Overture Magazine 2013-2014 May-June 2014 | Page 31

Program Notes } A charming choral song, “Ye spotted snakes,” is the fairies’ lullaby to their queen Titania. The magnitude of Mendelssohn’s achievement is even more astonishing when we realize that, while the incidental music was composed when the composer was 34, the overture—one of the bestloved curtain raisers ever penned—comes from 1826 when he was only 17. Even Mozart had not composed anything on this level of artistic originality and technical mastery at such a tender age. Mendelssohn was truly a golden child, blessed with brains and prodigious talent, and a near-ideal environment in which to cultivate them. His grandfather, Moses Mendelssohn, had risen from poverty to become an esteemed philosopher; his father, Abraham, was one of Germany’s leading bankers and had made the family fortune. Both of Felix’s parents were highly educated people and were determined that their offspring would realize their full potential. The four children, all bright and eager students, were given the finest tutors and books. As Felix’s musical genius hatched, he was able to spread his wings into all the areas that distinguished his adult career. Sunday afternoon musicales at the Mendelssohn household drew a crowd of Berlin’s artistic elite, and featured the youngster as impresario (planning the concert programs), piano soloist, conductor (the Mendelssohns sometimes hired a full professional orchestra), and composer. In 1825 when the family moved to a grand estate on Berlin’s Leipzigerstrasse, they converted the summerhouse in the garden into an auditorium seating more than 200. It was there, probably in the summer or early fall of 1826, that the 17-year-old prodigy premiered his Midsumme