Abstract:
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Mendelssohn finishes his once-famous but now somewhat neglected set of Seven Character Pieces, Op. 7 (1827), with No. 7, a Presto of the lightest, breeziest kind—indeed, the marking at the top of the piece, Leicht und luftig, says as much. We have been through much in Opus 7, assuming that we have heard all the pieces together, but Mendelssohn shows no interest in a weighty conclusion or an all-encompassing peroration, and so instead we get to fly happily for a half-dozen bright E major pages (well, the E major is not continuous for six pages—Mendelssohn was of course no minimalist, even if the texture of Op. 7, No. 7 does actually rely on a certain kind of "minimalism"), carried along by the two amiably competing hands of the pianist.
At any given moment in Op. 7, No. 7, each of the pianist's hands plays exactly the same sort of thing as the other—but not at the same time as the other. At the opening, and throughout much of the piece, they engage in a quiet dual of offbeats; and then ... |