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Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage

Composer: Mendelssohn Felix

Instruments: Orchestra

Tags: Overture

#Parts
#Arrangements

Download free scores:

Complete Score PDF 4 MBComplete Score PDF 3 MBComplete Score PDF 10 MB
Complete Score PDF 64 MB
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Complete Score PDF 4 MB

Parts for:

Orchestra
AllViolinViolaTrumpetTimpaniPiccoloOboeFrench hornFluteContrabassoonClarinetCello

Arrangements:

Orchestra Solo:

(Leopold Weninger)

Other

Piano four hands (Kogel, Gustav Friedrich) Piano(2) (Hermann, Friedrich) French horn + Piano (Horn, August) Piano + Violin (Johannes N. Rauch)
Wikipedia
Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage (Meeresstille und glückliche Fahrt), Op. 27, is an orchestral concert overture by Felix Mendelssohn inspired by the same verses that inspired Beethoven's 1815 cantata of the same title (and indeed inspired by Beethoven's version, which is in the same key, D major). Mendelssohn's work was first performed on 7 September 1828 in Berlin.
The titles of Goethe's two poems are not synonymous: in the days before steam, a totally calm sea was cause for alarm; it is only when the wind at last rises that the ship can continue on its journey. Mendelssohn's version concludes with a fanfare of trumpets suggesting the ship's final arrival at its port of destination.
Scored for piccolo, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, double bassoon, serpent, 2 horns, 3 trumpets, timpani and strings, the piece is programmatic for its reference of the two poems by Goethe. These two poems were extremely popular, and at the time of the premiere, Mendelssohn could have assumed that the audience would have been familiar with both poems and able to follow the programme of the music with minimal aid. The work is a concert overture - meaning that it is not intended as a prelude to a larger work such as an opera (as 'overture', deriving from the French for 'opening', more often implies). Instead, the piece is performed as an independent piece in a symphonic concert. The term overture here refers to the use of melody and form. However, it could also be considered as an early form of tone poem.
Edward Elgar quotes a theme from the overture in the 13th variation of his Enigma Variations to represent one of his "friends pictured within" on a ship bound for Australia or New Zealand.