100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Other

AoS A: Symphony No.4 - Mendelssohn (Set Work) Revision Notes PDF

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
14
Uploaded on
22-07-2025
Written in
2024/2025

Aesthetic revision notes for the Mendelssohn set work from Area of Study A (The Western Classical Tradition) for Eduqas A-Level Music, based on the textbook and Eduqas analysis of set works










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Document information

Uploaded on
July 22, 2025
Number of pages
14
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Other
Person
Unknown

Content preview

Symphony No. 4
MENDELSSOHN
Movement 1
EXPOSITION (BARS 1-209) Transition (Bars 66-92)
First Subject Section (Bars 1-65) O

This transition begins with an exciting antiphonal
passage, using an oscillating quaver motif as strings
alternate with the rest of the orchestra
&










Horns herald S1, which is an effervescent + acrobatic ↳
The idea is treated sequentially, passing through B
theme, characterised by the oscillating opening major minor (bar 70) + D major (bar 72)
3rd ↳
As the repeated quaver motion settles inviolins, ideas
With a forte chord (pizz. In strings), the first
4


from S1 are heard in the cellos, supported with
movement starts at a pace, progressing with elongated reminders of figure 'x' in oboes + clarinets
memorable short motivic patterns, including arpeggio 4
A return to S1 fanfare motif (figure 'x' in violins in
ideas bar 82 bring a series of smooth phrases, which
O

It is fast, in A major, with a lilting rhythmic character emphasise a subtle harmonic play with major + minor
in 8 time + the accompanying quavers in woodwind + modes, bringing a tonicisation of B major (bar 86),
horns support the Mediterranean flavour suggested in which is dominant preparation for the key of the
the title, sweeping the violin theme along next section
O
The texture at the start of the movement is
homophonic, dominated by the melodic idea + the
accompaniment Second Subject Section (Bars 93-187)
O
The answering melodic phrase in bar 11 descends in
motion with quite a distinctive little couplet idea + the
O

The section begins in the key of E major, though this
tonicisation of E major at bar 17 brings additional shifts to E minor by bar 96
harmonic colour
O

This theme maintains the overall spirit, but achieving a
g
Bar 23 calmness that certainly feels like a welcome contrast
There is a brief moment of hesitation, before flutes,

after the eventful opening subject matter
oboes + horns enter with the fanfare-like motif
O

The first idea is heard piano, with 2 motifs that seem
(figure 'x') of S1 inexorably linked
The wind instruments do not take the material


The motif in clarinets + bassoons, against the
beyond this + after a few repeats, the theme is taken staccato quavers of the violins + violas, with lower
back by violins (arco) + played again, but with the strings punctuating the texture with a quiet rising
ending changed (reminiscent of the little couplet arpeggio
figure)
O

S2a
The texture is busy + the conversational passagework





here feels modulatory

Detached chords in woodwind + brass punctuate this ↳


harmony, above scalic movement in the strings
This leads to 4 bars on the dominant 7th chord,





preparing to resolve to the tonic of A
O

Bars 51 -66

This begins with a repeat of bars 2-10, with additional
timps + enhanced scoring
-




The graceful subject matter is extended over many
The answering phrase has been condensed, although it

bars in all, but not before a second idea is introduced
includes similar harmonic working + the phrase in bar 110, again played by clarinets and bassoons
again concludes in A major

, Symphony No. 4
MENDELSSOHN
Movement 1
Second Subject Section (Bars 93-187) Codetta (Bars 187-209)
(Continued) O

This first time bar is important as this codetta theme
S2b
O
only appears here in this format

It contains fragments of S1 + S2, initially heard in

clarinets + bassoons (in 3rds) + solo oboe, above the
tonic pedal in horns + with lower srings outlining the
bass notes of the perfect cadence in E pizzicato at bar
This idea is still in E major + is probably the more
-




190-191
prominent of the 2 themes ↳
The emphasis on the cadence is reinforced + extended
Clarinets + bassoons hold on to the thematic
-




at 194, as S1 monopolises the melodic content + the
material (which is clearly still based on the first flute + bassoon change the pedal to that of the
subject), until it is transferred to flutes + oboes in dominant (B)
bar 124 ↳
At bar 199, the theme is heard p above a pedal note
This is heard above gentle quaver dialogue in
*
back on E which proves to be, in the first instance +
violins, continued until it is cut off in bar 132 the first time bar, 10 bars of dominant preparation
At that point the full orchestra joins in (pp at
>
-




for the repeat of the exposition section + a return to
first) with an initial reference to the melodic the home key of A major (which actually arrives in the
motif from bar 17, heard above a pedal note of A last bar of the codetta)
for 8 bars O

The second time bar remains on the chord of E major,
The texture reduces to just strings
-



before launching immediately into the development
Note that the V6 chord resolves onto an A major
&
section
chord in bar 141 with a reminder of S1, followed by
the tonicisation of F# minor in bar 143 before
returning to E major
Development (bars 210-368)
The oboes play a legato phrase using similar rhythms
-
First Development Section (Bars 210-284)
+ the section which follows includes imitative O

The thematic material of S2a begins its development at
material with hints of the motifs from S1, a bar 210, prefixed as before with the distinctive quaver
descending stepwise motif + the arpeggaic idea patterning of figure 'y' + is manipulated through
This musical sentence concludes quietly, with the
&
modulation, both contrapuntally + sequentially
dotted crotchet motif fading away O

The rising woodwind phrases are now heard against
This is a sparse texture with just 2 string lines
>
-




staccato triplets in violin 1 + the music moves through
as the cello echoes the descending line of violin 1
O

A minor (bar 217) + D minor (bar 220) + the texture
O

Bar 158 reduces eventually to a single line, fading away again

A pp solo clarinet reminds us again of S1 with staccato quavers in violins 1, before the next
Augmented, gradually to be joined by the rest of the
-




surprise
orchestra O

Bar 225

Note the low pedal G# for first violins + cellos here ↳
A new melody is introduced
It is 7 bars, not quite the lowest note for the A dance-like 'capricious' motif that never develops
-



-




instrument beyond the initial four bars
&

At bar 171, S1 is repeated with renewed vigour played ↳
S3
tutti + ff

This ends with a perfect cadence in E major (bar -




182-183), followed by 4 bars on the chord of E major,
with figure 'x' from S1 in the violins above a
descending arpeggio movement in low strings O

Bar 229

S3 begins on an E major chord, first inversion played
by violins only
This acts as a dominant to A minor, bar 230 in root
-




position (perfect cadence + tonicisation of that
key)
£10.49
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
xinfeiandrew

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
xinfeiandrew
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1
Member since
4 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
13
Last sold
1 month ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions