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Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 4, Italian

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🎵 Buy the MP3 album on the Official Halidon Music Store: 🎧 Listen to our playlist on Spotify: 🛍️Visit the Halidon shop on Amazon: 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 on the Halidon Music Store: ☕ 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. 4 in A Major, Op. 90 “Italian Symphony“ Performed by Budapest Scoring Symphonic Orchestra Conductor: Peter Illenyi 0:00:00 I. Allegro vivace 0:07:15 II. Andante con moto 0:13:33 III. Con moto modesto 0:20:24 IV. Saltarello The Symphony No. 4 in A major, Op. Posth. 90, commonly known as the Italian, is an orchestral symphony written by German composer Felix Mendelssohn. The work has its origins in the tour of Europe which occupied Mendelssohn from 1829 to 1831. Its inspiration is the colour and atmosphere of Italy, where Mendelssohn made sketches but left the work incomplete. Mendelssohn completed the symphony in Berlin on 13 March 1833, in response to an invitation for a symphony from the London (now Royal) Philharmonic Society. He conducted the first performance himself in London on 13 May 1833 at a London Philharmonic Society concert. The symphony was first performed in the United States by the Germania Musical Society, Carl Bergmann conducting, at Boston on 1 November 1851. Mendelssohn himself, however, remained dissatisfied with the symphony. He completed revisions to the work, particularly the last 3 movements, in July 1834. However, he never published the symphony during his lifetime. The symphony was published in 1851, in the original version given at the May 1833 premiere. The published 1851 version is the standard edition performed generally by symphony orchestras. © All rights reserved. #mendelssohn #classicalmusic

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