Tag: Leonard Bernstein

  • Bernstein Blitzstein Airborne Symphony

    Bernstein Blitzstein Airborne Symphony

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” to coincide with what would have been the 101st birthday of Leonard Bernstein, we’ll do our part in helping to wrap up the two-year, worldwide celebration of the Lenny centenary with, if not the most profound of his recordings, then surely one of the more unusual.

    Bernstein was a lifelong admirer of the Philadelphia-born composer Marc Blitzstein. He mounted a performance of Blitzstein’s notorious pro-labor musical, “The Cradle Will Rock,” while still at student at Harvard. He also dedicated his own opera, “Trouble in Tahiti” to him.

    Blitzstein’s “Airborne Symphony” was written on a commission from the U.S. Army while the composer was serving in its Air Force. The work traces the evolution of flight from its conception in theory to its use in modern warfare. The piece was envisaged by him as a big symphony on the theme of “the sacred struggle of airborne free men of the world… to crush the monstrous fascist obstructionist in their path.”

    Blitzstein began the work in 1943, at the height of World War II. It would not be completed until after the war, in 1946. Bernstein conducted the premiere virtually while the ink was still wet on the page. He recorded the piece twice. We’ll hear the second of the two recordings, from 1966, with Orson Welles as narrator, vocal soloists, the New York Philharmonic, and the men of the Choral Arts Society.

    I hope you’ll join me in celebrating Bernstein and Blitzstein – wrapping up the Bernstein centenary – on “Flight of Fancy,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Bernstein sings Blitzstein’s “Zipperfly”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VixrUZOppdI

  • Copland Bernstein Foss Fine Discuss American Music

    Copland Bernstein Foss Fine Discuss American Music

    I found this the other day, on Aaron Copland’s birthday, but I thought I would save it for the weekend, when you might have time to actually listen to it. It’s a fascinating document of four insanely talented composers – Copland, Leonard Bernstein, Lukas Foss, and Irving Fine – gathered around a piano and engaged in a bull session about the state of American music.

    https://www.wnyc.org/story/217199-what-american-music/


    PHOTOS: (top) Foss and Bernstein; (bottom) Copland and Fine

  • Happy Birthday Charles Ives A Musical Celebration

    Happy Birthday Charles Ives A Musical Celebration

    Happy birthday, Charles Ives!


    Ives’ “Hallowe’en” for string quartet and piano (though I miss the big drum):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NVnU4t5hMI4

    Leonard Bernstein on the Symphony No. 2:

    My preferred recording of the symphony, so beautiful (though not always entirely accurate, in regard to Ives’ intentions), with Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic in 1960.

    The Yale-Princeton Football Game:

    Ives sings!

  • My First Bernstein Record

    My First Bernstein Record

    Do you remember your first Bernstein record? Mine was this LP of famous overtures, including “William Tell” and “Poet and Peasant” – great cartoon music! It was sent home with me by my uncle at the end of a Saturday visit, after I picked it out of his collection and listened to it transfixed through his headphones.

    My uncle was an audio nut. Until my cousins were born, he was constantly upgrading his system. He always had the latest equipment. You’d think he’d be a natural candidate for a classical music lover – Richard Strauss or Shostakovich would have given his system a hell of a work-out – but he wasn’t. He was into classic rock before it became “classic.” The fact that he even had Bernstein in his collection demonstrates just how remarkable and pervasive Lenny was. He was the people’s conductor.

    My uncle loves “Rhapsody in Blue.” He’s got many recordings – even one made on a Moog synthesizer – but Bernstein’s remains his favorite.

    The overtures LP was one of my first classical records. Who knew where it would lead?

  • Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms on Musical Saw

    Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms on Musical Saw

    Now here’s something you don’t hear every day: a selection from Leonard Bernstein’s “Chichester Psalms,” played at Bernstein’s grave on the MUSICAL SAW.

    Natalia ‘Saw Lady’ Paruz – musical saw player shared this video on WWFM’s Facebook page yesterday afternoon, in celebration of “Uncle Lenny” for the 100th anniversary of his birth. Bernstein was born on this date in 1918.

    We’re still soliciting listener anecdotes and observations. Our hosts will be happy to share your Bernstein-related thoughts over the air, interspersed with classic Bernstein recordings, right up until 5:00 p.m. today. Send your Lenny stories to WWFM via the station’s Facebook page at WWFM – The Classical Network or by email at info@wwfm.org. Make sure to type “Bernstein” in the subject line.

    Sure, playing Bernstein on the musical saw is quixotic, but who knew it would be so beautiful?

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