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Mendelssohn and the Genesis of the Protestant A Cappella Movement

Mendelssohn and the Genesis of the Protestant A Cappella Movement

This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Paperback / softback

£18.00

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 9781009113359
Number of Pages: 98
Published: 09/11/2023
Width: 15.2 cm
Height: 22.9 cm
Drawing on his experiences in Berlin under Schleiermacher and his travels to the Vatican, Mendelssohn, as the Director of Prussian Church Music, wanted to offer an edifying worship experience where large-scale choral works would become an indispensable part of the liturgy, which he saw as a performative or representational act, centered around the life of Christ. Yet he quickly realized that the court and clergy were not interested in his foundational concepts; they merely wanted reforms based on the restauration ideals espoused by Winterfeld and Thibaut. Analyses of his 25 Domchor compositions and their revisions in this Element chronicle Mendelssohn's stylistic development and his ability to continue to offer a Christological worship experience within strictly prescribed parameters. The Berlin Domchor and its new repertoire by Mendelssohn and contemporaneous composers quickly became the model for the emerging a cappella movement throughout Protestant Germany.
1. Back to the future: Mendelssohn, Berlin, and the protestant a cappella movement; 2. Mendelssohn's concept of church music; 3. An inauspicious start: music for christmas 1843; 4. Ideals proposed: music for New Year's Day 1844; 5. Ideals compromised: music for epiphany and lent 1844; 6. New ideals conceptualized: preparing for departure; 7. Mendelssohn's lasting legacy; References.

Siegwart Reichwald (Westmont College, California)