Jessica Duchen sat down with András Schiff to talk about composer Felix Mendelssohn.
Who needs an excuse to celebrate a composer as fine as Felix Mendelssohn? Strangely, though, he and his reputation remain entrapped in a cats-cradle of paradoxes. He is at once the best-loved and most underrated of early romantic geniuses.
He was a painstaking, obsessive craftsman, yet his music sounds effortless. The results are often structurally conservative, but ground-breaking in romantic, programmatic content. He was born Jewish and became a convinced Lutheran. And while celebrated far and wide for his compositions, he was equally successful as a conductor and as founder of the Leipzig Conservatory. Indeed, he was probably the 19th century’s closest equivalent to the multitalented, multitasking Leonard Bernstein.
Ask Sir András Schiff why he wanted to create a Mendelssohn series now and the response is a beaming smile. “It’s a love affair,” he says. “He is still so underrated and I feel we have to help. There are composers who are not enough appreciated – Haydn is one, Mendelssohn is another – but these are giants.
“The more I study Mendelssohn, the more I know about him, the more lovable he seems, both as a human being and as a musician. There is so much to admire and to thank him for. For example, we wouldn’t have had a Bach renaissance without him.” Given a manuscript copy of the Bach St Matthew Passion as a gift by his grandmother while he was a teenager, Mendelssohn, aged 20, staged the work’s first public revival since its composer’s death.