
Mendelssohn - The Prophet
Conductor Charles Hazlewood looks at great composers. How the music of Mendelssohn embodies the Victorian age, and how he pioneered the conductor's baton.
Conductor Charles Hazlewood explores the lives, times and music of great composers. In the final programme in the series, he looks at Mendelssohn, whose music embodies the sound of the Victorian age. A friend of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, Mendelssohn made ten visits to Britain and his work appealed strongly to British tastes.
Mendelssohn's melodies such as O for the Wings of a Dove and Hark! the Herald Angels Sing became hugely popular and his astonishing overture to A Midsummer Night's Dream perfectly captured the Victorians' fondness for Shakespeare and fairy stories. He portrayed the grandeur of Scotland through a romanticism shared with poets such as Keats and Wordsworth, and captured the public imagination with his pioneering use of a new conductor's tool - the baton.
Charles's journey includes a stormy boat trip to Fingal's Cave and a visit to a chocolate factory, as well as a trip to the recently restored Birmingham Town Hall, where a massed choir comprising choral groups from across the West Midlands is brought together with the BBC Concert Orchestra and soloist Andrew Shore to perform extracts from Mendelssohn's iconic work Elijah.
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Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Charles Hazlewood |
| Series Producer | Helen Mansfield |
| Director | Francesca Kemp |
Broadcasts
- Sat 30 May 200919:30BBC Two except Wales & Yorkshire
Mon 1 Jun 200920:00BBC HD- Sat 6 Jun 200918:45BBC Two Wales (Analogue)
- Sat 6 Jun 200920:00BBC Two Wales
Sat 15 Aug 200922:15BBC HD- Fri 16 Jul 201020:00
- Sat 17 Jul 201001:50
Sat 11 Sep 201022:40BBC HD- Sun 21 May 201719:00
- Sun 13 Mar 202219:00
- Mon 14 Mar 202201:30
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