Mendelssohn scarcely needed to describe his Variations in D minor as ‘serious’. Contributing to a piano album in aid of the Beethoven monument in Bonn, he no doubt wanted to dissociate his music from the frothy virtuoso stuff that could be expected from some of the other composer–pianists—Czerny, Döhler, Henselt, Kalkbrenner, Moscheles, Taubert and Thalberg—who, along with Chopin and Liszt, had been invited to write pieces for the same album. It is quite clear from Mendelssohn’s earnest theme, presented in severe four-part harmonies, that nothing frivolous is about to happen.
Far from being an inconsequential series of entertaining ideas, the seventeen variations are carefully structured in groups. The first half of the work is built on a gradual increase in tempo and rhythmic activity from the Andante sostenuto of both the theme itself and variation No 1, by way of a strict canon in staccato semiquavers in No 4 and the agitated syncopations of No 5, to the Allegro vivace of Nos 8 and 9. The scurrying triplet semiquavers of No 9 run up against the measured (Moderato) fugato of No 10, which is followed by the cantabile, melancholy No 11 and the violently percussive No 12. The one concession to a virtuoso fashion of the day is the application of Thalberg’s ‘three-hand’ technique to sustain the melodic line as a middle voice in No 13.
The way the score is set out suggests that up to this point the variations should follow each other with either the shortest of breaks or no break at all. Before No 14, however, Mendelssohn inserts a pause, presumably to highlight the consolatory aspect of the one variation in the major, an enchanting Adagio chorale. From there the tempo increases again through the syncopated chords of No 15 to the dazzling Allegro vivace of Nos 16 and 17, which last then slows down for a brief recall of the original theme over left-hand tremolandos. The haste of the Presto coda is intensified by the impression that one hand is chasing the other until they synchronize in the closing bars.
from notes by Gerald Larner © 2009
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Theme: Andante sostenuto
[0'47]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 1: [poco più mosso]
[0'37]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 2: Più animato
[0'29]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 3: Vivace
[0'22]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 4: [delicatissimo]
[0'21]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 5: Agitato
[0'28]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 6: [a tempo]
[0'19]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 7: Presto con fuoco
[0'20]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 8: Allegro vivace
[0'19]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 9: [untitled]
[0'25]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 10: Moderato
[0'50]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 11: [molto cantando]
[0'37]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 12: Presto
[0'28]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 13: Tempo di tema
[0'46]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 14: Adagio
[1'01]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 15: Poco a poco più agitato
[0'21]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 16: Allegro vivace
[0'18]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Variation 17: [untitled]
[2'07]
recorded 30 October 1950
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Other recordings available for download |
Valerie Tryon (piano)
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Stephen Hough (piano)
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Other albums featuring this work
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