The symphony is in four movements: A typical performance lasts about 33 minutes.
I. Andante – Allegro con fuoco : During the slow introduction, Mendelssohn cites the "
Dresden Amen" on the strings. Mendelssohn's version of the "Dresden Amen" is as follows: : (The "Dresden Amen" was also adapted by
Richard Wagner as the "Grail"
leitmotif in his 1882 opera
Parsifal or by
Anton Bruckner in the finale of his
Fifth Symphony and the adagio of the
Ninth.) The strings are interrupted by battle-cries from the
brass section as follows: The "Dresden Amen" soon reappears on the strings and the
Allegro con fuoco section, which is in
sonata form, then begins. It opens as follows: :
II. Allegro vivace The second movement, a B major
scherzo, is very different in spirit from the first movement, being much lighter in tone. :
III. Andante The third movement, in G minor, is a lyrical piece primarily for the strings. The movement begins with a melodic quote from the traditional Jewish or hassidic tune Hevenu Shalom Aleichem ("We brought peace upon you") and is repeated throughout. There are references to the "Dresden Amen", and, at the movement's end, to the second theme of the first movement.
IV. Andante con moto – Allegro vivace – Allegro maestoso " The fourth movement is based on
Martin Luther's
chorale "
Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott" ("A mighty fortress is our God"). It is in
sonata form and is mostly in
time. There are a few unmarked
meter changes to to fit the meter of the original chorale. At the very end of the
coda, a powerful version of Martin Luther's chorale is played by the entire orchestra. : ==Notes==