Tag: Leonard Bernstein

  • Nadia Boulanger Influential Teacher

    Nadia Boulanger Influential Teacher

    Nadia Boulanger (1887-1979) has been described as the most influential teacher since Socrates.

    Her students included everyone from Dinu Lipatti to Igor Markevitch, from Aaron Copland to Elliott Carter, from Astor Piazzolla to Philip Glass, from Michel Legrand to Quincy Jones, from Leonard Bernstein to “What Makes It Great?” creator Rob Kapilow.

    Her influence on American music, in particular, has been incalculable. Hopefuls flocked to her American Conservatory at Fontainebleau, where she accepted applicants from all backgrounds, provided they were determined to learn. It was Virgil Thomson who quipped, “She was a one-woman graduate school, so powerful and permeating that legend credits every United States town with two things: a five and dime and a Boulanger pupil.” The five and dimes may have faded, but not so the legacy of the “Boulangerie.”

    Beneath those grey hairs and pince-nez lurked an iron will that brooked no nonsense, yet Boulanger was surprisingly accepting, astonishingly objective, and generally dead-on in her assessments. When asked if a hierarchy could be established among composers – Beethoven being more important than Max Bruch, for instance – she suggests the pointlessness of such comparisons, stating it is like comparing the Himalayas to Montmartre.

    She accepted the philosophical breadth of her pupils as a matter of course: “It’s very different to confront a work you don’t know yet, or a work in which you have to recognize some worth, while secretly saying to yourself, ‘that’s a trend I would never follow.’ That’s a matter of personal taste. Cannot culture allow us to go beyond personal taste and see the beauty of an object? I may not want to buy it, but I can see that it’s beautiful.”

    We need more of that in our world. Happy birthday, Nadia Boulanger!


    Fascinating Boulanger documentary, with first-hand accounts, historical footage, and terrific insights. Leonard Bernstein is interviewed in French, beginning around the 7-minute mark.

    Boulanger conducts Fauré’s Requiem

    Her sister, Lili, was really the composer in the family. (Sadly short-lived, she died at the age of 24.) Even so, Nadia made some game attempts at composition. Here’s her own “Fantaisie variée” for piano and orchestra.

    Three Pieces for Cello and Piano

    Playing Brahms waltzes with Dinu Lipatti

  • Bernstein’s Waterfront A Hollywood Contender

    Bernstein’s Waterfront A Hollywood Contender

    “I coulda had class. I coulda been a contender. I coulda been somebody – instead of a bum, which is what I am.”

    We’ve all had those kinds of days, haven’t we?

    Yet Leonard Bernstein’s score for “On the Waterfront” (1954) was always a contender, even if at times the composer found himself on the ropes.

    “On the Waterfront” was the only original film score composed by Bernstein (the screen adaptations of his stage musicals were adapted by other hands). Narrative film, of course, is a collaborative effort, in which music is usually the last to the table and the first to go. Bernstein’s score was edited and dialed down to suit the overall needs of the film.

    Unused to such rough treatment, Bernstein found his brush with Hollywood to be dispiriting, to say the least. He arranged his music into a concert suite, over which he had complete control, and the work has gone on to become one of his better-known pieces. That said, what can be heard in the film remains a powerful statement, and one of the great film scores.

    The original recordings, as they appear in the film, were long believed to have been lost. However, in the course of restoration of “On the Waterfront” for release on BluRay, it was discovered that audio had been preserved on acetate discs used for playback during the original recording sessions. Material from these were issued for the first time in 2014, on the Intrada label.

    Bernstein’s music would be nominated for an Academy Award, one of twelve total nominations for the film. “On the Waterfront” would win in eight categories, including Best Picture, Best Actor (Marlon Brando), and Best Director (Elia Kazan). Bernstein may have lost out to Dimitri Tiomkin for his work on “The High and the Mighty.” However, like Brando’s Terry Malloy, his score to “On the Waterfront” proves itself a champion.

    We’ll hear selections, alongside some of Aaron Copland’s music for “The Red Pony” (1949), once again, from the film’s original elements; dances from the only film score ever to be awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Music, “Louisiana Story” (1948), by Virgil Thomson; and the music that lends “Picture Perfect” its signature tune, “They Came to Cordura” (1959), by Elie Siegmeister.

    It’s an hour of New York composers in Hollywood this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EDT/8:00 AM PDT

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Bernstein Conducts Martinů Unearthed Recording

    Bernstein Conducts Martinů Unearthed Recording

    On Leonard Bernstein’s birthday, in line with all the Martinů posts that have appeared on this page over the past weeks, I’m sharing a link to this live concert performance from 1963 – unearthed by my most recent Bard Music Festival acquaintance, Mather Pfeiffenberger – of Bernstein conducting Martinů’s Concerto for String Quartet and Orchestra, featuring the Juilliard String Quartet. This is a work Bernstein never recorded commercially. How cool is that?

    The program and notes have been archived on the New York Philharmonic website. The concert also included Peter Mennin’s “Concertato for Orchestra: Moby Dick.”

    https://archives.nyphil.org/index.php/artifact/2ebe7228-160e-4bb2-81e4-4173bc3aec7d-0.1/fullview#page/1/mode/2up

    Bernstein took a master class with Martinů at Tanglewood in 1942.

    Martinů not your bag? In 1965, Bernstein reunited with the Juilliard Quartet, this time as pianist, for my favorite recording of Schumann’s Piano Quintet in E-flat Major.

    Happy birthday, Leonard Bernstein!


    PHOTOS (clockwise from left): Signed photo of Bohuslav Martinů; Bernstein recording at the piano; Julliard String Quartet in 1962

  • Bernstein and Dvořák’s Graceful Exits

    Bernstein and Dvořák’s Graceful Exits

    With summer winding down and Leonard Bernstein’s birthday right around the corner (on August 25), this week on “The Lost Chord,” I thought it would be a good time to enjoy a program of valedictory works by two complementary composers.

    Bernstein’s autobiographical “Arias and Barcarolles” (1988) was winnowed from its original conception for four singers to a leaner combination of mezzo-soprano, baritone, and piano duet. The texts of the eight-movement song cycle, personal reflections on the nature of familial love, in all its layered harmonies and discords, are mostly by Bernstein himself. One of them, “Little Smary,” is a bedtime story his mother told him when he was a child. Others are propelled by witty repartee and amusing inside jokes.

    The title is taken from a humorous episode Bernstein liked to recount, stemming from a meeting with President Eisenhower in 1960. After a performance at the White House, Eisenhower remarked, “I liked that last piece you played. It’s got a theme. I like music with a theme, not all them arias and barcarolles.”

    The work was subsequently orchestrated, with the composer’s consent, by Bright Sheng, but personally, I think it works much better in this earlier form. It’s nimbler and more intimate, and the words land more cleanly.

    Another composer whose influence on American music was incalculable was Antonin Dvořák. While director of the National Conservatory of Music in New York from 1892 to 1895, the revered Czech master was impressed by the character and individuality of what he heard all around him as only an outsider could be. He became intoxicated with the sounds of a diverse, vibrant culture, and was astonished that few had noticed what was so clearly evident – that the foundation of a nationally-identifiable school of music was not be achieved in emulating European models, but rather in assimilating the great American melting pot, through folk song, Native American elements, and especially what was then termed Negro spirituals. He led by example, composing works such as the “American” String Quartet and the “New World” Symphony.

    Following his academic and administrative sojourn, Dvořák returned to Bohemia, where in his later years, he focused on opera and symphonic poems based on some astonishingly dark fairy tales. An exception was his final orchestral utterance, “A Hero’s Song” (1897). Admittedly, there is a somewhat sobering, somber interlude at its core, but this only serves to emphasize the swaggering exuberance of the 22-minute work’s outer, swashbuckling sections. It’s astonishing and gratifying to hear Dvořák go out in such a blaze of glory!

    I hope you’ll join me for “Graceful Exits” – final works of Bernstein and Dvořák – on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EDT/8:00 AM PDT

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/


    PHOTOS: Dvořák receiving an honorary doctorate from Cambridge in 1891 (left); Bernstein letting it all hang out in Fairfield, CT, in 1988

  • Stravinsky’s Rite vs Delius’ Cuckoo for Spring

    Stravinsky’s Rite vs Delius’ Cuckoo for Spring

    March 20.

    Delius’ “On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring” is all well and good, but in this month notorious for its whiplash caprice, Leonard Bernstein conducting Stravinsky’s “Le sacre du printemps” is perhaps a better, if not safer, bet.

    Then again, from that photo, perhaps the cuckoo is not to be undersold…

    Here’s Bernstein, captured in his prime, conducting Stravinsky’s primal masterpiece without a score.

    Happy spring?

    Perhaps you prefer to decompress with Delius’ romanticized cuckoo.

    Both works were first performed in 1913!

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