Tag: Music Pedagogy

  • Nadia Boulanger: Celebrating the Legendary Teacher

    Nadia Boulanger: Celebrating the Legendary Teacher

    Nadia Boulanger, the grande dame of 20th century music, was born on this date in 1887.

    Widely considered to have been the greatest musical pedagogue who ever lived, she was especially instrumental to the development of American composition. Hopefuls flocked to the American Conservatory at Fontainebleau, France, where she accepted applicants from all backgrounds. Her only stipulation was that they be 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.

    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 (unofficially) to “What Makes It Great?” radio host Rob Kapilow.

    Here’s what a few of those who benefited from her tutelage have to say about their experiences with her.

    Quincy Jones

    Harold Shapero

    Elliot Carter

    Elliot Carter and Ned Rorem

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

    There’s a live recording of Mme Boulanger conducting the Requiem of her teacher, Gabriel Fauré, from 1968 that’s circulated on various labels, with the BBC Chorus and BBC Symphony Orchestra. However, this performance too, with the Choral Art Society and the New York Philharmonic, is quite lovely, captured in Carnegie Hall in 1962.

    Nadia’s early ambition was to become a composer herself. However, she soon acknowledged that her sister, Lili, was the true talent in this regard and devoted her life to teaching. Sadly, Lili died of Crohn’s Disease at the age of only 24.

    Here’s Nadia’s own “Fantaisie variée” for piano and orchestra from 1912, written when she was 25.

    And an earlier work, “Cantique” from 1909

    Boulanger died in 1979 at the age of 92.

    Joyeux anniversaire… et merci!

  • Seymour Bernstein at 95 Piano Legend

    Seymour Bernstein at 95 Piano Legend

    Born and raised in Newark, NJ, Seymour Bernstein has basically been teaching piano for 80 years, ever since his own teacher, Clara Husserl – herself a pupil of Theodor Leschetizky – delegated the supervision of some of her more gifted younger pupils to him when he was 15. Today, Bernstein continues to teach and enlighten, with 95 years of accumulated wit and wisdom.

    Also contributing to his own education were celebrated pianists Alexander Brailowsky, Clifford Curzon, and Jan Gorbaty, legendary pedagogue Nadia Boulanger, and master of all trades George Enescu.

    As a soloist, Bernstein gave the world premiere of Heitor Villa-Lobos’ Piano Concerto No. 2 with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 1969. Even at the height of his career as a performer, he taught, conducting master classes in Europe, Asia, and the Americas. He abandoned the concert stage at the age of 50, opting instead for the quieter satisfactions of teaching and composing. He intimated to no one that his final concert, in 1977, would be his swan song.

    Today, he maintains a private studio in New York City and is an adjunct professor at New York University. His books include “With Your Own Two Hands: Self-Discovery Through Music,” “20 Lessons in Keyboard Choreography,” “Monsters and Angels: Surviving a Career in Music,” and “Chopin: Interpreting His Notational Symbols.”

    Warm and funny, dry, opinionated, and always full of insight, Bernstein is a larger-than-life character whose philosophy of musicmaking is always rooted in the heart. Don’t let that grandfatherly exterior lull you. Bernstein remains as sharp as C-sharp major.

    In 2015, a documentary was released, “Seymour: An Introduction,” directed by Princeton’s Ethan Hawke. (If you’re a Salinger fan, you’ll doubly appreciate the title.) The film has a 100-percent fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes. You can watch the trailer here.

    A Bernstein interview at the age of 90 on “Living the Classical Life”

    There are also hours of fascinating videos on the YouTube channel “tonebase PIANO.” In this one, Bernstein dismantles Glenn Gould’s Mozart.

    Bernstein plays Brahms

    At 19, playing Liszt’s “Mephisto Waltz No. 1”

    Happy 95th birthday, Seymour Bernstein!

  • Nadia Boulanger Birthday & Legacy

    Nadia Boulanger Birthday & Legacy

    September is really a banner month for female composers. Amy Beach (9/5), Isabella Leonarda (9/6), Joan Tower (9/6), Clara Schumann (9/13), Francesca Caccini (9/18), Vivian Fine (9/28), and who knows how many others, were all born in September. But you’d have to go a long way, in terms of the influence of women on music, to beat today, the anniversary of the birth of Nadia Boulanger.

    Nadia Boulanger’s strong will, infallible objectivity, and blunt assessments made her perhaps the greatest – certainly the most influential – musical pedagogue of the 20th century.

    Her influence on American music, in particular, is incalculable. She taught composers from Aaron Copland and Virgil Thomson to Philip Glass and even Rob Kapilow. It was 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.”

    Hopefuls flocked to her American Conservatory at Fontainebleau, where she accepted applicants from all backgrounds, provided they were determined to learn. When some failed to show up for their lessons during the Stavisky Riots of 1934, as demonstrators were being shot in the Place de la Concorde, she remarked dismissively that they didn’t take music seriously enough.

    Her methods engendered surprising loyalty and affection in those she taught. In certain respects, she could be quite conservative, drilling her students in the “Well-Tempered Clavier,” rejecting the dodecaphony of Schoenberg and his followers, and displaying all the sartorial splendor of Whistler’s mother.

    However, dodecaphony aside, she was accepting – perhaps astonishingly so – of a broad panoply of styles. She was unusually generous to students who displayed innate talent, and she nurtured their individuality. It’s to be remembered that among her pupils were Astor Piazzolla, Quincy Jones, and Michel Legrand.

    As a woman, she was a first in many respects, not only as a teacher, but as conductor and a performer. She was the first woman to conduct the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic (at Carnegie Hall), the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the National Symphony Orchestra. Even during the Cold War, she was welcomed everywhere. She was invited to the White House by the Kennedys and to Moscow to jury the International Tchaikovsky Competition.

    Curiously, her own views on women’s rights were about as current as her manner of dress. Though she performed on a couple of concerts in support of women’s equality in the early 1920s, she expressed bitter disappointment whenever a female student dropped out of school to get married. Those who did complete their studies included such important figures as Grazyna Bacewicz, Louise Talma, and Thea Musgrave.

    Later in life Boulanger came down hard in opposition to “feminism,” going so far as to state that women should not have the right to vote, because they lacked the necessary political sophistication. That was in the 1970s! A complex and outspoken personality, to be sure.

    But her actions belie her words. Beneath those grey hairs and pince-nez lurked an iron will that brooked no nonsense and recognized no impediments.

    Join me this afternoon for music and music-making by a mere handful of Boulanger’s hundreds of notable pupils, including composer and conductor Igor Markevitch, pianist Dinu Lipatti, and her exceptionally gifted sister, the sadly short-lived Lili Boulanger.

    We’ll hear Nadia Boulanger as pianist and conductor. We’ll also hear two works premiered by her. When Igor Stravinsky was sidelined with tuberculosis, she conducted the first performance of his “Dumbarton Oaks Concerto.” She was also the soloist for the first performances of Aaron Copland’s “Symphony for Organ and Orchestra,” a work about which the conductor, Walter Damrosch, famously – and one hopes facetiously – remarked, “If a gifted young man can write a symphony like that at the age of 23, within five years he will be ready to commit murder.”

    Boulanger has been described as the most influential teacher since Socrates. The Boulangerie will be baking overtime today, as we celebrate her on her birthday, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Nadia Boulanger: Influential Music Teacher

    Nadia Boulanger: Influential Music Teacher

    Today is the anniversary of the birth of Nadia Boulanger (1887-1979), pedagogue and Patron Saint of American – some might argue “20th Century” – Music. Certainly, her influence continues to be felt into our own time.

    Among Boulanger’s hundreds of pupils: Daniel Barenboim, Idil Biret, Elliot Carter, Aaron Copland, John Eliot Gardiner, Philip Glass, H. Wiley Hitchcock, Quincy Jones, Robert Kapilow, Dini Lipatti, Igor Markevitch, Astor Piazzolla, Walter Piston, Stanislaw Skrowaczewski, Virgil Thomson and George Walker.

    Writes Ned Rorem (the rare American who did not study with Boulanger), “Myth credits every American town with two things: a 10-cent store and a Boulanger student.”

    Here is Rorem writing about Boulanger in the New York Times in 1982:

    http://www.nytimes.com/1982/05/23/books/the-composer-and-the-music-teacher.html?pagewanted=all&mcubz=3


    PHOTO: Boulanger with one of her pupils, the composer Jean Françaix

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