Composer: Felix Mendelssohn
Orchestra: London Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Sir John Eliot Gardiner
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: LSO
Release: 2016
Size: 1.23 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes
Symphony No. 1 in C minor, Op. 11
01. I. Allegro di molto
02. II. Andante
03. III. Scherzo. Sempre pianissimo e leggiero (1829 London Version)
04. III. Menuetto. Allegro molto (1824 Original Version)
05. IV. Allegro con fuoco
Symphony No. 4 in A major, Op. 90 ‘Italian’
06. I. Allegro vivace
07. II. Andante con moto
08. III. Menuetto. Con moto moderato
09. IV. Finale (Saltarello). Presto
Constantly in the vanguard of enlightened interpretation, Sir John Eliot Gardiner stands as a leader in today’s musical life. His award-winning Mendelssohn cycle on LSO Live showcases his period performance expertise; the LSO muscians standing to play, highlighting their individual musicianship. As Gardiner notes: “It gives a different type of dynamism and energy… it means that the fiddles are freer in the way that they attack the extremely virtuosic lines and it gives a tremendous sense of occasion to the music making.”
Dramatic and harmonically adventurous, Mendelssohn’s Symphony No 1 is presented here in a unique format, with both the original and revised versions of the third movement. As Gardiner said when introducing the work in concert: “It’s not every evening that you get to hear a symphony by a 14-and-a-half-year-old genius and there’s an intriguing complication to this piece. When Mendelssohn came to London in 1829, he performed the symphony and he wrote back to his parents saying: “well, I looked over my symphony and, lord, the minuet bored me to tears! So what I did was to take the scherzo from my Octet and I added a few airy trumpets and it sounded lovely.” Well, actually he did an awful lot more than that; he re-orchestrated absolutely brilliantly. And it’s so good, we thought you should hear that version. But what about the minuet and trio? Why, when he came to publish the symphony did he use that version and leave out the scherzo? I happen to think they’re both really remarkable, as is the whole symphony, and perhaps you’d let us know which you prefer…?”
The Fourth Symphony is inspired by the sights, sounds and atmosphere of Italy and is among the best loved of all the composer’s works. Mendelssohn himself described it as: “the jolliest piece I’ve written so far.” Symphony No 1 was broadcast across Europe on Mezzo TV, alongside Mendelssohn’s ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’, and this rich video content will be shared to support the release.