Format : Vocal Score
Aus: Drei Motetten-Mendelssohn's Veni Domine for SATB.Inspiration for the Three Motets op. 39 was a visit to the romanesque church of Trinit dei Monti. On 20 Dec 1830 Mendelssohn wrote to his parents: 'The French nuns sing there and it is wonderfully lovely. ... Now one should know one more thing: that one is not allowed to see the singers. Therefore I have come to an unusual decision: I will compose something for their voices which I rememer exactly...'
SKU: BR.SON-441
ISBN 9790004803493. 10 x 12.5 inches.
The circumstance that Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy searched all his life in vain for suitable material for an opera easily obscures the fact that he actually produced a considerable output of incidental music - from the Singspiele of his childhood and youth up to the large-scale works of incidental music of the 1840s for the Prussian king Friedrich Wilhelm IV.; also an opera fragment based on the Loreley material has survived.The volume ,,Kleinere Buhnenwerke (Minor stage works) of the complete edition contains - with the exception of the above-mentioned scores - all other works that can be attributed to the genre of musical drama, whereby the term ,,stage works is applied in a broad sense, since they also comprise pieces that are on the border between a concertante and a stage performance: several fragments from his childhood years, the contribution, published in 1833, for a festival of the Berlin poet Wilhelm Emil Julius, four works of incidental music for the Dusseldorf theatre (1833-1835) and a piece of convenience for the Leipzig theatre (music for Ruy Blas with the first version of the corresponding overture of 1839). In addition to these (complete and fragmentary) scores, the volume includes arrangements of individual movements of these works. It therefore represents a compilation of works which in terms of instrumentation, character and dimensions are extremely diverse - and today for the most part unknown.
SKU: M7.DOHR-94100
ISBN 9790202001004. German.
SKU: CA.9705000
ISBN 9790007131265.
Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy's Lieder ohne Worte arranged for choir and organ by Bernd Stegmann The individual pieces of the collection adhere to the model or distance themselves from it considerably. In the latter cases it is rather a question of a game played with the building blocks of the original. Thus the songs (Lieder) with words are not transcriptions in the usual sense. All of the texts have been chosen so that they do not result in a narrowing of the denomination. The goal of the collection is to enrich the choral repertoire for worship services and concerts with an interesting color.