Concert Music

CONCERT MUSIC

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“Everything anybody writes has always been based on the sum of all the music that composer has ever heard plus a voice of his own.”

—Leonard Bernstein

Video

Conductor Marin Alsop shares why she thinks Leonard Bernstein should be considered one of the great composers of the 20th century.

© 2008 The Carnegie Hall Corporation.

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Michael Wager and Alexander Bernstein on Symphony No. 3, “Kaddish.”

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Jamie, Alexander, and Nina Bernstein talk about their favorite Bernstein compositions.

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Jamie, Nina, and Alexander Bernstein remember their father’s compositional process.

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Nina and Alexander Bernstein talk about their dad’s ability to crossover from serious to popular music.

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Focus On

The “Serious” Side of Music

One of Leonard Bernstein’s great regrets was that he composed so little music. Yet considering the range of his musical endeavors—conductor, educator, pianist, global cultural ambassador—it seems miraculous that he composed as much as he did. A fair number of Bernstein’s compositions fall into the category of “serious” or “concert” music, though he consistently blurred the distinction between works for the theater and the concert hall. The Symphonic Dances from West Side Story is now a beloved staple of the concert repertoire, while Mass is a difficult-to-categorize synthesis of Broadway and the concert hall. Further blurring the distinction is Bernstein’s tendency to incorporate discarded songs from musicals into his concert works. To cite just one example, …

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From Leonard Bernstein: American Original

John Adams on
Bernstein’s Musical Voice

For all his native intelligence and astonishing mental powers, Bernstein was fundamentally a musician for whom Eros was a prime mover. Bernstein doubtless couldn’t find the erotic potential in the music of Schoenberg or Carter, and, the music leaving him cold and untouched, he could not bring himself to go near it again, not even as a collegial gesture of support for a fellow composer.

You could see Eros not only in the way his small, compact, and lithe body moved in sync with what he was conducting, but also in the very nature of his own music, which, not in the least troubled by modesty, he programmed with the Philharmonic no fewer than one hundred seventy-five times—second only to Copland among American composers. Bernstein the composer is at his best when the music is choreographic and suffused with sensuality.

Excerpted from Leonard Bernstein: American Original, by Burton Bernstein and Barbara B. Haws (HarperCollins, August 2008).

Listen

Excerpt from Bernstein’s Symphony No. 1, “Jeremiah” (III. Lamentation)

New York Philharmonic / Leonard Bernstein, Conductor; Jennie Tourel, Mezzo-Soprano. Sony Classical SK 60697.

Find this and more of Leonard Bernstein’s work at ArkivMusic.com ›

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Leonard Bernstein: American Original

Leonard Bernstein: American Original

By Burton Bernstein— former New Yorker writer and Leonard’s brother—and the New York Philharmonic’s historian, Barbara Haws.
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