Felix Mendelssohn - Violin Sonata in F minor, Op. 4

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2024

Комментарии • 76

  • @NothingFunnyAboutTheseCarpets
    @NothingFunnyAboutTheseCarpets 2 года назад +25

    This first movement has got to be the most zen piece of early romantic music i ve heard. It’s soooo calm I can’t even describe it

  • @catherinejones9396
    @catherinejones9396 2 года назад +15

    This duo was beautifully in sync. What a lovely work. Thank you for the upload.

  • @mikejr41387
    @mikejr41387 6 лет назад +29

    Ostrovsky was my teacher at Conservatory. Great to hear this

  • @MartinaVonTrapp
    @MartinaVonTrapp 3 года назад +3

    This is probably my favoriete music of all and in my absolute favorite recording. Thankyou Schlomo Mintz, Paul Ostrovsky, and last but not least Felix Mendelssohn for creating this beautiful solace; it is laced with lighthearted melancholy, and is food for the soul like no other 🙏🙏🙏

  • @SpreadTheLove
    @SpreadTheLove 3 года назад +4

    Brilliant work done by Felix! Thank you. Great recording.

  • @tree_fingers
    @tree_fingers 5 лет назад +18

    cant find many recordings of this piece, especially by well-known artists. This rec is the nicest one I've listened to.

    • @silviapavani-devisser1150
      @silviapavani-devisser1150 4 года назад

      you could try Jaap Schroder and Penelope Crawford. You can listen to it here also.. ruclips.net/video/MiEmSrTvbtw/видео.html

    • @katarinamills8530
      @katarinamills8530 7 месяцев назад

      Agree❤

  • @JFGecik
    @JFGecik 8 лет назад +58

    I believe that this beautiful work, Opus 4, is also indexed as MWV Q12, completed in 1825, when Felix Mendelssohn was just sixteen years old.

    • @BoomerRaid
      @BoomerRaid 7 лет назад +5

      Four works after, he did his infamously well known Octet for strings. Yet, on an f minor key for a sonata is rare and difficult to play for a violinist. Still, it's an incredible piece

    • @timothythorne9464
      @timothythorne9464 5 лет назад

      This is just an incredible work for such a young composer. It goes above and beyond what Mozart accomplished at the same stage; and in addition, Mendelssohn furnishes his work with a warm Romantic glow (albeit Victorian and proper).

    • @ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks
      @ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks 2 года назад

      @@timothythorne9464 Mozart composed the first piano concerto in teenage and it's really good. The symphonies and the string quartets are also very good. Don't forget that Mozart already composed good symphonies in prepubertal age.

    • @timothythorne9464
      @timothythorne9464 2 года назад

      @@ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks you may be right. I recently listened to Mozart's 5th piano concerto and his 21st symphony, both composed when he was 16, and they are simply fantastic! Also he was a teenager when he wrote his 5 violin concertos; they're among the finest such works in all instrumental music.

    • @ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks
      @ClassicalMusicAndSoundtracks 2 года назад

      @@timothythorne9464 Listen to symphony 14 too. He composed it when he was 15 years old.
      I think that the first and the fourth movements have brilliant themes.

  • @trueimagename
    @trueimagename 8 лет назад +11

    Beautiful music; beautiful playing; beautiful violin sound!

  • @genie857
    @genie857 8 лет назад +14

    WHERE WAS I WHEN THIS WAS UPLOADED HERE ON RUclips?! THIS IS SO BEAUTIFUL! (instantly downloads it)

  • @marcosPRATA918
    @marcosPRATA918 6 лет назад +27

    The 9 introductory bars are a declaration of love to Bach! It is no wonder that Mendelssohn was the important rehabilitator of Bach in the nineteenth century; and also responsible for the romanticization of the master of Leipzig and so many other cities of the Holy Empire. And did Bach belong somewhere other than music?

  • @bettinamuller2195
    @bettinamuller2195 7 лет назад +8

    Dieses Stück wird am 21. Mai 2017 in der Halle 424 in Hamburg aufgeführt.Ich freue mich sehr darüber!

  • @kurtbangen6840
    @kurtbangen6840 8 лет назад +12

    Wow! An outstanding violin sonata! Thank you for loading it.

  • @2ears1mouth786
    @2ears1mouth786 8 лет назад +9

    Wonderfully played by Mintz and Ostrovsky!

    • @gianlucalav
      @gianlucalav Год назад

      Just listen to WANDA LUZZATO and Antonio BELTRAMI and you ‘ll listen the top

    • @DavidSmith-kc4hz
      @DavidSmith-kc4hz 3 месяца назад

      Maybe many of you are unaware that Shlomo Mintz is one of the finest violinists of the present century and is recognised so the world over. He has recorded most of the standard concertos as well as the Paganini 24 caprices.

  • @СергейЕрмоленко-ъ5г
    @СергейЕрмоленко-ъ5г 4 года назад +4

    Шикарно!!!!!!!

  • @chrismoule7242
    @chrismoule7242 2 года назад +2

    Wow - so that opening is the signature tune for BBC Radio's Sherlock Holmes series with Clive Merrison & Michael Williams.

    • @xandru.mitropoulos
      @xandru.mitropoulos Год назад

      Took me years to find this after hearing those adaptations! Also, Saint-Saëns, Camille violin concerto no.3

  • @MrGer2295
    @MrGer2295 8 лет назад +10

    Beautiful ! Thanks for posting :)

  • @eduardo4134
    @eduardo4134 8 лет назад +8

    Sublime sound! They play with much feeling.

  • @esejsnake1503
    @esejsnake1503 8 лет назад +8

    2:34 - 3:09
    (just a note for myself if i forget which fragment that was, that I loved so much)

    • @ykd5l
      @ykd5l 8 лет назад +1

      It reminds me of Carl Loewe's symphony in e minor

    • @esejsnake1503
      @esejsnake1503 8 лет назад +2

      The symphony may be written in the same mood as this and I rather like it. It's very repetetive (I know that some would argue, that it's supposed to sound like this, but couldn't the composer have written the passages in a less obvious way? I mean: even I grow bored of the same motif over and over again, and I sometimes listen to the same piece the whole day on loop, while learning).
      You're right, the symphony really is similar to Mendelssohn's sonata. Repetetive. But the sonata sounds much better in my opinion.

    • @ykd5l
      @ykd5l 8 лет назад +1

      I really enjoy both. But I agree, this sonata has some mistery around it

  • @snowcarriagechengcheng-hun3454
    @snowcarriagechengcheng-hun3454 8 лет назад +3

    Thanks for uploading!

  • @motcornerbyalisonhasselquist
    @motcornerbyalisonhasselquist 6 лет назад +13

    Thanks! I have never heard it before, but I am practicing the piano part and my cousin will do violin! It is good to familiarize myself with it.

  • @OasisSheep
    @OasisSheep 8 лет назад +12

    *fangirling over music*

  • @letsschubertiad1966
    @letsschubertiad1966 4 года назад +4

    Gibt es ein Stück das einen tiefer rührt als dieses, und einem Trost in dunklen Nächten verspricht?

  • @harmonicparadox2055
    @harmonicparadox2055 7 лет назад +31

    Clearly a conscious reference to Beethoven's Tempest Sonata in the opening piano part, right down to how the chord resolves.

    • @matsmmmaaattsss8495
      @matsmmmaaattsss8495 4 года назад +6

      I think there is also a reference to Appassionata in the ending part of 3rd mvmt - the repeated chords

    • @ulysse__
      @ulysse__ 3 года назад +1

      I think he meant the Appassionata 1st movement lol. Funny how no-one thought to object

    • @harmonicparadox2055
      @harmonicparadox2055 3 года назад +2

      @@ulysse__ Nope, I did mean Tempest, right at 1:20-1:26.

    • @ulysse__
      @ulysse__ 3 года назад +1

      @@harmonicparadox2055 Oop, I thought you meant right at the start of the piano entry - with the first minitheme C-Ab-F that really sounded like the opening of the Appassionata

    • @Zimzamzoom95
      @Zimzamzoom95 3 года назад +1

      @@harmonicparadox2055 not at all, that is a stock-standard rule of the octave scale realization for the most part

  • @GUSTAVOMARZANO
    @GUSTAVOMARZANO 4 месяца назад

    Mil gracias, que maravilloso

  • @CanelonVegano
    @CanelonVegano 8 лет назад +3

    Beautiful

  • @AlkanLove
    @AlkanLove Год назад +2

    メンデルスゾーンは神童であった裏付けの1つの作品

  • @jasarinvorawathanabuncha6620
    @jasarinvorawathanabuncha6620 8 лет назад +10

    omg that ending!

  • @BoomerRaid
    @BoomerRaid 7 лет назад +21

    Ask yourself, how many composers at sixteen can compose an F-minor violin sonata just like this and with unexpected tempo changes? Typical of Mendelssohn to do so. Sad that he didn't live longer- I would have loved another sonata of his...

    • @vt2637
      @vt2637 7 лет назад +5

      BoomerRaid Yes, Mendelssohn was a blessing from God. I love his music a lot too. His premature death makes me wonder what other great works he could have written had he lived longer.

    • @esejsnake1503
      @esejsnake1503 7 лет назад

      I don't know if you ever stumbled upon this: ruclips.net/video/OdmdoVSjXTo/видео.html . I know I was suprised that there do exist other Mendelssohn violin sonatas.

    • @karlpoppins
      @karlpoppins 5 лет назад +1

      Mendelssohn was a very promising composer than never really matured during his lifetime. All of his works have this aura of expectation that is never fully delivered.

  • @letsschubertiad1966
    @letsschubertiad1966 4 года назад +3

    Mir gefällt besonders der 2. Satz

  • @micheldupaul7768
    @micheldupaul7768 3 года назад +2

    Très belle sonate jouée de mains de maîtres.

  • @justaninsider9213
    @justaninsider9213 3 года назад +5

    There is an absolutely stunning reading of the other Mendelssohn Sonata (1838) by Hoepcker/Bidini. For who wants to check that out...it’s worth it!

  • @matthewwhitehouse301
    @matthewwhitehouse301 8 лет назад +51

    You can tell he definitely had Mozart in mind while writing this.

    • @CrackheadOwen
      @CrackheadOwen 7 лет назад +5

      where would we be without Mozart? who knows...but i'm glad we had him.

    • @republiccooper
      @republiccooper 6 лет назад +5

      Beethoven.

    • @timothythorne9464
      @timothythorne9464 5 лет назад +2

      republiccooper I hear a bit of Weber in the slow movement.

    • @Claudio3689p
      @Claudio3689p 4 года назад +1

      @violin614 Indeed

    • @alanleoneldavid1787
      @alanleoneldavid1787 4 года назад +2

      Haydn trío on e flat minor has some simmilar motifs

  • @davidmtz2175
    @davidmtz2175 6 лет назад +4

    simplemente me encanta.

  • @alleygh0st
    @alleygh0st 6 лет назад +6

    21:38 - 21:50
    well, that was adventurous : )

  • @benmarkovic9074
    @benmarkovic9074 3 года назад +2

    Wonderful playing. The only thing that bugs me is the poor mixing / audio engineering at 22:30 - 22:45. No idea what happens but it's the only blemish in an otherwise exquisite performance.

  • @yyjj841
    @yyjj841 5 лет назад +5

    When I saw he wrote this at only 14 I had to double check what I had read

  • @davidb9639
    @davidb9639 3 года назад +5

    Clive Merrison's Sherlock Holmes brought me here.

  • @DrChrisF
    @DrChrisF 2 года назад +2

    Reminds me a lot of the Mozart Em violin sonata

  • @DanellaLuciaIsraelBalvin
    @DanellaLuciaIsraelBalvin 4 месяца назад

    hola , podrian compartirme la partitura de esta sonata ?

  • @tarikeld11
    @tarikeld11 3 года назад +4

    1:12 Tristan Chord at measure 6!

    • @nicholasfox966
      @nicholasfox966 2 года назад +5

      That's not a Tristan chord (half-diminished 7th), but rather a fully diminished seventh chord (E natural-G-Bflat-Dflat) with an accented passing tone on the downbeat in the left hand. That F is not part of the chord, but rather a dissonant passing tone, which gets resolved into the actual note in the chord, E natural. The same thing happens on the downbeat right after the repeat sign, but in that case the dissonance is in the right hand.
      Another thing to remember is that the so-called Tristan chord--the half-diminished seventh harmony--is not at all an unusual or pathbreaking or innovative chord in the tonal music of the common practice period. It's a standard harmony that goes back to at least Bach, and serves a specific traditional function. What is pathbreaking about Wagner's use of the sonority is **how** he uses it; mysteriously and without any obvious, traditional resolution. Wagner's sonority is more symbolic of the further chromatic freedom that composers would take subsequently, but the chord itself is by no means innovative.

  • @Whatismusic1234
    @Whatismusic1234 2 месяца назад

    This is music

  • @jesusmon2060
    @jesusmon2060 Год назад

    El octeto para cuerdas fue una obra maestra, para nada infamante

  • @ziegunerweiser
    @ziegunerweiser 9 лет назад +2

    Mintz is magic here, if you're interested in video as Mutter has a DVD out.

  • @letsschubertiad1966
    @letsschubertiad1966 4 года назад +3

    The second movement reminds me of Mozart

  • @GerhardBSchneckerich
    @GerhardBSchneckerich 3 года назад +2

    I noticed that if you check out the comment sections of videos showing pieces Mendelssohn composed when he was younger, you'll find a couple of people crying:
    "OUOUOUOUOU!!! SOUNDS LIKE ***any composer who is in these people's minds***!!! I NOTICED THAT AFTER HEARING THE CHORD AT EXACTLY 15:39! I'M A MUSICAL ACADEMIC SNOP AND IN MY OPINION MENDELSSOHN WAS NOT VERY GOOD! ...and my opinion is a fact!"
    But no front against all these dudes - there are also cool people who describe the similarities between pieces by Mendelssohn and other composers very constructively.

  • @petersimon5231
    @petersimon5231 Год назад

    Young Mendelssohn or not, I find this quite boring and un-interesting, but the rarity deserves a couple of hearings. I have no clue where the accolades have been coming from, sorry.

    • @klop4228
      @klop4228 Год назад +1

      I'm only in the first movement, but I can really see where you're coming from. There's really not a lot of big tension here, though a fair bit of smaller tensions and resolutions. It's definitely not as good as his later work imo, but charming for me, especially when considering the guy was 14 lol.