Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel: Complete Solo Piano Works, Vol. 1. Ana-Marija Markovina, piano. Hänssler Classic. $32.99 (4 CDs).
There were few exigencies impinging on Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel’s creative life, but by modern standards her compositional prowess was attenuated both by her gender and, strangely to today’s way of thinking, by her upper-class existence. Strictures associated with the expectations of her well-to-do upbringing seem to have been at least as binding upon her as ones involving her gender, which were certainly present but which did not prevent other highly skilled female musicians of the time, such as Clara Schumann, from developing and managing long, successful careers. Those two women met several times, cordially and with mutual respect, during the last year of Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel’s life, although the class differences between them were substantial. And then there was Felix Mendelssohn, Fanny’s brother and someone to whom she was so close that at various times there have been unjustifiable hints regarding how close they were – suggestions that result from a lack of understanding of familial relations in upper-class households of their time.
Musically, Fanny was at least moderately encouraged by Felix, who arranged for some of her works to be published under his own name to avoid any “unseemly” publication pressures on her; and she was certainly supported by her husband, the artist Wilhelm Hensel, who at one point, in 1841, provided illustrations for Fanny’s piano cycle Das Jahr. Piano works were at the center of Fanny’s music, most of them small-scale and often in the form of the sort of “songs without words” with which Felix is so closely associated. More than one-third of Fanny’s 450 or so compositions – an impressive number – are for piano, and a great many of the piano works have never been recorded before. So it is cause for celebration that Ana-Marija Markovina, who has previously recorded Felix’s complete solo-piano music, has now turned her hand – that is, both her hands – to Fanny’s keyboard oeuvre.
The first of two planned multi-disc releases on the Hänssler Classic label is a revelation and a delight, a success on virtually all levels. Arranged chronologically – a very wise decision – the recording allows listeners not only to hear and enjoy these generally very short pieces on their own, but also to experience Fanny’s growing confidence in her compositional abilities as she develops her own musical voice. Nothing in the 78 tracks on these four CDs – four-and-a-half hours of music in all – is profound; everything justifies Fanny’s self-evaluation to Felix that she “lack[ed] the ability to sustain ideas properly and give them the needed consistency” and was therefore only truly comfortable in brief, self-contained pieces (although her comment actually referred to Lieder, which were her primary focus beyond piano solos).
Nevertheless, the poise and elegance and awareness of keyboard capabilities – and desire to extend them to a certain degree – are everywhere present in these pieces. Fanny, who at age 13 was able to play Bach’s entire Das wohltemperierte Klavier from memory, emerges gradually through these miniatures as a composer with her own ideas and approaches and her own emotional compass – which is finely honed and never indulged in to excess.
Speaking of excess of a different sort, one would do well, before listening to these discs, to consider the single significant flaw in this highly admirable project: Markovina’s use of a highly resonant and resounding Bösendorfer piano, whose full intensity she does not hesitate to produce in the stronger chordal passages of these works. It was not until the 1880s that pianos even had the modern 88 keys, so nothing by Fanny (or Felix) was conceived for such a large and full-sounding instrument – and Markovina’s has an especially strong lower register, which would be highly impressive in appropriate music but which here sometimes overwhelms these rather slight pieces.
Aside from that issue – which is of little importance in the quieter and more delicate portions of the music, in which Markovina carefully keeps her pedaling in check and her touch light (pianos of Fanny and Felix’s time had less key travel) – the playing here is first-rate throughout. There are many, many highlights to be heard in pieces that are frequently labeled simply Klavierstück or Übungstück. On the first CD, catalog numbers H 37 and H 42 are distinctly Bachian, while H 71 connects clearly to Beethoven. The longest work on this disc, at seven-and-a-half minutes, is H 44, labeled Sonatensatz and having a modicum of sonata scale. H 67 is especially bouncy and technically interesting, requiring a particularly light touch, while H 74, a Larghetto in E-flat minor, is the first piece in this collection showing Fanny starting to develop her own voice. Interestingly, the last work on this CD, H 108, has the sort of sound that is sometimes referred to as “Mendelssohnian,” based on Felix’s music.
The second CD in this set contains 17 works, 16 of them in minor keys: in these pieces Fanny is often striving for tinges of melancholy, although scarcely anything deeply emotional or tragic. There are still many echoes of earlier composers present, notably in H 114, labeled Tokkate and very clearly imitative of Bach. This CD includes an actual three-movement sonata, H 128, which is the only major-key work on the disc (in C) but dips repeatedly into minor to make its points. The third CD contains a much larger sonata, Ostersonate, H 235, laid out in four movements; at 26 minutes, it is the longest piece in this set by far. It is not particularly cohesive, but it does show Fanny coming to terms with material on a broader scale. Even more interesting here is H 253, labeled Fantasie, which sounds quite different from everything else on the disc and is exploratory of emotions and techniques in some more-forward-looking ways. By the fourth CD, the extensive use of minor keys diminishes somewhat in favor of tempo indications intended to show what feelings Fanny wants to elicit: agitato, con espressione, con sentimento and more. Some highlights here are H 269, labeled Duett für Tenor und Sopran and indeed sounding like a song without words, and H 294, which is impressively emotive and graceful – although here Markovina’s pounding chords are just too strong and intense for the music’s filigree. But this piece and the two that follow on the CD, H 302 and H 304, certainly show Fanny reaching for wider sweep and scope, and so do other pieces on the disc, such as H 393 – where, again, the very strong chords are a bit too much for the music, but the piece makes its points nicely nevertheless. The final four works on this disc and thus in this collection all carry a designation of Lied and show Fanny thinking in songful terms even when, as here, the vocal element is absent – or rather is “sung” by the piano. Comparisons with Felix’s music are inevitable and serve to show that this brother and sister were in many ways similar in creativity and thought patterns, despite their everyday lives moving in very different directions. It will surely be as fascinating to hear the second volume in Markovina’s comprehensive performance of Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel’s piano works as it is to visit and revisit the works offered in this first, highly welcome and thoroughly enjoyable volume.