Tag: Leonard Bernstein

  • Focus Like Mahler Build a Composing Hut

    Focus Like Mahler Build a Composing Hut

    Have a hard time focusing? Can’t seem to get your work done? Get yourself a composing hut!

    Grieg had one. Mahler had several. Perhaps niftiest of all, George Bernard Shaw had a writer’s hut, which he could rotate with the sun.

    Yessiree. Get yourself a hut.

    Also, stay off the internet.

    Happy birthday, Gustav Mahler! Thank you for your productivity.

    Here’s a private video tour of Mahler’s Komponierhäuschen in Toblach, where he composed his 9th Symphony:

    And Leonard Bernstein conducting the 9th:

    PHOTOS: Huts belonging to Grieg (red), Shaw (pictured), and two used by Mahler

  • Carl Nielsen: An Underrated Genius?

    Carl Nielsen: An Underrated Genius?

    Yesterday, I inadvertently committed a crime against Danish music by ignoring the birthday anniversary of Carl Nielsen. Far from being a simple Sibelius knock-off, Nielsen forged his own, immediately-recognizable style – which can’t always be said with as much conviction about a lot of other fin de siècle Scandinavian music. Not that I don’t love the stuff.

    Leonard Bernstein believed Nielsen’s rightful place was as Sibelius’ equal.

    “I think many people are in for pleasant surprises as they get to know Nielsen,” he said at a centennial celebration of the composer’s birth, “his rough charm, his swing, his drive, his rhythmic surprises, his strange power of harmonic and tonal relationships – and especially his constant unpredictability – all these are irresistible. I feel confident that Nielsen’s time has come.”

    That was in 1965. Yet, fifty years on, with many more recordings and performances to choose from, Nielsen continues stubbornly to be an acquired taste.

    What’s not to like? There’s struggle in the music and harmonic ambiguity – key relationships don’t always play out the way you expect they should (they don’t always in life, either, so why should they in music?) – there is conflict and violence, anxiety, but also great beauty and even humor. At its core and at the end of the journey, there is, for me, an optimism in much of Nielsen’s output, a love for life, a belief that there is indeed, as the subtitle of his Fourth Symphony professes, something inextinguishable in all of us, that I find inspiring.

    A tip of the blond brush cut to Carl Nielsen. Happy belated birthday!

  • Blitzstein’s Airborne Symphony on The Lost Chord

    Blitzstein’s Airborne Symphony on The Lost Chord

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll highlight a single work: Marc Blitzstein’s “Airborne Symphony.” Commissioned by the U.S. Army, while Blitzstein 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 work was envisaged by the composer 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. Leonard Bernstein conducted the premiere virtually while the ink was still wet on the page. He recorded it twice. We’ll be listening to the second of the two recordings, from 1966. It features Orson Welles as the narrator, and vocal soloists with the New York Philharmonic and men of the Choral Arts Society.

    Join me for this forgotten relic of WWII. It’s “Flight of Fancy” this week on “The Lost Chord.” You can hear it tonight at 10 ET, with a repeat Thursday night at 11, or listen to it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

    PHOTO: Blitzstein (standing) with Bernstein

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