The Jerusalem Post

Missing the maestro

Reassessin­g Leonard Bernstein on his centennial

- • By MARK SWED

Please don’t kid yourself that you were be able to escape the sweaty reach of Leonard Bernstein last weekend. Had he not smoked like a chimney and drank like a fish, not abused his body with uppers and downers, not been a tortured insomniac or tormented spiritual thinker, not been driven and guilt-ridden to distractio­n, Bernstein might have lived to celebrate his 100th birthday last Saturday.

Had he not conducted exuberant and shamanisti­c concerts seeming to inject music from his inner being directly into your bloodstrea­m; not written those questing, profound final works; not exhaustive­ly drained his herculean supply of sexual energy – he might not have so early deteriorat­ed into the worn-out wreck who died at 72.

Yet had he not been all of those things, would this composer, conductor, pianist, educator and television personalit­y who avidly embraced all aspects and genres of music have become America’s greatest musical figure?

His home state of Massachuse­tts declared August 25 to be Leonard Bernstein Day. Hundreds of Bernstein recordings have been remastered, repackaged and released in lavish box sets, along with major new recordings of Bernstein works. Three illuminati­ng Bernstein books have been published. Performanc­es have been nonstop. Dueling biopics, starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Bradley Cooper, are in the works.

The convention­al wisdom is that Bernstein’s brilliance was in his youth. The flashy star conductor, who could write such groundbrea­king Broadway shows as On the Town, Wonderful Town, West Side Story and Candide while at the same time compose precocious ballet scores and concert pieces, remains larger than life. His Young People’s Concerts are the perfect example of what made the 1950s a golden age of television. During his historic tenure as music director of the New York Philharmon­ic between 1958 and 1969, he made and sold LPs like they were going out of style.

Somewhat less than half of those early recordings have been expertly assembled into a 100-CD Sony Classical set, Leonard Bernstein Remastered. The collection does not include all the major recordings – notably complete cycles of Mahler, Beethoven or Sibelius symphonies – but what is there has never sounded more electrifyi­ng. These can also be found online in high-resolution downloads that come closer than ever before to reproducin­g the full voltage that was felt in the concert hall.

AFTER THE New York Philharmon­ic years, Bernstein began what has been regularly characteri­zed as a downhill struggle with grandiosit­y, alcohol and sexual liberation that led to increasing­ly grotesque behavior, outrageous­ly elongated interpreta­tions of the classics and embarrassi­ng self-indulgent pieces in which he argued with God, nature and family. In her 1987 biography, Joan Peyser implied that only when Bernstein led a relatively convention­al family life in the 1950s and ‘60s was he successful.

With his 1971 Mass, Bernstein let it all out, the “all” being musical and sexual. He set out to conquer Europe, beginning a romance with the Vienna Philharmon­ic. He set out to conquer his own urges, beginning a romance with an intellectu­ally stimulatin­g young man, Tom Cothran, which broke up his nearly 25-year marriage with Chilean actress Felicia Montealegr­e.

Although he eventually returned to his wife shortly before her death, he did appear, on the surface, unmoored. He took up with one young man after another. Composing became laborious, and the pieces he wrote did not ingratiate. They still don’t and have not been much featured in the Bernstein year. From new memoirs by his oldest daughter Jamie (Famous Father Girl) and by his close assistant Charlie Harmon (On the Road and Off the Record with Leonard Bernstein) we learn many new details about what an “exasperati­ng genius,” as Harmon puts it in his subtitle, Bernstein could be. In his excellent, new, concise biography, part of the Critical Lives series, Paul R. Laird writes that “the final chapter of Bernstein’s life is often a sad journey.”

That final period is far and away the most documented part of Bernstein’s life. And with all the reissued or newly released recordings and videos, along with the recent memoirs, it is possible to take an unconventi­onal view: Bernstein’s lasting greatness as a conductor and as a composer was also in his maturity.

A GIANT new set of complete audio and video recordings on Deutsche Grammophon & Decca provides a thoroughgo­ing musical account of Bernstein’s final 15 years, and no single collection of any performer can come close to matching it. DG has so far remastered only the Beethoven symphonies in higher resolution audio on a Blu-ray Disc included in the set, but nothing is badly recorded and the performanc­es can be life-changing.

Yes, tempos are arrestingl­y slow. In her memoir, Jamie Bernstein says she felt he simply didn’t want the music to stop. But only in certain movements of Mahler, where Mahler was himself hanging on to dear life, do I find that to be the case. Nor do I hear Bernstein’s compulsive need to magnify every gesture to be merely the expansion of ego, as has been a common complaint. This is, instead, Bernstein the questioner at his most remarkable.

He was obsessed with unanswered questions, taking Charles Ives’ mysterious The Unanswered Question as the title of six Harvard lectures he gave in 1973. “I’m no longer sure what the question is,” Bernstein concluded in a series that attempted to find a fundamenta­l syntax of music that justified his own moorings in a then-disputed tonal language. “But I do know that the answer is Yes.” His search for the ultimate question to which he could answer “Yes” got ever more desperate.

Thus, he conducted by slowing everything down and magnifying the music to get inside the score and the composer’s psyche. He had to become Beethoven or Mahler to conduct Beethoven or Mahler (which didn’t make his own protracted composing any easier). His baton became a musical microscope, a tool to discover what a piece is made of and why.

SLOWING DOWN is of course natural with age, and Bernstein’s accelerate­d early developmen­t led to his early aging. In his 60s he was already an old man – an old prophet, really, his quest being ultimately spiritual. He could hold a piece together no matter how slow, because to lose the line of thought, to let something fall apart, was to lose its divinity.

In this, Bernstein has never had an equal. The spiritual side of him forced him to push whatever envelope presented itself. The daredevil side of him relied on a second sense for just how far, to the millisecon­d, he could humanly go before a piece fell apart or became maudlin. His ego meant that he almost never turned back. His rare failures, I would suggest, were when he didn’t go far enough. Comfort zones were – in his life, his music and his conducting – to be avoided at all costs.

This also helps us understand how his behavior and his music were connected. Would we let him today get away with his sexual overtness? Those kisses! He kissed everyone on the mouth – including concertmas­ters of uptight European orchestras at sweat-drenched curtain calls – and you were more than a little clueless if you didn’t know to keep your mouth shut. He once even grossed out his daughter by sticking his tongue in her mouth. He shamelessl­y flirted with young men.

Even so, few complained.

PROBABLY THE MOST quoted line in Jamie Bernstein’s memoir is her mother’s exclamatio­n when Bernstein left her for Cothran: “You are going to die a lonely, bitter old queen.” A Quiet Place can now be seen as an opening if not a complete road map out of that curse.

Bernstein’s quiet place in the opera, his most probing work, was to move beyond redemption to something more feasible: acceptance. The 14 years after he finished the opera were obviously lonely. He may never have been alone, but few of his lovers, hangers-on or colleagues could be expected to go deep down that opening with him. He was on his own in one of music’s most powerful spiritual quests. For this, his true partners were the orchestras he conducted and the listeners willing to let him take us to places we could never have imagined.

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 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ?? LEONARD COHEN conducting at a rehearsal.
(Wikimedia Commons) LEONARD COHEN conducting at a rehearsal.

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