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Fanny Mendelssohn

Fanny Mendelssohn (14 November 1805 – 14 May 1847) was a German composer and pianist of the early Romantic era who was also known as Fanny (Cäcilie) Mendelssohn Bartholdy and, after her marriage, Fanny Hensel (as well as Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel). Her compositions include a piano trio, a piano quartet, an orchestral overture, four cantatas, more than 125 pieces for the piano, and over 250 lieder, most of which went unpublished in her lifetime. Although praised for her piano technique, she rarely gave public performances outside her family circle.

Fanny Hensel, 1842, by Moritz Daniel Oppenheim

She grew up in Berlin and received a thorough musical education from teachers including her mother, as well as the composers Ludwig Berger and Carl Friedrich Zelter. Her younger brother Felix Mendelssohn, also a composer and pianist, shared the same education and the two developed a close relationship. Due to her family's reservations, and to social conventions of the time about the roles of women, six of her songs were published under her brother's name in his Opus 8 and 9 collections. In 1829, she married artist Wilhelm Hensel and, in 1830, they had their only child, Sebastian Hensel. In 1846, despite the continuing ambivalence of her family towards her musical ambitions, Fanny Hensel published a collection of songs as her Opus 1. She died of a stroke in 1847.

Since the 1990s her life and works have been the subject of more detailed research. Her Easter Sonata was inaccurately credited to her brother in 1970, before new analysis of documents in 2010 corrected the attribution. The Fanny & Felix Mendelssohn Museum opened on 29 May 2018 in Hamburg, Germany.

Life

Early life and education

Mendelssohn was born in Hamburg, the oldest of four children, including her brother Felix Mendelssohn born four years after her.[1] She was descended on both sides from distinguished Jewish families; her parents were Abraham Mendelssohn (who was the son of the philosopher Moses Mendelssohn), and Lea, née Salomon, a granddaughter of the entrepreneur Daniel Itzig.[2] She was baptised as a Christian in 1816, becoming Fanny Cäcilie Mendelssohn Bartholdy.[3] Despite this, she and her family continued an affinity with the social and moral values of Judaism.[4][5] Like her brother Felix, she objected strongly when their father Abraham changed the family surname to "Mendelssohn Bartholdy" with the intention of playing down their Jewish origins: she wrote to Felix of "Bartholdy, that name which we all dislike."[6]

 
Carl Friedrich Zelter – portrait by Carl Begas (1827)

While growing up in the family's new home in Berlin,[7] Mendelssohn showed prodigious musical ability and began to write music. She received her first piano instruction from her mother, who may have learned the Berlin Bach tradition through the writings of Johann Kirnberger, a student of Johann Sebastian Bach.[8] Thus as a 14 year old, Mendelssohn could already play all 24 preludes from Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier from memory alone, and she did so in honour of her father's birthday in 1819.[9] Beyond inspiration from her mother, Mendelssohn may also have been influenced by the role-models represented by her great-aunts Fanny von Arnstein and Sarah Levy, both lovers of music, the former the patroness of a well-known salon and the latter a skilled keyboard player in her own right.[10]

After studying briefly with the pianist Marie Bigot in Paris, Mendelssohn and her brother Felix received piano lessons from Ludwig Berger and composition instruction from Carl Friedrich Zelter. At one point, Zelter favoured Fanny over Felix: he wrote to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe in 1816, in a letter introducing Abraham Mendelssohn to the poet, "He has adorable children and his oldest daughter could give you something of Sebastian Bach. This child is really something special."[11][n 1] Both Mendelssohn and her brother Felix received instruction in composition from Zelter starting in 1819. In October 1820, they joined the Sing-Akademie zu Berlin, which was then being led by Zelter.[13] Much later, in an 1831 letter to Goethe, Zelter described Fanny's skill as a pianist with the highest praise for a woman at the time: "... she plays like a man."[14] Visitors to the Mendelssohn household in the early 1820s, including Ignaz Moscheles and Sir George Smart, were equally impressed by both siblings.[15][16]

Gender and class limitations

 
Abraham Mendelssohn Bartholdy, as drawn by Fanny's husband Wilhelm Hensel

The music historian Richard Taruskin suggests that "the life of Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel is compelling proof that women's failure to "compete" with men on the compositional playing-field has been the result of social prejudice and patriarchical mores (which in the nineteenth century granted only men the right to make the decisions in bourgeois households)."[17] Such attitudes were shared by Mendelssohn's father, who was tolerant, rather than supportive, of her activities as a composer. In 1820, he wrote to her, "Music will perhaps become his [i.e. Felix's] profession, while for you it can and must be only an ornament".[18] Although Felix was privately broadly supportive of her as a composer and a performer, he was cautious (professedly for family reasons) of her publishing her works under her own name. He wrote:

From my knowledge of Fanny I should say that she has neither inclination nor vocation for authorship. She is too much all that a woman ought to be for this. She regulates her house, and neither thinks of the public nor of the musical world, nor even of music at all, until her first duties are fulfilled. Publishing would only disturb her in these, and I cannot say that I approve of it.[19]

The music historian Angela Mace Christian has written that Fanny Mendelssohn "struggled her entire life with the conflicting impulses of authorship versus the social expectations for her high-class status ...; her hesitation was variously a result of her dutiful attitude towards her father, her intense relationship with her brother, and her awareness of contemporary social thought on women in the public sphere."[20] Felix's friend Henry Chorley wrote of Fanny: "Had Madame Hensel been a poor man's daughter, she must have become known to the world by the side of Madame Schumann and Madame Pleyel as a female pianist of the highest class", suggesting that as well as her sex, her social class was limiting for her career.[21]

The biography of the Mendelssohn family compiled from family documents by Fanny's son Sebastian Hensel[22] has been construed by the musicologist Marian Wilson Kimber as intending to represent Fanny as having no aspirations to perform outside the private sphere.[23] Kimber notes that Fanny's "oft-reported longing for a professional music career is not supported by her ... diaries, which are somewhat surprising for how little they reveal about her musical life."[24]

Felix and Fanny

 
Felix Mendelssohn aged 12 (1821) by Carl Begas

The siblings' bond was strengthened by their shared passion for music. Fanny's works were often played alongside her brother's at the family home in Berlin in a Sunday concert series (Sonntagskonzerte), which was originally organized by her father and after 1831 carried on by Fanny herself.[25] In 1822, when Fanny was 17 and Felix 13, she wrote "Up to the present moment I possess his [Felix's] unbounded confidence. I have watched the progress of his talent step by step, and may say I have contributed to his development. I have always been his only musical adviser, and he never writes down a thought before submitting it to my judgment."[26]

In 1826/1827 Felix arranged with Fanny for some of her songs to be published under his name,[27] three in his Op. 8 collection[28] and three more in his Op. 9.[29] In 1842, this resulted in an embarrassing moment when Queen Victoria, receiving Felix at Buckingham Palace, expressed her intention of singing to the composer her favourite of his songs, Italien (to words by Franz Grillparzer), which Felix confessed was by Fanny.[27][28]

There was a lifelong musical correspondence between the two. Fanny helped Felix by providing constructive criticism of pieces and projects, which he always considered very carefully.[30] Felix would rework pieces solely based on the suggestions she made, and nicknamed her "Minerva" after the Roman goddess of wisdom.[31] Their correspondence of 1840/41 reveals that they were both outlining scenarios for an opera on the subject of the Nibelungenlied (which never materialized): Fanny wrote "The hunt with Siegfried's death provides a splendid finale to the second act."[32]

Marriage and later life

 
Fanny Mendelssohn, sketched in 1829 by Wilhelm Hensel

In 1829, after a courtship of several years (they had first met in 1821 when she was 16),[33] Fanny married the artist Wilhelm Hensel, and the following year gave birth to their only child, Sebastian Hensel.[34] She later had at least two miscarriages or stillbirths, in 1832 and 1837.[24]

In 1830 came her first public notice as a composer, when John Thomson, who had met her in Berlin the previous year, wrote in the London journal The Harmonicon in praise of a number of her songs that had been shown to him by Felix.[35] Her public debut at the piano (one of only three known public performances according to Mendelssohn scholar R. Larry Todd)[36] came in 1838, when she played her brother's Piano Concerto No. 1.[37]

Fanny's support of Felix's music was clearly demonstrated during the 1838 rehearsals in Berlin for her brother's oratorio St. Paul at the Singverein, which she attended at the invitation of its conductor, Carl Friedrich Rungenhagen. In a letter to her brother she described attending the rehearsals and "suffering and champing at the bit ... as I heard the whining and [the accompanist's] dirty fingers on the piano ... They started [the passage] 'mache dich auf' at half the right tempo, and then I instinctively called out, 'My God, it must go twice as fast!' The consequence was that Rungenhagen consulted her closely about all details of the rehearsals and performance; this included her firm instructions not to add a tuba to the organ part. "I assured them that they should be ruled by my word, and they'd better do it for God's sake."[38]

 
Wilhelm Hensel: Self-portrait (1829)

Wilhelm Hensel, like Felix, was supportive of Fanny's composing, but unlike many others of her circle was also in favour of her seeking publication of her works.[24][39][40] The music historian Nancy B. Reich has suggested two events which may have increased her confidence. One was her visit to Italy with her husband and Sebastian in 1839–40. This was her first visit to Southern Europe and she felt invigorated and inspired; they also spent time with young French musicians who had won the Prix de Rome (one was the young Charles Gounod) and whose respect for Fanny powered her self-esteem as a musician. The other event was her acquaintance shortly afterwards with the Berlin music enthusiast Robert von Keudell: in her diary she wrote: "Keudell looks at everything new that I write with the greatest interest, and points out to me if there is something to be corrected ... He has always given me the very best counsel."[41]

In 1846, after an approach by two Berlin publishers[42] and without consulting Felix, she decided to publish a collection of her songs (as her Op. 1), under her married name, "Fanny Hensel geb. [i.e. née] Mendelssohn-Bartholdy".[43] After publication, Felix wrote to her "[I] send you my professional blessing on becoming a member of the craft ... may you have much happiness in giving pleasure to others; may you taste only the sweets and none of the bitterness of authorship; may the public pelt you with roses, and never with sand." (12 August 1846). On 14 August Fanny wrote in her journal "Felix has written, and given me his professional blessing in the kindest manner. I know that he is not quite satisfied in his heart of hearts, but I am glad he has said a kind word to me about it."[44] She also wrote about the publication to her friend Angelica von Woringen: "I can truthfully say that I let it happen more than made it happen, and it is this in particular which cheers me ... If [the publishers] want more from me, it should act as a stimulus to achieve. If the matter comes to an end then, I also won't grieve, for I'm not ambitious."[24]

Throughout March 1847 Fanny had many meetings with Clara Schumann. At this time Fanny was working on her Piano Trio Op. 11 and Clara had recently completed her own Piano Trio (Op. 17), which she may have intended to dedicate to Fanny.[45]

Death

On 14 May 1847 Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel died in Berlin of complications from a stroke suffered while rehearsing one of her brother's cantatas, The First Walpurgis Night.[46] Felix himself died less than six months later from the same cause (which was also responsible for the deaths of both of their parents and their grandfather Moses),[47] but not before completing his String Quartet No. 6 in F minor, written in memory of his sister.[48] Fanny was buried next to her parents in a portion of the Dreifaltigkeit Cemetery in Berlin reserved for Jewish converts to Christianity (Neuchristen).[49]

Compositions

 
Title page of first edition of Fanny Hensel's Op. 1, 1846

Fanny Mendelssohn composed over 450 pieces of music.[20] Her compositions include a piano trio, a piano quartet, an orchestral overture, four cantatas, over 125 pieces for the piano, and in excess of 250 lieder (art songs).[7] Six of her songs were originally published under Felix's name in his Opus 8 and 9 collections.[50] Her piano works are often in the manner of songs, and many carry the name Lied für Klavier (Song for Piano), analogous to Felix's Lieder ohne Worte (Songs Without Words). This style of piano music was most successfully developed by Felix, whose first set (Op. 19b) appeared in 1829–30, with a second set (Op. 30) appearing in 1833–34. Fanny's sets of Lieder für Klavier were written in the period 1836–1837, at about the same time as Felix's set Op. 38.[51][52]

The majority of Fanny Mendelssohn's compositions are limited to lieder and piano pieces as she felt her abilities did not extend to larger, more intricate compositions. She was also undoubtedly hampered by the fact that, unlike her brother, she had never studied or played any string instruments, experience which would have assisted her in writing chamber or orchestral works.[53] After completing her string quartet, she wrote to Felix in 1835, "I lack the ability to sustain ideas properly and give them the needed consistency. Therefore lieder suit me best, in which, if need be, merely a pretty idea without much potential for development can suffice."[54] She was an early example of women composers of a string quartet; she had also earlier written, with the assistance of Zelter, a piano quartet in 1822 (her first large-scale work), and, despite her reservations in her letter to Felix, she wrote in her last year a piano trio (Op. 11).[45][55] Her Easter Sonata written in 1828, was unpublished in her lifetime. It was discovered and attributed to her brother in 1970, before examination of the manuscript and a mention of the work in her diary finally established in 2010 that the work was hers.[56]

 
April from the manuscript of Fanny Hensel's Das Jahr (illustration by Wilhelm Hensel)

Most of Hensel's work after her marriage was on a small scale, songs and piano pieces. In 1831 for the first birthday of her son Sebastian, she created a cantata, the Lobgesang (Song of Praise). Two other works for orchestra, soloists and choir were written in that year, Hiob (Job) and an oratorio in sixteen sections, Höret zu, merket auf (Listen and take note).[57] In 1841 she composed a cycle of piano pieces depicting the months of the year, Das Jahr (The Year).[58] The music was written on tinted sheets of paper and illustrated by her husband, with each piece accompanied by a short poem.[n 2] The writer Kristine Forney has suggested that the poems, artwork and coloured paper may represent the different stages of life, with others suggesting they represent her own life.[59] In a letter from Rome, Fanny described the process behind composing Das Jahr:

I have been composing a good deal lately, and have called my piano pieces after the names of my favourite haunts, partly because they really came into my mind at these spots, partly because our pleasant excursions were in my mind while I was writing them. They will form a delightful souvenir, a kind of second diary. But do not imagine that I give these names when playing them in society, they are for home use entirely.[60]

After Das Jahr her only large-scale work was her Piano Trio Op. 11 of 1847.[45]

Style and form

 
Fanny Hensel's music room in the Hensel house, Leipziger Str. 3, Berlin

Angela Mace, the musicologist who proved Fanny Hensel's authorship of the Easter Sonata, considers that Fanny was much more experimental with her lieder than Felix, noting that her works have a "harmonic density" that serves to express emotion.[61]

R. Larry Todd has pointed out that, although there has been much comment about the influence of Felix's music on Fanny (and some comment on that of Fanny on Felix), both were strongly influenced by the later music of Ludwig van Beethoven in terms of form, tonality and fugal counterpoint.[62] This is apparent for example in Fanny's string quartet.[63]

The musicologist Stephen Rodgers has claimed that the relative lack of analysis of Fanny Hensel's music has left the presence of triple hypermeter in her songs mostly overlooked. He points to this type of meter being used by Mendelssohn to alter the speed of vocals in the song and to reflect emotions through distortion of duple norms.[64] He also points to a lack of tonic harmony as a recurring characteristic of her lieder, identifying it in the lied Verlust (Loss) as a deliberate means to reflect the song's themes of abandonment and failing to find love. Mendelssohn's use of word painting is also acknowledged as a common element of her style, a method of stressing emotion in the song text.[65] She commonly used strophic form for her songs, and her piano accompaniments frequently doubled the voice-line, characteristics also of the music of her teachers Zelter and Berger.[66] Though the foundation created by her teachers would remain, Rodgers suggests that she increasingly turned to through-composed forms as her style developed, as a way to respond to elements of poetic text.[67]

Legacy

 
Grave of Fanny Hensel in Berlin

From the 1980s onwards there has been renewed interest in Mendelssohn and her works. In November 2017, the Mendelssohn-Haus museum in Leipzig inaugurated a permanent exhibit dedicated to her.[68] The Fanny & Felix Mendelssohn Museum, which is dedicated to the lives and work of the two siblings, opened on 29 May 2018 in Hamburg.[69]

Minor planet fr:(9331) Fannyhensel is named after her.[70]

On 14 November 2021, Google commemorated Fanny Hensel's 216th birthday with a Google Doodle in North America, Iceland, Germany, Greece, Ukraine, Israel, Armenia, Australia and New Zealand.[71]

Music

Six months before his death, Felix attempted to ensure that his sister received the recognition that had been withheld throughout much of her life. He collected many of her works intending to release them to the public through his publisher, Breitkopf & Härtel. In 1850, the publisher began to distribute Fanny Mendelssohn's unreleased works, starting with Vier Lieder Op. 8.[72] Commencing in the late 1980s, Fanny Mendelssohn's music has become better known, thanks to concert performances and new recordings.[73] Her Easter Sonata for piano, formerly attributed to Felix, was premiered in her name by Andrea Lam on 12 September 2012.[74]

Writings

Fanny Mendelssohn published no writings during her lifetime. Selected letters and journal entries were published during the 19th century, notably by Sebastian Hensel in his book on the Mendelssohn family. Her collected letters to Felix, edited by Marcia Citron, were published in 1987.[22][75][76]

Biographical and musicological studies

During the 19th century Fanny mainly figured as a bystander in biographies and studies of her brother Felix; typically she was a representative of a supposed 'feminizing' influence that sapped his artistry.[77] In the 20th century the conventional narrative switched to presenting Felix as disapproving of his sister's musical activities and seeking to contain them, whilst the 'feminizing' accusation against Fanny evaporated.[78] From the 1980s onwards Fanny Mendelssohn has been the subject of many academic books and articles.[79][n 3] Kimber opines that "The tale of Fanny, the 'suppressed' composer, has so readily found a place in the biographies of the siblings because of its resemblance to prevailing models for the life of a 'Great Composer' ... based in Romantic ideology about male artists. ... Hensel fits neatly into a traditional narrative of the suffering artistic genius ... with a modern twist: the feminine gender of its main character. Thus two characters [Felix and Fanny] are forced to bear the weight of two centuries of gender ideology."[80]

A catalogue of the works of Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel has been prepared by Renate Hellwig-Unruh, according to which each work may be referred to by its "H-U number".[81]

References

Notes

  1. ^ In 1827 Goethe wrote a poem dedicated to Fanny, Wenn ich mir in stiller Seele (When in my quiet soul), which Fanny set as a lied in 1828.[12]
  2. ^ See Das Jahr: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  3. ^ See bibliography in Mace Christian 2018

Citations

  1. ^ Mace Christian 2018, §1.
  2. ^ Todd 2010, pp. 3–5.
  3. ^ Todd 2003, p. 33.
  4. ^ Mendelssohn (Hensel) 1987, pp. xxix, 629.
  5. ^ Citron 1994, p. 322.
  6. ^ Mendelssohn (Hensel) 1987, p. 66.
  7. ^ a b Forney & Dell'Antonio 2015, p. 278.
  8. ^ Todd 2010, p. 7.
  9. ^ Hayman 2017.
  10. ^ Conway 2012, pp. 122, 146.
  11. ^ Conway 2012, p. 171.
  12. ^ Krebs, Sharon; Kanen, Lau (2008). "Wenn ich mir in stiller Seele". The Lieder Net Archive. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  13. ^ Todd 2003, p. 55.
  14. ^ Todd 2010, p. 146.
  15. ^ Conway 2012, p. 169.
  16. ^ Smart 1907, pp. 173, 179.
  17. ^ Taruskin 2010, p. 186.
  18. ^ Letter of 16 July 1820, in Hensel 1884, I, p. 82
  19. ^ Letter to Lea Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, 24 June 1837. Mendelssohn Bartholdy 1864, p. 116
  20. ^ a b Mace Christian 2018, Introduction.
  21. ^ Conway 2012, pp. 27–28.
  22. ^ a b Hensel 1884.
  23. ^ Kimber 2002, p. 115.
  24. ^ a b c d Kimber 2004, p. 51.
  25. ^ Mendelssohn (Hensel) 1987, p. 631.
  26. ^ Hensel 1884, I, p. 117.
  27. ^ a b Hensel 1884, II, pp. 168–171.
  28. ^ a b Todd 2003, p. 175.
  29. ^ Todd 2003, p. 224.
  30. ^ Reich 1991, p. 92.
  31. ^ Padua & Lavine 2010.
  32. ^ Letter of 9 December 1840. See Mendelssohn (Hensel) 1987, pp. 299–301
  33. ^ Mace Christian 2018, §3.
  34. ^ Todd 2003, pp. 219, 230.
  35. ^ Gates 2007, p. 7.
  36. ^ Todd 2010, p. x.
  37. ^ Mendelssohn (Hensel) 1987, p. xxiv.
  38. ^ Citron 1984, p. 104.
  39. ^ Reich 1991, p. 95.
  40. ^ Kimber 2002, p. 116.
  41. ^ Reich 1991, pp. 95–96.
  42. ^ Hensel 1884, II, p. 325.
  43. ^ Todd 2003, pp. 523–524.
  44. ^ Hensel 1884, II, pp. 325–326.
  45. ^ a b c Mace Christian 2018, §10.
  46. ^ Todd 2003, p. 557.
  47. ^ Sterndale Bennett 1955, p. 376.
  48. ^ Todd 2010, pp. 348–349.
  49. ^ Conway 2012, p. 180.
  50. ^ Song 2016, pp. 2–3.
  51. ^ Mace 2013, p. 118.
  52. ^ Song 2016, pp. 5–7.
  53. ^ Reich 1991, pp. 93–94.
  54. ^ Mendelssohn (Hensel) 1987, p. 174.
  55. ^ Todd 2003, pp. 104, 542–544.
  56. ^ Mace Christian 2018, §4.
  57. ^ Ledbetter 2019.
  58. ^ Mace Christian 2018, 8.
  59. ^ Forney & Dell'Antonio 2015, p. 177.
  60. ^ Hensel 1884, II, p. 103.
  61. ^ Mace 2013, p. 10.
  62. ^ Todd 2010, p. 182.
  63. ^ Song 2016, p. 1.
  64. ^ Rodgers 2011b, passim.
  65. ^ Rodgers 2011a, pp. 180–184.
  66. ^ Draper 2012, p. 87.
  67. ^ Rodgers 2011a, p. 201.
  68. ^ "Leben und Wirken von Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy und Fanny". Leipziger Volkszeitung (in German). 2 January 2023. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  69. ^ KomponistenQuartier n.d.
  70. ^ "(9331) Fannyhensel [2.75, 0.06, 4.4]". Dictionary of Minor Planet Names: Addendum to Fifth Edition: 2003–2005. Springer. 2006. p. 45. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-34361-5_339. ISBN 978-3-540-34361-5.
  71. ^ Google 2021.
  72. ^ Todd 2010, p. 351.
  73. ^ March et al. 1999, pp. 858–859.
  74. ^ CVNC Online Arts Journal 2012.
  75. ^ Mace Christian 2018, Bibliography.
  76. ^ Mendelssohn (Hensel) 1987.
  77. ^ Kimber 2004, pp. 48–49.
  78. ^ Kimber 2004, pp. 49–50.
  79. ^ Stokes 2019, passim.
  80. ^ Kimber 2004, p. 52.
  81. ^ Hellwig-Unruh 2000.

Cited sources

Books
Journals
  • Gates, Eugene (2007). "Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel: A Life of Music within Domestic Limits" (PDF). Kapralova Society Journal. 5 (2): 1–14.
  • Kimber, Marian Wilson (2002). "The 'Suppression' of Fanny Mendelssohn: Rethinking Feminist Biography". 19th-Century Music. 26 (2): 113–129. doi:10.1525/ncm.2002.26.2.113. S2CID 162379412.
  • Rodgers, Stephen (2011a). "Fanny Hensel's Lied Aesthetic" (PDF). Journal of Musicological Research. 30 (3): 175–201. doi:10.1080/01411896.2011.588641. S2CID 191550522.
  • Rodgers, Stephen (2011b). "Thinking (and Singing) in Threes" (PDF). Music Theory Online. 17 (1). doi:10.30535/mto.17.1.7.
  • Sterndale Bennett, R. (1955). "The Death of Mendelssohn". Music & Letters. 36 (4): 374–376. doi:10.1093/ml/XXXVI.4.374.
  • Song, Hye-Bin (2016). "Influence, Individuality and Stylistic Evolution in the Music of Fanny Hensel and Felix Mendelssohn" (PDF). Kapralova Society Journal. 14 (2).
Online
  • "Duke Performances, Duke University Department of Music: Fanny Hensel Rediscovered: Part II". CVNC Online Arts Journal. 7 September 2012. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  • "Fanny & Felix Mendelssohn Museum". KomponistenQuartier Hamburg (in German). Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  • Google (14 November 2021). "Fanny Hensel's 216th Birthday". {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  • Hayman, Sheila (8 March 2017). "A Fanny Mendelssohn Masterpiece Finally Gets Its Due". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  • Ledbetter, Steven (3 April 2019). "The Other Mendelssohn's Early Cantatas". The Boston Online Musical Intelligencer. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  • Padua, Pat; Lavine, Kevin (2010). "Women's History Month: Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel". In the Muse: Performing Arts Blog (Library of Congress website). Retrieved 29 October 2020.

External links

  • Free scores by Fanny Hensel at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
  • Free scores by Fanny Hensel in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki)
  • Free digital scores by Hensel, Fanny (Mendelssohn) in the OpenScore Lieder Corpus
  • Fanny Hensel geb. Mendelssohn fannyhensel.de
  • Fanny Hensel (in German) rcs-krueger.de/FannyHensel.htm
  • Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel / Piano Trio in d minor editionsilvertrust.com
  • Mace Christian, Angela (n.d.). "Easter Sonata Discovery". Angela Mace Christian. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  • The Complete Songs of Fanny Hensel free to download, edited by Tim Parker-Langston
  • Free digital scores of Fanny Hensel's piano and instrumental music from HenselPushers
  • Fanny Hensel manuscript and document scans from Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin Digitized Collections

fanny, mendelssohn, november, 1805, 1847, german, composer, pianist, early, romantic, also, known, fanny, cäcilie, mendelssohn, bartholdy, after, marriage, fanny, hensel, well, hensel, compositions, include, piano, trio, piano, quartet, orchestral, overture, f. Fanny Mendelssohn 14 November 1805 14 May 1847 was a German composer and pianist of the early Romantic era who was also known as Fanny Cacilie Mendelssohn Bartholdy and after her marriage Fanny Hensel as well as Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel Her compositions include a piano trio a piano quartet an orchestral overture four cantatas more than 125 pieces for the piano and over 250 lieder most of which went unpublished in her lifetime Although praised for her piano technique she rarely gave public performances outside her family circle Fanny Hensel 1842 by Moritz Daniel Oppenheim She grew up in Berlin and received a thorough musical education from teachers including her mother as well as the composers Ludwig Berger and Carl Friedrich Zelter Her younger brother Felix Mendelssohn also a composer and pianist shared the same education and the two developed a close relationship Due to her family s reservations and to social conventions of the time about the roles of women six of her songs were published under her brother s name in his Opus 8 and 9 collections In 1829 she married artist Wilhelm Hensel and in 1830 they had their only child Sebastian Hensel In 1846 despite the continuing ambivalence of her family towards her musical ambitions Fanny Hensel published a collection of songs as her Opus 1 She died of a stroke in 1847 Since the 1990s her life and works have been the subject of more detailed research Her Easter Sonata was inaccurately credited to her brother in 1970 before new analysis of documents in 2010 corrected the attribution The Fanny amp Felix Mendelssohn Museum opened on 29 May 2018 in Hamburg Germany Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Gender and class limitations 1 3 Felix and Fanny 1 4 Marriage and later life 1 5 Death 2 Compositions 2 1 Style and form 3 Legacy 3 1 Music 3 2 Writings 3 3 Biographical and musicological studies 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Citations 4 3 Cited sources 5 External linksLife EditEarly life and education Edit Mendelssohn was born in Hamburg the oldest of four children including her brother Felix Mendelssohn born four years after her 1 She was descended on both sides from distinguished Jewish families her parents were Abraham Mendelssohn who was the son of the philosopher Moses Mendelssohn and Lea nee Salomon a granddaughter of the entrepreneur Daniel Itzig 2 She was baptised as a Christian in 1816 becoming Fanny Cacilie Mendelssohn Bartholdy 3 Despite this she and her family continued an affinity with the social and moral values of Judaism 4 5 Like her brother Felix she objected strongly when their father Abraham changed the family surname to Mendelssohn Bartholdy with the intention of playing down their Jewish origins she wrote to Felix of Bartholdy that name which we all dislike 6 Carl Friedrich Zelter portrait by Carl Begas 1827 While growing up in the family s new home in Berlin 7 Mendelssohn showed prodigious musical ability and began to write music She received her first piano instruction from her mother who may have learned the Berlin Bach tradition through the writings of Johann Kirnberger a student of Johann Sebastian Bach 8 Thus as a 14 year old Mendelssohn could already play all 24 preludes from Bach s The Well Tempered Clavier from memory alone and she did so in honour of her father s birthday in 1819 9 Beyond inspiration from her mother Mendelssohn may also have been influenced by the role models represented by her great aunts Fanny von Arnstein and Sarah Levy both lovers of music the former the patroness of a well known salon and the latter a skilled keyboard player in her own right 10 After studying briefly with the pianist Marie Bigot in Paris Mendelssohn and her brother Felix received piano lessons from Ludwig Berger and composition instruction from Carl Friedrich Zelter At one point Zelter favoured Fanny over Felix he wrote to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe in 1816 in a letter introducing Abraham Mendelssohn to the poet He has adorable children and his oldest daughter could give you something of Sebastian Bach This child is really something special 11 n 1 Both Mendelssohn and her brother Felix received instruction in composition from Zelter starting in 1819 In October 1820 they joined the Sing Akademie zu Berlin which was then being led by Zelter 13 Much later in an 1831 letter to Goethe Zelter described Fanny s skill as a pianist with the highest praise for a woman at the time she plays like a man 14 Visitors to the Mendelssohn household in the early 1820s including Ignaz Moscheles and Sir George Smart were equally impressed by both siblings 15 16 Gender and class limitations Edit Abraham Mendelssohn Bartholdy as drawn by Fanny s husband Wilhelm HenselThe music historian Richard Taruskin suggests that the life of Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel is compelling proof that women s failure to compete with men on the compositional playing field has been the result of social prejudice and patriarchical mores which in the nineteenth century granted only men the right to make the decisions in bourgeois households 17 Such attitudes were shared by Mendelssohn s father who was tolerant rather than supportive of her activities as a composer In 1820 he wrote to her Music will perhaps become his i e Felix s profession while for you it can and must be only an ornament 18 Although Felix was privately broadly supportive of her as a composer and a performer he was cautious professedly for family reasons of her publishing her works under her own name He wrote From my knowledge of Fanny I should say that she has neither inclination nor vocation for authorship She is too much all that a woman ought to be for this She regulates her house and neither thinks of the public nor of the musical world nor even of music at all until her first duties are fulfilled Publishing would only disturb her in these and I cannot say that I approve of it 19 The music historian Angela Mace Christian has written that Fanny Mendelssohn struggled her entire life with the conflicting impulses of authorship versus the social expectations for her high class status her hesitation was variously a result of her dutiful attitude towards her father her intense relationship with her brother and her awareness of contemporary social thought on women in the public sphere 20 Felix s friend Henry Chorley wrote of Fanny Had Madame Hensel been a poor man s daughter she must have become known to the world by the side of Madame Schumann and Madame Pleyel as a female pianist of the highest class suggesting that as well as her sex her social class was limiting for her career 21 The biography of the Mendelssohn family compiled from family documents by Fanny s son Sebastian Hensel 22 has been construed by the musicologist Marian Wilson Kimber as intending to represent Fanny as having no aspirations to perform outside the private sphere 23 Kimber notes that Fanny s oft reported longing for a professional music career is not supported by her diaries which are somewhat surprising for how little they reveal about her musical life 24 Felix and Fanny Edit Felix Mendelssohn aged 12 1821 by Carl BegasThe siblings bond was strengthened by their shared passion for music Fanny s works were often played alongside her brother s at the family home in Berlin in a Sunday concert series Sonntagskonzerte which was originally organized by her father and after 1831 carried on by Fanny herself 25 In 1822 when Fanny was 17 and Felix 13 she wrote Up to the present moment I possess his Felix s unbounded confidence I have watched the progress of his talent step by step and may say I have contributed to his development I have always been his only musical adviser and he never writes down a thought before submitting it to my judgment 26 In 1826 1827 Felix arranged with Fanny for some of her songs to be published under his name 27 three in his Op 8 collection 28 and three more in his Op 9 29 In 1842 this resulted in an embarrassing moment when Queen Victoria receiving Felix at Buckingham Palace expressed her intention of singing to the composer her favourite of his songs Italien to words by Franz Grillparzer which Felix confessed was by Fanny 27 28 There was a lifelong musical correspondence between the two Fanny helped Felix by providing constructive criticism of pieces and projects which he always considered very carefully 30 Felix would rework pieces solely based on the suggestions she made and nicknamed her Minerva after the Roman goddess of wisdom 31 Their correspondence of 1840 41 reveals that they were both outlining scenarios for an opera on the subject of the Nibelungenlied which never materialized Fanny wrote The hunt with Siegfried s death provides a splendid finale to the second act 32 Marriage and later life Edit Fanny Mendelssohn sketched in 1829 by Wilhelm HenselIn 1829 after a courtship of several years they had first met in 1821 when she was 16 33 Fanny married the artist Wilhelm Hensel and the following year gave birth to their only child Sebastian Hensel 34 She later had at least two miscarriages or stillbirths in 1832 and 1837 24 In 1830 came her first public notice as a composer when John Thomson who had met her in Berlin the previous year wrote in the London journal The Harmonicon in praise of a number of her songs that had been shown to him by Felix 35 Her public debut at the piano one of only three known public performances according to Mendelssohn scholar R Larry Todd 36 came in 1838 when she played her brother s Piano Concerto No 1 37 Fanny s support of Felix s music was clearly demonstrated during the 1838 rehearsals in Berlin for her brother s oratorio St Paul at the Singverein which she attended at the invitation of its conductor Carl Friedrich Rungenhagen In a letter to her brother she described attending the rehearsals and suffering and champing at the bit as I heard the whining and the accompanist s dirty fingers on the piano They started the passage mache dich auf at half the right tempo and then I instinctively called out My God it must go twice as fast The consequence was that Rungenhagen consulted her closely about all details of the rehearsals and performance this included her firm instructions not to add a tuba to the organ part I assured them that they should be ruled by my word and they d better do it for God s sake 38 Wilhelm Hensel Self portrait 1829 Wilhelm Hensel like Felix was supportive of Fanny s composing but unlike many others of her circle was also in favour of her seeking publication of her works 24 39 40 The music historian Nancy B Reich has suggested two events which may have increased her confidence One was her visit to Italy with her husband and Sebastian in 1839 40 This was her first visit to Southern Europe and she felt invigorated and inspired they also spent time with young French musicians who had won the Prix de Rome one was the young Charles Gounod and whose respect for Fanny powered her self esteem as a musician The other event was her acquaintance shortly afterwards with the Berlin music enthusiast Robert von Keudell in her diary she wrote Keudell looks at everything new that I write with the greatest interest and points out to me if there is something to be corrected He has always given me the very best counsel 41 In 1846 after an approach by two Berlin publishers 42 and without consulting Felix she decided to publish a collection of her songs as her Op 1 under her married name Fanny Hensel geb i e nee Mendelssohn Bartholdy 43 After publication Felix wrote to her I send you my professional blessing on becoming a member of the craft may you have much happiness in giving pleasure to others may you taste only the sweets and none of the bitterness of authorship may the public pelt you with roses and never with sand 12 August 1846 On 14 August Fanny wrote in her journal Felix has written and given me his professional blessing in the kindest manner I know that he is not quite satisfied in his heart of hearts but I am glad he has said a kind word to me about it 44 She also wrote about the publication to her friend Angelica von Woringen I can truthfully say that I let it happen more than made it happen and it is this in particular which cheers me If the publishers want more from me it should act as a stimulus to achieve If the matter comes to an end then I also won t grieve for I m not ambitious 24 Throughout March 1847 Fanny had many meetings with Clara Schumann At this time Fanny was working on her Piano Trio Op 11 and Clara had recently completed her own Piano Trio Op 17 which she may have intended to dedicate to Fanny 45 Death Edit On 14 May 1847 Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel died in Berlin of complications from a stroke suffered while rehearsing one of her brother s cantatas The First Walpurgis Night 46 Felix himself died less than six months later from the same cause which was also responsible for the deaths of both of their parents and their grandfather Moses 47 but not before completing his String Quartet No 6 in F minor written in memory of his sister 48 Fanny was buried next to her parents in a portion of the Dreifaltigkeit Cemetery in Berlin reserved for Jewish converts to Christianity Neuchristen 49 Compositions EditSee also List of compositions by Fanny Mendelssohn Title page of first edition of Fanny Hensel s Op 1 1846 Fanny Mendelssohn composed over 450 pieces of music 20 Her compositions include a piano trio a piano quartet an orchestral overture four cantatas over 125 pieces for the piano and in excess of 250 lieder art songs 7 Six of her songs were originally published under Felix s name in his Opus 8 and 9 collections 50 Her piano works are often in the manner of songs and many carry the name Lied fur Klavier Song for Piano analogous to Felix s Lieder ohne Worte Songs Without Words This style of piano music was most successfully developed by Felix whose first set Op 19b appeared in 1829 30 with a second set Op 30 appearing in 1833 34 Fanny s sets of Lieder fur Klavier were written in the period 1836 1837 at about the same time as Felix s set Op 38 51 52 The majority of Fanny Mendelssohn s compositions are limited to lieder and piano pieces as she felt her abilities did not extend to larger more intricate compositions She was also undoubtedly hampered by the fact that unlike her brother she had never studied or played any string instruments experience which would have assisted her in writing chamber or orchestral works 53 After completing her string quartet she wrote to Felix in 1835 I lack the ability to sustain ideas properly and give them the needed consistency Therefore lieder suit me best in which if need be merely a pretty idea without much potential for development can suffice 54 She was an early example of women composers of a string quartet she had also earlier written with the assistance of Zelter a piano quartet in 1822 her first large scale work and despite her reservations in her letter to Felix she wrote in her last year a piano trio Op 11 45 55 Her Easter Sonata written in 1828 was unpublished in her lifetime It was discovered and attributed to her brother in 1970 before examination of the manuscript and a mention of the work in her diary finally established in 2010 that the work was hers 56 April from the manuscript of Fanny Hensel s Das Jahr illustration by Wilhelm Hensel Most of Hensel s work after her marriage was on a small scale songs and piano pieces In 1831 for the first birthday of her son Sebastian she created a cantata the Lobgesang Song of Praise Two other works for orchestra soloists and choir were written in that year Hiob Job and an oratorio in sixteen sections Horet zu merket auf Listen and take note 57 In 1841 she composed a cycle of piano pieces depicting the months of the year Das Jahr The Year 58 The music was written on tinted sheets of paper and illustrated by her husband with each piece accompanied by a short poem n 2 The writer Kristine Forney has suggested that the poems artwork and coloured paper may represent the different stages of life with others suggesting they represent her own life 59 In a letter from Rome Fanny described the process behind composing Das Jahr I have been composing a good deal lately and have called my piano pieces after the names of my favourite haunts partly because they really came into my mind at these spots partly because our pleasant excursions were in my mind while I was writing them They will form a delightful souvenir a kind of second diary But do not imagine that I give these names when playing them in society they are for home use entirely 60 After Das Jahr her only large scale work was her Piano Trio Op 11 of 1847 45 Style and form Edit Fanny Hensel s music room in the Hensel house Leipziger Str 3 Berlin Angela Mace the musicologist who proved Fanny Hensel s authorship of the Easter Sonata considers that Fanny was much more experimental with her lieder than Felix noting that her works have a harmonic density that serves to express emotion 61 R Larry Todd has pointed out that although there has been much comment about the influence of Felix s music on Fanny and some comment on that of Fanny on Felix both were strongly influenced by the later music of Ludwig van Beethoven in terms of form tonality and fugal counterpoint 62 This is apparent for example in Fanny s string quartet 63 The musicologist Stephen Rodgers has claimed that the relative lack of analysis of Fanny Hensel s music has left the presence of triple hypermeter in her songs mostly overlooked He points to this type of meter being used by Mendelssohn to alter the speed of vocals in the song and to reflect emotions through distortion of duple norms 64 He also points to a lack of tonic harmony as a recurring characteristic of her lieder identifying it in the lied Verlust Loss as a deliberate means to reflect the song s themes of abandonment and failing to find love Mendelssohn s use of word painting is also acknowledged as a common element of her style a method of stressing emotion in the song text 65 She commonly used strophic form for her songs and her piano accompaniments frequently doubled the voice line characteristics also of the music of her teachers Zelter and Berger 66 Though the foundation created by her teachers would remain Rodgers suggests that she increasingly turned to through composed forms as her style developed as a way to respond to elements of poetic text 67 Legacy Edit Grave of Fanny Hensel in Berlin From the 1980s onwards there has been renewed interest in Mendelssohn and her works In November 2017 the Mendelssohn Haus museum in Leipzig inaugurated a permanent exhibit dedicated to her 68 The Fanny amp Felix Mendelssohn Museum which is dedicated to the lives and work of the two siblings opened on 29 May 2018 in Hamburg 69 Minor planet fr 9331 Fannyhensel is named after her 70 On 14 November 2021 Google commemorated Fanny Hensel s 216th birthday with a Google Doodle in North America Iceland Germany Greece Ukraine Israel Armenia Australia and New Zealand 71 Music Edit Six months before his death Felix attempted to ensure that his sister received the recognition that had been withheld throughout much of her life He collected many of her works intending to release them to the public through his publisher Breitkopf amp Hartel In 1850 the publisher began to distribute Fanny Mendelssohn s unreleased works starting with Vier Lieder Op 8 72 Commencing in the late 1980s Fanny Mendelssohn s music has become better known thanks to concert performances and new recordings 73 Her Easter Sonata for piano formerly attributed to Felix was premiered in her name by Andrea Lam on 12 September 2012 74 Writings Edit Fanny Mendelssohn published no writings during her lifetime Selected letters and journal entries were published during the 19th century notably by Sebastian Hensel in his book on the Mendelssohn family Her collected letters to Felix edited by Marcia Citron were published in 1987 22 75 76 Biographical and musicological studies Edit During the 19th century Fanny mainly figured as a bystander in biographies and studies of her brother Felix typically she was a representative of a supposed feminizing influence that sapped his artistry 77 In the 20th century the conventional narrative switched to presenting Felix as disapproving of his sister s musical activities and seeking to contain them whilst the feminizing accusation against Fanny evaporated 78 From the 1980s onwards Fanny Mendelssohn has been the subject of many academic books and articles 79 n 3 Kimber opines that The tale of Fanny the suppressed composer has so readily found a place in the biographies of the siblings because of its resemblance to prevailing models for the life of a Great Composer based in Romantic ideology about male artists Hensel fits neatly into a traditional narrative of the suffering artistic genius with a modern twist the feminine gender of its main character Thus two characters Felix and Fanny are forced to bear the weight of two centuries of gender ideology 80 A catalogue of the works of Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel has been prepared by Renate Hellwig Unruh according to which each work may be referred to by its H U number 81 References EditNotes Edit In 1827 Goethe wrote a poem dedicated to Fanny Wenn ich mir in stiller Seele When in my quiet soul which Fanny set as a lied in 1828 12 See Das Jahr Scores at the International Music Score Library Project See bibliography in Mace Christian 2018 Citations Edit Mace Christian 2018 1 Todd 2010 pp 3 5 Todd 2003 p 33 Mendelssohn Hensel 1987 pp xxix 629 Citron 1994 p 322 Mendelssohn Hensel 1987 p 66 a b Forney amp Dell Antonio 2015 p 278 Todd 2010 p 7 Hayman 2017 Conway 2012 pp 122 146 Conway 2012 p 171 Krebs Sharon Kanen Lau 2008 Wenn ich mir in stiller Seele The Lieder Net Archive Retrieved 21 January 2021 Todd 2003 p 55 Todd 2010 p 146 Conway 2012 p 169 Smart 1907 pp 173 179 Taruskin 2010 p 186 Letter of 16 July 1820 in Hensel 1884 I p 82 Letter to Lea Mendelssohn Bartholdy 24 June 1837 Mendelssohn Bartholdy 1864 p 116 a b Mace Christian 2018 Introduction Conway 2012 pp 27 28 a b Hensel 1884 Kimber 2002 p 115 a b c d Kimber 2004 p 51 Mendelssohn Hensel 1987 p 631 Hensel 1884 I p 117 a b Hensel 1884 II pp 168 171 a b Todd 2003 p 175 Todd 2003 p 224 Reich 1991 p 92 Padua amp Lavine 2010 Letter of 9 December 1840 See Mendelssohn Hensel 1987 pp 299 301 Mace Christian 2018 3 Todd 2003 pp 219 230 Gates 2007 p 7 Todd 2010 p x Mendelssohn Hensel 1987 p xxiv Citron 1984 p 104 Reich 1991 p 95 Kimber 2002 p 116 Reich 1991 pp 95 96 Hensel 1884 II p 325 Todd 2003 pp 523 524 Hensel 1884 II pp 325 326 a b c Mace Christian 2018 10 Todd 2003 p 557 Sterndale Bennett 1955 p 376 Todd 2010 pp 348 349 Conway 2012 p 180 Song 2016 pp 2 3 Mace 2013 p 118 Song 2016 pp 5 7 Reich 1991 pp 93 94 Mendelssohn Hensel 1987 p 174 Todd 2003 pp 104 542 544 Mace Christian 2018 4 Ledbetter 2019 Mace Christian 2018 8 Forney amp Dell Antonio 2015 p 177 Hensel 1884 II p 103 Mace 2013 p 10 Todd 2010 p 182 Song 2016 p 1 Rodgers 2011b passim Rodgers 2011a pp 180 184 Draper 2012 p 87 Rodgers 2011a p 201 Leben und Wirken von Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy und Fanny Leipziger Volkszeitung in German 2 January 2023 Retrieved 15 May 2023 KomponistenQuartier n d 9331 Fannyhensel 2 75 0 06 4 4 Dictionary of Minor Planet Names Addendum to Fifth Edition 2003 2005 Springer 2006 p 45 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 34361 5 339 ISBN 978 3 540 34361 5 Google 2021 Todd 2010 p 351 March et al 1999 pp 858 859 CVNC Online Arts Journal 2012 Mace Christian 2018 Bibliography Mendelssohn Hensel 1987 Kimber 2004 pp 48 49 Kimber 2004 pp 49 50 Stokes 2019 passim Kimber 2004 p 52 Hellwig Unruh 2000 Cited sources Edit BooksCitron Marcia J 1984 Fanny Hensel s Letters to Felix Mendelssohn In Finson Jon W Todd R Larry eds Mendelssohn and Schumann Essays on their Music and its Context Durham North Carolina Duke University Press pp 99 108 ISBN 978 0 8223 0569 9 Citron Marcia J 1994 Mendelssohn Bartholdy Fanny Cacilie The New Grove Dictionary of Women Composers New York New York Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 0 333 51598 3 Conway David 2012 Jewry in Music Entry to the Profession from the Enlightenment to Richard Wagner Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 01538 8 Draper Brian W 2012 Text Painting and Musical Style in the Lieder of Fanny Hensel PDF Eugene Oregon University of Oregon OCLC 817677286 MA Thesis Forney Kristine Dell Antonio Andrew 2015 The Enjoyment of Music Essential Listening Edition with Total Access Twelfth Edition New York New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 90604 2 Hellwig Unruh Renate 2000 Fanny Hensel geb Mendelssohn Bartholdy Thematisches Verzeichnis der Kompositionen Adliswil Kunzelmann ISBN 3 9521049 3 0 Hensel Sebastian ed 1884 The Mendelssohn Family 1729 1847 From Letters and Journals Translated by Klingemann Carl London England Sampson Low and Co OCLC 1061914545 2 volumes Kimber Marian Wilson 2004 Felix and Fanny Gender Biography and History In Mercer Taylor Peter ed The Cambridge Companion to Mendelssohn Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 53342 3 Mace Angela Regina 2013 Fanny Hensel Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy and the Formation of the Mendelssohnian Style PDF Durham North Carolina Duke University OCLC 852761347 Thesis Mace Christian Angela 2018 Hensel nee Mendelssohn Bartholdy Fanny Cacilie Grove Music Online Oxford England Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 omo 9781561592630 013 3000000159 ISBN 9781561592630 subscription or UK public library membership required March Ivan Greenfield Edward Layton Robert Czajkowski Robert 1999 The Penguin Guide to Compact Discs London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0140513790 Mendelssohn Bartholdy Felix 1864 Mendelssohn Bartholdy Paul ed Letters of Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy from 1833 to 1847 Translated by Lady Wallace London England Longman OCLC 17521633 Mendelssohn Hensel Fanny 1987 Citron Marcia ed The Letters of Fanny Hensel to Felix Mendelssohn New York Pendragon Press ISBN 978 0 918728 52 4 Reich Nancy B 1991 The Power of Class Fanny Hensel In Todd R Larry ed Mendelssohn and his World Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 86 99 ISBN 978 0 691 02715 9 Smart Sir George 1907 H B Cox C L E Cox eds Leaves from the Journal of Sir George Smart London England Longmans Green and Co OCLC 504621895 Stokes Laura K T 2019 Fanny Hensel A Research and Information Guide Abingdon on Thames England Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 23740 7 Taruskin Richard 2010 Music in the Nineteenth Century The Oxford History of Western Music Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 538483 3 Todd R Larry 2003 Mendelssohn A Life in Music Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 511043 2 Todd R Larry 2010 Fanny Hensel The Other Mendelssohn Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518080 0 JournalsGates Eugene 2007 Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel A Life of Music within Domestic Limits PDF Kapralova Society Journal 5 2 1 14 Kimber Marian Wilson 2002 The Suppression of Fanny Mendelssohn Rethinking Feminist Biography 19th Century Music 26 2 113 129 doi 10 1525 ncm 2002 26 2 113 S2CID 162379412 Rodgers Stephen 2011a Fanny Hensel s Lied Aesthetic PDF Journal of Musicological Research 30 3 175 201 doi 10 1080 01411896 2011 588641 S2CID 191550522 Rodgers Stephen 2011b Thinking and Singing in Threes PDF Music Theory Online 17 1 doi 10 30535 mto 17 1 7 Sterndale Bennett R 1955 The Death of Mendelssohn Music amp Letters 36 4 374 376 doi 10 1093 ml XXXVI 4 374 Song Hye Bin 2016 Influence Individuality and Stylistic Evolution in the Music of Fanny Hensel and Felix Mendelssohn PDF Kapralova Society Journal 14 2 Online Duke Performances Duke University Department of Music Fanny Hensel Rediscovered Part II CVNC Online Arts Journal 7 September 2012 Retrieved 8 January 2021 Fanny amp Felix Mendelssohn Museum KomponistenQuartier Hamburg in German Retrieved 28 October 2020 Google 14 November 2021 Fanny Hensel s 216th Birthday a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Hayman Sheila 8 March 2017 A Fanny Mendelssohn Masterpiece Finally Gets Its Due The Guardian Retrieved 9 January 2021 Ledbetter Steven 3 April 2019 The Other Mendelssohn s Early Cantatas The Boston Online Musical Intelligencer Retrieved 19 January 2021 Padua Pat Lavine Kevin 2010 Women s History Month Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel In the Muse Performing Arts Blog Library of Congress website Retrieved 29 October 2020 External links EditFree scores by Fanny Hensel at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Free scores by Fanny Hensel in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Free digital scores by Hensel Fanny Mendelssohn in the OpenScore Lieder Corpus Fanny Hensel geb Mendelssohn fannyhensel de Fanny Hensel in German rcs krueger de FannyHensel htm Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel Piano Trio in d minor editionsilvertrust com Mace Christian Angela n d Easter Sonata Discovery Angela Mace Christian Retrieved 10 January 2021 The Complete Songs of Fanny Hensel free to download edited by Tim Parker Langston Free digital scores of Fanny Hensel s piano and instrumental music from HenselPushers Fanny Hensel manuscript and document scans from Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin Digitized Collections Portals Biography Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fanny Mendelssohn amp oldid 1154814630, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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