, where
Elijah premiered
Elijah was popular at its premiere and has been frequently performed, particularly in English-speaking countries, ever since. It is a particular favourite of amateur choral societies. Its melodrama, easy appeal and stirring choruses have provided the basis for countless successful performances. Prince Albert inscribed a libretto for the oratorio
Elijah in 1847: "To the noble artist who, surrounded by the Baal-worship of false art, has been able, like a second Elijah, through genius and study, to remain true to the service of true art." A number of critics later treated the work harshly, however, emphasizing its conventional outlook and undaring musical style.
Bernard Shaw wrote in 1892: :I sat out the performance on Wednesday to the last note, an act of professional devotion which was no part of my plan for the evening ... You have only to think of
Parsifal, of the
Ninth Symphony, of
Die Zauberflöte, of the inspired moments of Bach and Handel, to see the great gulf that lies between the true religious sentiment and our delight in Mendelssohn's exquisite prettiness. Similarly, after Boston's
Handel and Haydn Society presented the work for the first time in February 1848, its success resulted in eight more performances that spring. In the mid-1920s, however,
H.T. Parker, the city's principal music critic, described how members of the audience gazed upward at a recent performance: "How many of those eyes were there in rapture, or were counting the four dead lights in the central sunburst of the ceiling?....
Elijah is hopelessly, awfully, irremediably mid-Victorian. However, with the widespread re-evaluation of Mendelssohn’s work in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, these critical opinions have largely changed. In his definitive biography of the composer, the musicologist R. Larry Todd wrote that “the oratorio was the crowning achievement of Felix’s career”. And in 2005 critic and musicologist Michael Steinberg described
Elijah as “thrilling to sing” and noted that it “includes some of Mendelssohn’s finest music”. Mendelssohn wrote the
soprano part in
Elijah for the 'Swedish Nightingale',
Jenny Lind, although she was unavailable to sing the Birmingham premiere. In her place, the part was created by
Maria Caterina Rosalbina Caradori-Allan. Lind was devastated by the composer's premature death in 1847. She did not feel able to sing the part for a year afterwards. She resumed singing the piece at
Exeter Hall in London in late 1848, raising £1,000 to fund a scholarship in his name. After
Arthur Sullivan became the first recipient of the
Mendelssohn Scholarship, she encouraged him in his career.
Charles Salaman adapted "He that Shall Endure to the End" from
Elijah as a setting for
Psalm 93 (Adonai Malakh), sung on most Friday nights at the sabbath-eve service of the London
Spanish & Portuguese Jewish community. ==References==