Musicians
Related: About this forumBrash, Confident and Democratic: How Bernstein Symbolized America
Five writers on what made the protean Bernstein, born 100 years ago, one of the most indelible figures in the history of the arts.
'A man, a country and an era came together in Leonard Bernstein, the musician of the American century.
After 150 years of insecurity as this country gazed across the sea at the edifices of European culture, here was the New World finally in command. Composer, conductor, arranger, pianist, television personality, star, Bernstein a Jew, crucially, just a few years after the Holocaust marched Mahler back into Vienna, a second wave of liberation, a musical Marshall Plan. Bold, maybe a little brash; tender, maybe a little sentimental; difficult to work with yet desperate to please: Bernsteins qualities were Americas, too.
He was born 100 years ago on Aug. 25, and his centenary is being celebrated as his achievement and the smilingly confident place and time he symbolized seems ever more unrepeatable. Who today could write both West Side Story and three thorny, searching symphonies? Who could bring together Brahms and the Beatles on national television, and have millions watch? To what maestros left-wing political dalliances would New York magazine devote a cover story in 2018?
Yet if there will never be another Bernstein, and if the high culture for which he tirelessly evangelized keeps drifting farther from the mainstream, his legacy is still clear, and secure. When he died, in 1990, he left us a charge to listen to music, of all kinds, with endless enthusiasm; to devote ourselves to both the creation of new work and the revival of old; to make every facet of culture accessible to all.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/23/arts/music/leonard-bernstein-centennial.html?
dhill926
(16,953 posts)fascinating article. There may never be another one like him...so sad when I heard of his death....all the great music that would never be written...
stuffmatters
(2,578 posts)I love that term in this article, his "musical Marshall Plan."