|
Recent Researches in the Music of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth CenturiesFelix MendelssohnConcerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra in E Major The Original Version of the First Movement (1823) Edited by Stephan D. Lindeman
In 1823 the adolescent Felix Mendelssohn completed his Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra in E Major. Regarded as immature by the budding composer, the work was set aside and not published. The Concerto remained in manuscript until the Leipziger Ausgabe der Werke Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy issued in 1961 a version substantially revised by Mendelssohn perhaps a decade after the premiere and edited by Karl-Heinz Köhler. The present edition of the original version of the first movement allows us to see for the first time Mendelssohn’s initial conception of the work at this nascent time in his development. Moreover, by comparing the original version with Köhler’s, it is possible to view the “composer’s workshop.” In this score Mendelssohn grapples with such issues as the role of virtuosity, harmonic design, and the thematic relationships between tutti instruments and soloists. The present edition offers a fascinating glimpse into a crucial point in the evolution of the concerto genre by one of the most important composers writing for the genre in the early nineteenth century. Performance parts are available for rental: N28R See the article on this volume in Embellishments 10. |