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Fanny Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (1805-1847), like her younger brother
Felix, demonstrated prodigious musical talent as a child. In their
youth, Fanny and Felix were inseparable friends; they encouraged
each other, collaborated in musical endeavors, and received the
same education and training from distinguished tutors. But as an
adolescent, Fanny was told by her father that her role as a woman
was to concern herself with her home and that music could be only
secondary, even though she had become a remarkable pianist and
composer. She married Wilhelm Hensel, a respected portrait painter
who encouraged her musical talents. Fulfilling her domestic role as
wife and as mother of their son, Sebastian, she continued to
compose - principally lieder - and to organize concerts in her home
that became an integral part of the Berlin musical scene. Her
talents were warmly received during a journey to Italy,
particularly by Gounod, who heard her play from memory the music of
Bach, Beethoven, and Mendelssohn. At forty years of age Fanny
finally went against the orders of her father and of Felix and
published her compositions. She had just begun to receive critical
praise when she died suddenly at the age of forty-two. Her death
was a devastating blow to Felix, who survived her by barely six
months. This book, originally published in French in 1992, is the
first and only authoritative biography of Fanny Mendelssohn and
contains a complete list of her published compositions. Set against
the backdrop of a privileged life in Berlin in the early nineteenth
century, Francoise Tillard's vivid portrait describes an
exceptional artist - she left behind four hundred works - who could
have held her own among thegreatest if she had not been prohibited
from venturing into the professional world.
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