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Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 3, Scottish

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🎵 Buy the MP3 album on the Halidon Music Store: 🎧 Listen to our playlist on Spotify: These recordings are available for sync licensing in web video productions, corporate videos, films, ads and music compilations. For further information and licensing please contact info@ 👉 The HalidonMusic Sync Licensing platform is now live at 📧 Subscribe to our newsletter and get a 20% discount for 10 days: ☕ If you like what we do and would like to support us, you can now buy us a coffee: Donations will go towards keeping the YouTube channel going and funding new recording sessions with our amazing team of artists. Thank you! 🙏 Felix Mendelssohn Symphony No. 3, Op. 56 “Scottish“ 00:00 I. Introduction. Andante con moto; Allegro un poco agitato 12:30 II. Scherzo. Vivace non troppo 16:55 III. Adagio 26:41 IV. Finale guerriero. Allegro vivacissimo; Allegro maestoso assai Performed by Budapest Scoring Symphonic Orchestra Conductor: Peter Illenyi The Symphony No. 3 in A minor, Op. 56, MWV N 18, known as the Scottish, is a symphony by Felix Mendelssohn, composed between 1829 and 1842. Mendelssohn was initially inspired to compose this symphony during his first visit to Britain in 1829. After a series of successful performances in London, Mendelssohn embarked on a walking tour of Scotland with a friend. On 30 July, Mendelssohn visited the ruins of Holyrood Chapel at Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh, where, as he related to his family in a letter, he received his initial inspiration for the piece. Mendelssohn continued to work on his initial sketches of what would become Symphony No. 3 while touring Italy. However, he struggled to make progress, and after 1831 set the piece aside. It is not known exactly when Mendelssohn resumed work on the symphony but he was certainly working in earnest on the piece by 1841 and completed the symphony in Berlin on 20 January 1842. Intriguingly, despite describing the work as his ’Scottish Symphony’ to his family in 1829, by the time the work was published in 1842 Mendelssohn never publicly called attention to the symphony’s Scottish inspiration. Ever since the Scottish provenance became known following the composer’s death, however, audiences have found it hard not to hear the piece as evoking the wild Romantic landscapes of the north. (Source: Wikipedia) © All rights reserved.

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