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Nachtwanderer (1843, Eichendorff)
Bitte (1846, Lenau)
An einen Liebenden im Frühling (1824, Tieck) HU 12
Harfners Lied (1825, Goethe) HU 162
Im Herbste (1822, Uhlandt) HU 54
Du bist die Ruh (1839, Rückert)
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About the Composer

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Fanny Hensel

This composer and pianist left behind a substantial oeuvre of around 460 compositions, predominantly songs and compositions for piano as well as several works of chamber music, choral music, cantatas, and an overture. Within the private milieu of the salons held in her parents’ home, she performed (and conducted) her compositions herself; they are in no way inferior to those of her brother Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy.

1805Born in Hamburg on November 14, the eldest child of the banker Abraham Mendelssohn.
1811Moves to Berlin.
1816The children are baptized in the Evangelical Reformed church. Piano instruction from Marie Bigot during a stay in Paris, from Ludwig Berger in Berlin.
1819Lessons in composition from Carl Friedrich Zelter, together with Felix; composition of songs.
1820Joins the Sing-Akademie, led by Zelter, along with Felix and their younger sister Rebecka.
1821First, partly public Sunday concerts take place in the Mendelssohn household. Fanny performs as pianist, later as conductor and composer. From 1831 she assumes leadership of them.
from 1825Anonymous publication of her own compositions; the songs “Das Heimweh” (1824), “Italien” (1825), and “Suleika and Hatem” (1825) are published in the volumes of her brother’s Op. 8 (1827), “Sehnsucht” (1827), “Verlust” (1828), and “Die Nonne” (1822) in that of his Op. 9 (1830).
1829She marries the Royal Prussian court painter Wilhelm Hensel.
1830Birth of their only son, Sebastian Ludwig Felix. Cantatas: “Lobgesang” (dedicated to her son), “Hiob” (“Job”) and “Choleramusik” (1831), “Zum Fest der heiligen Cäcilia” (1833).
1831/32Concert aria, “Hero und Leander.”
1838Offering of the Piano Concerto No. 1 by Felix, her only known public performance.
1841Piano cycle “Das Jahr” (“The Year”) with pictures by her husband.
1843Piano Sonata in G minor, which engages with Beethoven’s works.
1846Publication of the “Six Songs for Solo Voice and Piano,” Op. 1, as the first songs published under her own name. “Four Songs for the Piano,” Op. 2, Op. 6 (1847), Op. 8 (1850), counterpart to Felix’s Songs Without Words, with bolder harmonies and greater in scale.
1847Death in Berlin on May 14 from a stroke during rehearsals for a Sunday concert.

© 2003, 2010 Philipp Reclam jun. GmbH & Co. KG, Stuttgart

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G. Henle Verlag

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