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Mojca Erdmann - Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 5 in D Major, Op. 107, MWV N 15 "Reformation" (2017)

Posted By: Pisulik
Mojca Erdmann - Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 5 in D Major, Op. 107, MWV N 15 "Reformation" (2017)

Mojca Erdmann - Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 5 in D Major, Op. 107, MWV N 15 "Reformation" (2017)
Classical | MP3 CBR 320 kbps | 01:06:26 | 152 MB
Label: Orfeo | Release Year: 2017

The second instalment of Jörg Widmanns involvement with the Irish Chamber Orchestra and their recordings of Felix Mendelssohns symphonies is devoted to what is known as the composers Fifth, in keeping with the upcoming celebrations to mark 500 years since the Reformation. In fact, from a chronological point of view, this is Mendelssohns second symphony. Conceived originally, to mark the celebrations of 300 years since the Reformations Augsburg Confession of 1530, to play the work and the premiere never took place a shocking experience for the then-23- the premiere planned for 1832 seemed to be very promising, since the work was to be played by the benchmark orchestra of the day, the Orchestra of the Paris Conservatoire under the baton of François-Antoine Habeneck. However, rehearsals descended into tumult, the orchestra refused year-old former child prodigy. The following year the gifted composer applied, after the death of his mentor Carl Friedrich Zelter, to succeed him as Director of the Berlin Singakademie. Mendelssohn was eminently qualified for the post and was encouraged by many friends to apply, in view of his groundbreaking revival of Bachs St Matthew Passion with that choral society just four years earlier. As part of his application Mendelssohn had given three concerts, one of which included the premiere of his Symphony in Celebration of the Church Revolution. The fact that his application was unsuccessful was traumatic for the young composer, whose approach to faith was an idealistic one. The rejection was bound up for him with his second great attempt at a symphony and he wanted nothing more to do with the work thereafter; indeed, it was not published until 1868, more than 20 years after his death, by his son Paul under the posthumous opus number 107. Todays verdict on the works musical status is of course an entirely different matter. The reports by Mendelssohns friend Ferdinand Hiller about the failed rehearsals in Paris the work is altogether too scholastic […] too many fugatos, too little melody and much more in that vein say more from todays standpoint about the composer than about the overburdened orchestra musicians. And in this era when we are almost obsessively torn between overcoming and reawakening national, cultural and religious identities, Mendelssohns complex and (not merely) aesthetic experiment undertaken at a time poised between revolution and restoration is truly fascinating especially when one adds in the extra dimension of the historical allusion to the Reformation. The daring and abundantly formal characteristics of the work offer more than ample material for such analysis, from the confrontation of the artistic, canonically-elaborated Catholic intonation of the Psalms employing a Reformational wind chorale over the Dresden Amen that both Wagner and Bruckner were to use, through to the superimposition of the sonata writing and chorale variation in the final movement. For someone like Jörg Widmann, so intimately familiar with the technical and aesthetic dimensions of the art of composition, it was an appealing challenge to contrast the historically fraught and consciously complex experiment by the mature prodigy Mendelssohn with the young Mozarts highly emotional, compositionally concentrated answer to his encounter with Bachs Fugues, which Baron von Swieten had introduced him to in the 1780s in Vienna: the Fugue in C Minor for two pianos, expanded here by a passionate Adagio and arranged here for string orchestra.

TRACKLIST

01. Adagio & Fugue in C Minor, K. 546 "String Quartet No. 27" (Version for String Orchestra) - Irish Chamber Orchestra
02. String Quartet No. 5 "Versuch über die Fuge" (Version for Soprano, Oboe & Chamber Orchestra) - Mojca Erdmann
03. Symphony No. 5 in D Major, Op. 107, MWV N 15 "Reformation": I. Andante-Allegro con fuoco - Irish Chamber Orchestra
04. Symphony No. 5 in D Major, Op. 107, MWV N 15 "Reformation": II. Allegro vivace - Irish Chamber Orchestra
05. Symphony No. 5 in D Major, Op. 107, MWV N 15 "Reformation": III. Andante - Irish Chamber Orchestra
06. Symphony No. 5 in D Major, Op. 107, MWV N 15 "Reformation": IV. Andante con moto - Irish Chamber Orchestra
07. Clarinet Sonata in E-Flat Major, MWV Q 15: II. Andante (Arr. J. Widmann for Clarinet, Harp, Celesta & String Orchestra) - Irish Chamber Orchestra