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Nr. 1 in F minor (played by Wolfram Syré) No. 2 in C minor No. 3 in A major No. 4 in B-flat major No. 5 in D major No. 6 in D minor. The six sonatas are: No. 1 in F minor (Allegro – Adagio – Andante recitativo – Allegro assai vivace) No. 2 in C minor (Grave – Adagio – Allegro maestoso e vivace – Fugue: Allegro moderato)
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Organ Sonata No. 3 in A major (1844) (MWV W 58) ... (actually Mendelssohn's 1st Piano Sonata) Op. Posth. 106, Piano Sonata No ...
Felix Mendelssohn aged 12 (1821) by Carl Joseph Begas. Felix Mendelssohn was born on 3 February 1809, in Hamburg, at the time an independent city-state, [n 4] in the same house where, a year later, the dedicatee and first performer of his Violin Concerto, Ferdinand David, would be born. [4]
Fantasie in F-sharp minor, Op. 28, by Felix Mendelssohn, is a work composed for piano in three movements to be played without pause. This work was also known as Sonata écossaise (Scottish Sonata). First an Allegro in F-sharp minor in a loose sonata form, then an Allegro con moto in A major, and third a finale in F-sharp minor, in sonata form ...
Amongst 19th-century composers, Felix Mendelssohn based the third of his Organ Sonatas, Op. 65, on the chorale [13] Franz Liszt wrote a setting for organ and harmonium based on BWV 38. [20] In the 20th century, Max Reger composed a chorale prelude as No. 3 of his 52 Chorale Preludes, Op. 67 in 1902. [21]
No. 3 Andante maestoso in E minor ("Trauermarsch") No. 4 Allegro con anima in G major; No. 5 Andante con moto in A minor ("Venezianisches Gondellied" or Venetian Boat Song No. 3) No. 6 Allegretto grazioso in A major ("Frühlingslied" or "Spring Song") Book 6, Op. 67 (1843–1845) No. 1 Andante in E-flat major; No. 2 Allegro leggiero in F-sharp ...
Drei Motetten (Three motets), Op. 39, is a collection of three sacred motets for women's voices and organ by Felix Mendelssohn. Composed in 1830 for different liturgical occasions and in different scoring, they were published together in 1838.
The publisher Pietro Mechetti asked Mendelssohn to contribute to a 'Beethoven Album', published in January 1842, which also included pieces by Liszt, Chopin, Moscheles and others, of which the proceeds would go to the Monument. [2] (Schumann's Fantasie in C was the final result of a work originally intended for the same purpose).