Leonard Bernstein
Brilliant Bruckner, Franck falls apart – but it’s still Bernstein at his most compelling
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Darius Milhaud, Johannes Brahms, Anton Bruckner, César Franck, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven
Genre:
DVD
Label: Medici Arts
Magazine Review Date: 12/2008
Media Format: Digital Versatile Disc
Media Runtime: 0
Mastering:
Stereo
Catalogue Number: 2057068
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Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Symphony No. 1 |
Johannes Brahms, Composer
Israel Philharmonic Orchestra Johannes Brahms, Composer Leonard Bernstein, Conductor |
Symphony No. 3 |
Johannes Brahms, Composer
Israel Philharmonic Orchestra Johannes Brahms, Composer Leonard Bernstein, Conductor |
Symphony |
César Franck, Composer
César Franck, Composer Ile de France National Orchestra Leonard Bernstein, Conductor Paris Théâtre des Champs-Élysées Orchestra |
(La) Création du monde |
Darius Milhaud, Composer
Darius Milhaud, Composer Ile de France National Orchestra Leonard Bernstein, Conductor Paris Théâtre des Champs-Élysées Orchestra |
(Le) Boeuf sur le toit, '(The) Bull on the Roof' |
Darius Milhaud, Composer
Darius Milhaud, Composer Ile de France National Orchestra Leonard Bernstein, Conductor Paris Théâtre des Champs-Élysées Orchestra |
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 17 |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
Leonard Bernstein, Conductor Leonard Bernstein, Piano Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer |
Symphony No. 39 |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer
Leonard Bernstein, Piano Leonard Bernstein, Conductor Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer |
Symphony No. 9, 'Choral' |
Ludwig van Beethoven, Composer
Bavarian Radio Chorus Bavarian Radio Orchestra Jan-Hendrik Rootering, Bass June Anderson, Soprano Kirov Orchestra Klaus König, Tenor Leonard Bernstein, Conductor London Symphony Orchestra Ludwig van Beethoven, Composer New York Philharmonic Orchestra Paris Orchestra Sarah Walker, Mezzo soprano Staatskapelle Dresden |
Symphony No. 9 |
Anton Bruckner, Composer
Anton Bruckner, Composer Leonard Bernstein, Conductor Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra |
Author: David Gutman
With footage running from 1973 to 1990 it might be assumed that the earlier material would show Bernstein at his most compelling. I’m not so sure. The latest taping is drawn from his final series of concerts with the Vienna Philharmonic and it’s profoundly impressive. Bernstein directed only two Bruckner symphonies in his maturity but, with his own health declining fast, he seems to identify with the unfinished Ninth as never before. His control over the orchestra is not in doubt and the confrontation with mortality is dramatised with flair. Or is it that for Bernstein the search for stable, meaningful tonality was itself a matter of life and death? Whether you find the results uncomfortable or revelatory, the players provide the rich-toned strings and gorgeous brass that define what we think of as idiomatic Bruckner-playing. The usually egocentric maestro is plainly conscious of this in the democratic manner in which he tackles his curtain calls.
The Franck from 1981 is at the opposite pole from the fleet-footed Gallic conception associated with Pierre Monteux. The Paris audience goes mad for the reading, unsurprising given the sheer intensity achieved, even if the work’s structure falls apart. Incidentally, tasked with defending such subjective, Romantic interpretations in a DG booklet-note, musicologist James Hepokoski suggested that they “compel primarily through the magnetic force of the conductor’s virtually sacramental, personal identification with the music”. Bernstein believed in flamboyant revivification rather than a reconstructed stylistic accuracy. You have been warned.
After this the Mozart seems surprisingly mainstream, the one-time virtuoso’s part-time pianism in better shape than was often the case in later years. The Brahms, disadvantaged by more restricted camera movements, attests to Bernstein’s long-standing relationship with the Israel Philharmonic; its musicians play their hearts out for him. The Beethoven attests to his place on the world stage. The Ninth is the piece he conducted to symbolise the reunification of the city of Berlin on Christmas Day 1989. Historians and documentary film-makers will look on this as a totemic event, though DG will shortly be issuing in audio-visual form a tauter alternative, the climax of Bernstein’s Beethoven cycle from Vienna. Admirers will want both.
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