Er - sorry, what!? Schubert...?!
The 1st movement of Mendelssohn's 5th is based on the famous "Dresden Amen" (well-known from Schumann's 3rd and Parsifal - Wagner modelled his version on Mendelssohn's). The main allegro is simply a speeded-up version of the closely-related theme from the introduction - and very convincing and enjoyable I find it. The richness of invention, the proliferation of motivic ideas and developments make it closer to Beethoven than to anything else, as were FMB's early string quartets.
After the joyously fleet-footed (and melodically memorable!) scherzo (a musical form Mendelssohn almost made his own, like Brahms' intermezzi) there's one of his most intense, and typically compressed, slow movements where listeners often mistake brevity for lack of depth. (vide Waldstein sonata and Triple Concerto...)
The finale is a remarkably original structure based on the Lutheran chorale "A Mighty Fortress is Our God" which itself is clearly a member of the same thematic family as the first movement's principal ideas!
The whole symphony is rich in thematic cross-reference and motivic interrelations, which shouldn't surprise anyone who knows FMB's early quartets; bear in mind the "Symphony no.5" is an actually an early work, written when he was 20!
All of which mightn't matter if it weren't also tunefully and harmonically memorable - it's often humming around my head somewhere...
Chris and Caliban - get Colin Davis's Dresden State recording and see if you change your mind(s). You'll get a lovely No.3 into the bargain...
The 1st movement of Mendelssohn's 5th is based on the famous "Dresden Amen" (well-known from Schumann's 3rd and Parsifal - Wagner modelled his version on Mendelssohn's). The main allegro is simply a speeded-up version of the closely-related theme from the introduction - and very convincing and enjoyable I find it. The richness of invention, the proliferation of motivic ideas and developments make it closer to Beethoven than to anything else, as were FMB's early string quartets.
After the joyously fleet-footed (and melodically memorable!) scherzo (a musical form Mendelssohn almost made his own, like Brahms' intermezzi) there's one of his most intense, and typically compressed, slow movements where listeners often mistake brevity for lack of depth. (vide Waldstein sonata and Triple Concerto...)
The finale is a remarkably original structure based on the Lutheran chorale "A Mighty Fortress is Our God" which itself is clearly a member of the same thematic family as the first movement's principal ideas!
The whole symphony is rich in thematic cross-reference and motivic interrelations, which shouldn't surprise anyone who knows FMB's early quartets; bear in mind the "Symphony no.5" is an actually an early work, written when he was 20!
All of which mightn't matter if it weren't also tunefully and harmonically memorable - it's often humming around my head somewhere...
Chris and Caliban - get Colin Davis's Dresden State recording and see if you change your mind(s). You'll get a lovely No.3 into the bargain...
Originally posted by Chris Newman
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