Octet for Strings in E-flat Major, Op. 20, musical composition for four violins, two violas, and two cellos (or, two string quartets) by German composer Felix Mendelssohn, remarkable for the fluidity of its melodies and for the delicate balance of its various parts. Written in 1825, when the composer was only 16 years old, the piece likely premiered at one of the home concerts of the Mendelssohn family. Mendelssohn dedicated the work to his friend, violinist Eduard Rietz, on the occasion of Rietz’s 23rd birthday.
Alternately symphonic and intimate, the piece begins with a graceful allegro that soars with the principal violin and then proceeds to a gently thoughtful second movement. The mysterious third-movement scherzo, according to the composer’s sister Fanny Mendelssohn, evokes a particular ghostly vision from the pages of Goethe’s Faust. The final movement begins with a bustling fugue, a technique learned from the young composer’s extensive studies of Bach, and concludes in a mood of exuberance. Throughout the work, each of the eight instruments is used somewhat differently to achieve maximum musical contrast within an overall context of sonic equilibrium.
The octet has remained a favourite of string players, chamber-music lovers, and general audiences alike. Even the composer himself regarded it highly: he described the octet as “my favourite of all my compositions” and added, “I had a most wonderful time in the writing of it!”