The Unanswered Question - Six Talks at Harvard by Leonard Bernstein
Actor: Leonard Bernstein , Michael Wager
ISBN: 0769715702
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Manufacturer: Kultur Video
Customer Rating:




, based on 20 reviews
Lowest Price: $52.59
By Supplier: overman2000
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Always absorbing and frequently brilliant, Leonard Bernstein's The Unanswered Question is a very lucid and convincing discussion of music's history and forms, with particular emphasis on modern music. It addresses the average intelligent listener who is not musically trained but wants to know what makes music work--what is meant, for example, by "tonal" and "atonal." It requires some concentration, but Bernstein, a superb teacher, keeps technical jargon to a minimum, illustrates what he means with musical examples and graphics, and repeats key points.
Delivered in 1973, the talks were transcribed for a book, but in it Bernstein insists "The pages that follow were written not to be read, but listened to," really an endorsement of the video edition. The talks are, in fact, performances. Television was always kind to Bernstein; he had magnetism and knew how to use it. To illustrate various points in his analyses, he plays the piano frequently, sings occasionally, and conducts significant works of key composers: Mozart, Beethoven, Berlioz, Wagner, Ravel, Debussy, Ives, Mahler, and Stravinsky.
Bernstein traces the development of music from its origins to the 20th-century struggle between tonality (championed notably by Stravinsky) and atonalism (represented mainly by Schoenberg). The last two talks, devoted to these composers, are particularly enlightening, but all six are outstanding. He argues persuasively that humans are born with an ability to grasp musical forms, and that rules of musical syntax are rooted in nature--in mathematically measurable relations between tones and overtones.
These talks are a key document. They coincide chronologically, as cause and/or symptom, with the movement of America's leading composers back from Schoenbergian forms toward a tonal orientation. Bernstein predicts and promotes this movement, which is still in progress. He is clearly an advocate of tonality, but he discusses atonal music with sympathy and understanding. --Joe McLellan
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Bernstein presents a myriad of ideas, all of which are illustrated with remarkable lucidity and grace. Music, of course, constitutes the central theme of these lessons---the significant time spent on other disciplines (most notably, the evolution of words and their structural implications) is always at the service of a better understanding of our auricular art.
This set would be worth its price for the musical examples alone; in addition to the 10 hours or so of Mr. Bernstein's discourse, you're also getting a spectacular amount of full-length orchestral performances. These segments---under the incomparable baton of Mr. Bernstein (and played, in most cases, by the equally impressive Boston Symphony Orchestra)---are flawlessly produced, and sound wonderful. Mozart's 40th Symphony, Beethoven's 6th, and a complete production of Stravinsky's OEDIPUS REX are just three of many, many great works included here.
This set isn't just for musicologists, but for everyone with fertile minds and open ears. I watched these lectures as an experienced composer, musician, and theorist, and I was NEVER bored. Even mundane topics, like the harmonic series, are brilliantly re-illuminated. I've been watching them with my parents, both of whom are equipped with virtually no musical training, and they have been absorbing just as much as I've been.
Grammarians will find plenty of interesting material here, as well. Bernstein frequently utilizes techniques pioneered by Chomsky (relating to deep structures and the like) to illustrate abstract musical concepts, and the results are nothing short of astonishing.
If it seems I've been waxing hyperbolic about these DVDs, rest assured I haven't been. Buy them, watch them, and you'll see why.












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