had a tremendous influence on the British music. The third accomplishment was done in Leipzig, his most important working place where he spent most of his time. From the age of 26 until his death, he worked in Leipzig, directing Gewandhaus Orchestra (also known as the "Gewandhausorchester Leipzig". He directed about 20 concerts each year (from October to March) on top of the concerts with celebrated visiting musicians, for charity purposes and chamber concerts. Mendelssohn tirelessly led the orchestra, one of the top European ensembles at present. The programs he put together showed his preference for the works by Beethoven and Mozart, featured some famous operas in concert version, performances that combined vocal and instrumental music, as well as classical and contemporary works. The fourth accomplishment is also related to Leipzig. In 1843, he participated in discussing the founding of the Leipzig Conservatory. According to the Conservatory's announcement, it would offer courses in composition, violin, piano, organ, vocal music, chamber music, chorus and music history. Students from Germany and abroad were required to participate in the rehearsals and concerts with Gewandhaus Orchestra and other local music organizations. The faculty included Mendelssohn himself and Schumann. On April 3, 1843, the school was founded and enrolled 22 students. It is the oldest music school in Germany and has produced numerous outstanding musicians, including the Father of Norwegian music Grieg and China's famous composer XIAO Youmei.
Mendelssohn was very talented. Besides composing, he was also a pianist, violinist and conductor. He loved painting, producing countless watercolors, landscape paintings and sketches in his life. Since music and fine art are closely related, many of Mendelssohn's musical works are regarded as "music of landscape painting".
In May 1847, on the way back home after the busy performance in the UK, he learned about the unexpected death of his sister Fanny. Upon his return to Berlin, he was so grief-stricken over her death that he suffered from a stroke. On the evening of November 4, he passed away due to the deteriorating condition. The funeral was held in Leipzig on the 7th, with musicians, including Schumann, Gade, and Moscheles, as pallbearers. The next day, his coffin was transported to Berlin and interred by his sister's in the church cemetery.
Mendelssohn's large compositions throughout his life include orchestral music, chamber music, keyboard music, oratorio and other vocal works. Among these, the most important genre is his orchestral music, including symphonies, overtures and concertos. His works to be performed by the NCPA Orchestra in this season mostly belong to this category.
Mendelssohn wrote five symphonies in total, and NCPA Orchestra will perform his Symphony No. 5 in D major, Op. 107 on May 25 this year (conducted by Eschenbach). This symphony was entitled "Reformation" in honor of the 300th anniversary of the Presentation of the Augsburg Confession (June 1830). However, the premiere came two years later, and it was not published until 1868, 21 years after the composer's death. The opening and ending of this symphony present a contrast between two types of religious music: the Palestrinian imitative writing based on the Jupiter motto of Mozart's symphony and the reference to "Dresden Amen" symbolize Catholicism, while "Ein feste Burg" ("A mighty fortress is our God") in the theme and texture of the final movement represents Lutheranism.
His trip to Italy in 1830 was inspirational for his Italian Symphony, which was completed and premiered in London in 1833, revised in the following year, but was published as the Fourth Symphony in 1851 after his death. The symphony begins with a bright motif, reminiscent of "the warm and aromatic air of southern Europe." The modal melody that commences the slow movement is clearly depicting religious rituals or processions. The inspiration for the third movement may come from Goethe's humorous poem "Lilis Park". The final movement, entitled "Saltarello," begins with fast-tempo sound-type, reminiscent of the Saltarello dance music he had heard in Italy.
The Lobgesang Symphony, composed in 1840, was published as his second symphony in 1841. NCPA Orchestra will perform this work on January 17 and 18, 2020. Similar to Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, Mendelssohn incorporated vocal music, religious music, to be precise, into this symphony and produced a mix of symphony and cantata: a combination of three-movement symphony and nine-movement vocal cantata. The lyrics from the Bible praise human's advancement from darkness to enlightenment.
Mendelssohn's last symphony was the Scottish Symphony, inspired by his trip to Scotland in 1829 but not completed until 1842 in Berlin. In the ruins of Edinburgh's Holyrood Palace, Mendelssohn, who was only 20 years old, conceived the theme of the slow introduction, played by bassoon and viola. He also attended the bagpipe competition in Edinburgh. Some elements of Scottish folk music undoubtedly appeared in the lively pentatonic introduced by clarinet at the beginning of the Scherzo. The entire symphony has five movements, which are interconnected with parts that grow from the continual thematic transformation of the original idea presented in the slow introduction to the first movement (E-A-B-C) and made a cohesive whole.
In addition, Mendelssohn also wrote a total of 13 symphonies for string ensembles in his early years from 1821 to 1823. These works show the influence of Bach, especially that of his second son C.P.E. Bach's works in this genre.
Overtures are Mendelssohn's most popular orchestral works. He wrote a total of six independent overtures. One of them, the Meeresstille und glücklishe Fahrt, composed in 1828, is based on Goethe's two short poems that depict a boat sailing on the calm sea. Beethoven also wrote a short Cantata for chorus and orchestra (published in 1822) based on the same verses, while Mendelssohn used only orchestra to express the poem. The prelude consists of two "pictures" connected by a transitional section. The ending is completed with the "Happy Sailing", suggesting a cheer for the ship arriving at the port.
Mendelssohn had created another celebrated themed overture, entitled The Hebrides, which was inspired by his tour on the west coast of Scotland in 1829. He once again introduced his theme with a motif, vividly portraying the tumultuous waves and the peculiar seascape. In the 1833 adaption for two pianos, he also included the title of Fingalshöhle.
Mendelssohn's Concertos are mainly for two instruments he was good at: piano and violin. He found that concerto was a particularly difficult task for him throughout his composition career, and he confided to his friends that he had painfully balanced between the requirements of virtuosity and the integrity of the art. His first and second piano concertos are better known, featuring bright and brilliant techniques with little contemporary style.
His last concerto, Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64, is a very special one. It is one of the most important violin concertos of the 19th century. The three interconnected movements have several notable features, including the early entry of the solo in the first movement, and that the Cadenza is used to connect the development and recapitulation. The slow movement in ternary form presents a lyrical "Song without Words", and the final movement in the sonata-rondo form is a typical Mendelssohn's capricious scherzo. The NCPA Orchestra will perform this famous piece with Tung-Chieh Chuang and Ziyu He on October 26, 2019.
Mendelssohn also produced excellent chamber music, including three piano trios, quartets, violin sonatas, sextets, Octet (completed in 1825 and considered to be Mendelssohn's first masterpiece), six string Quartets (1827-1847) and two string quintets, etc. The NCPA Chamber Music Series will present two string quartets from the Opus No. 44 in the 2019/20 season. These two pieces, composed during his honeymoon in the Black Forest following his wedding in Freiburg in 1837, are marked by their classical style.
Mendelssohn had been working on composing piano music throughout his life; he maintained mixed sentiments towards the piano music of that era and abandoned many popular techniques of the time. His mature piano works reveal three important influences from his predecessors: Bach's forceful counterpoint, Beethoven's Dramatic gesture and transcendental utterances, and Weber's virtuous piano texture. Lieder ohne Worte, the most popular among Mendelssohn's piano works, was published in six volumes with a total of 36 songs from 1832 to 1845 (another two volumes were published posthumously). The musical thought of a theorist at the time, A.B. Marx (who discussed the performance potential of instrumental music) also influenced Mendelssohn. Perhaps these works initially contained lyrics written by the composer, which were later removed. When given suggestion to add titles or lyrics to these works, Mendelssohn replied that he would rather keep them the way they were. He believed that pure instrumental music without titles and lyrics could be more expressive and unrestricted. He only added titles to a few of them (such as the three pieces called “Venetianisches Gondellied”).
Mendelssohn was not the only oratorio composer of the 19th century, but his two works: St Paul (1836) and Elijah (1846) enjoyed sustained popularity of his time. Of course, the theme of the conversion of Saul to St Paul carried special meaning for the Mendelssohns, who embraced Christianity. His composition drew much from the works of Handel. Elijah presents the famous prophet in the Bible; by adopting a rich chorus, removing the narrator, and embedding the plot lines into the character's monologues, the musical structure becomes better.
Mendelssohn's another impressive work is the secular cantata Die erste Walpurgisnacht (1832). Based on Goethe's poetry (from the first part of Faust), the work is to depict the pagan rituals of the Druids on the Brocken. Although Mendelssohn did not write a successful operatic work, he had been searching for a suitable opera script (libretto). He also wrote some incidental music; the most notable were the 12 pieces (including the famous Wedding March) written for Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream in 1843.
In short, Mendelssohn stood at the forefront of German music in the 1830s and 1840s (in the early days of Romanticism) and was a first-rate composer. His musical style was well established before the age of 20, primarily influenced by the music of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven and Weber. His seemingly conservative style recreated the great traditions of German classical music in the new Romantic era. In this respect, he was different from more radical Romantic composers such as Wagner, Berlioz, and Liszt. However, Mendelssohn was recognized after a tortuous development. Nietzsche regarded him but "an Interlude" of German music between Beethoven and Wagner. After his death, people often misinterpreted his music with overly sentimental expression. His works were also particularly hit by anti-Semitism in Europe since the 19th century. Wagner criticized Mendelssohn in his anonymous article Das Judenthum in der Musik. The Nazis of the 20th century even banned his music and removed and destroyed the statue of him that was erected in front of the Leipzig Gewandhaus. However, these acts did not affect Mendelssohn's distinction. Fortunately, people today have a more accurate understanding of him, and his music has become more popular.