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Just how ‘Scottish’ is the ‘Scottish’ Symphony? Thoughts on Form and Poetic Content in Mendelssohn’s Opus 56
DOI link for Just how ‘Scottish’ is the ‘Scottish’ Symphony? Thoughts on Form and Poetic Content in Mendelssohn’s Opus 56
Just how ‘Scottish’ is the ‘Scottish’ Symphony? Thoughts on Form and Poetic Content in Mendelssohn’s Opus 56 book
Just how ‘Scottish’ is the ‘Scottish’ Symphony? Thoughts on Form and Poetic Content in Mendelssohn’s Opus 56
DOI link for Just how ‘Scottish’ is the ‘Scottish’ Symphony? Thoughts on Form and Poetic Content in Mendelssohn’s Opus 56
Just how ‘Scottish’ is the ‘Scottish’ Symphony? Thoughts on Form and Poetic Content in Mendelssohn’s Opus 56 book
ABSTRACT
Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy's Third Symphony in A Minor, Op. 56 is—and always has been—the 'Scottish' Symphony: this idea seems to be one of the eternal truths of Mendelssohn scholarship, so obvious that any discussion about it would appear superfluous. The genre of the symphony presented a special problem for Mendelssohn as for anyone else at the time, since it occupied an uneasy middleground in respect to programmaticism. The attempts of modern-day musicologists—at times bordering on the desperate—to find the 'Scottish' elements in the symphony would probably have reinforced Mendelssohn in his decision to suppress the title. In the movement as a whole, Mendelssohn thus demonstrates the far from simple skill of combining the most sophisticated of classical forms with the 'poetic' image of dancing on a village green. The A minor Symphony—the first 'real' symphony of the mature Mendelssohn—was published as his first purely instrumental symphony since the C minor Symphony, Op. 11 of 1824.