Los Angeles Times

Birthday salute for Bernstein

With Pasadena Pops, Michael Feinstein goes big for 100th birthday of maestro.

- By Richard S. Ginell calendar@latimes.com

Pasadena Pops, with special guest Carol Lawrence, above, toasts the maestro.

The Bernstein centenary celebratio­ns just keep on coming.

The Leonard Bernstein Office recently upped its estimate to more than 3,300 events worldwide as Bernstein’s actual 100th birthday looms Saturday. The sheer volume of tributes exceeds anything during his lifetime and might have even astonished the composer-conductor, who could never get enough love to satisfy his soul.

So it was inevitable that the Pasadena Pops — captained by the persistent curator of the Great American Songbook Michael Feinstein — would join this crowded party, though the orchestra did so at a point where Bernstein fatigue is beginning to set in.

Neverthele­ss, with Feinstein’s antiquaria­n bent in play, one could anticipate something different in his approach to the whole shebang — which is what we got at the L.A. County Arboretum on Saturday night.

Rather than devote the full program to Bernstein, Feinstein sprinkled in small doses throughout an accumulati­on of this and that by others. The idea was to put Bernstein’s music within the context of his time and place, exploring his influences (a good stab at it), whom he influenced (not so much) and pieces by his contempora­ries. “Bernstein’s New York,” he called it.

Feinstein went at it with his scholarly yet ever-entertaini­ng patter that is always worth hearing. There were some fresh first-hand Bernstein anecdotes, like an example of his provocativ­e behavior late in life (after asking whether Feinstein knew a piece by Poulenc — he didn’t — Bernstein supposedly said, “You know, Michael Feinstein, you know a lot about music, but not enough”). He even performed a few mashups of Bernstein songs he once entertaine­d the composer with on the piano.

Most of all, Feinstein went out of his way to try to find connection­s between Bernstein and the other figures on the program who were in or out of his gravitatio­nal pull. Some were obvious, like Bernstein’s great friend and mentor Aaron Copland. Others were quite a stretch — like linking Bernstein and Peruvian vocal stunt lady Yma Sumac on the basis of a single 1953 joint concert from which Bernstein might — might — have stolen the idea for the famous Mambo from “West Side Story.”

All this was supposed to set up the eclectic variety of selections on tap. Things got off to a lugubrious start when Feinstein led perhaps the slowest rendition of the “Candide” Overture ever — slower than even Bernstein’s own late-life renditions, which I guess made it a kind of homage to the Lenny that Feinstein knew. But things perked up considerab­ly in a Pops revisit to the “New York, New York” arrangemen­t that André Kostelanet­z once played.

Before conducting Morton Gould’s bouncy “Pavanne” — which John Coltrane “borrowed” for his jazz standard “Impression­s” — Feinstein commendabl­y gave Gould his due as an important figure in American music. (Even though Gould, who was just as freethinki­ng as Bernstein, was maligned and subsequent­ly downgraded for recording carloads of easy-listening albums.)

Singer Ali McGregor spectacula­rly demonstrat­ed that her five-octave range is just about as wide as Sumac’s. The talented 18year-old Finn Sagal dropped some Sinatra-like phrasing into “Time After Time,” followed by a Sinatra medley penned by Nelson Riddle (yes, Lenny and Frank knew each other). Julian Ovenden sang the other “New York, New York” — the one Sinatra made famous — after confessing that he loathed the song. The “surprise” special guest turned out to be Carol Lawrence — “West Side Story’s” original Maria — who at age 85 offered a starry-eyed reminiscen­ce of Bernstein and a sturdy rendition in a throaty alto of “I Feel Pretty” with son Chris Goulet on vocal obbligato.

It was all quite entertaini­ng, as a Feinstein/Pasadena Pops concert usually is, but the Bernstein fan in me has to raise two points. One, the meager selection of Bernstein was limited mostly to well-worn stuff from just two popular musicals, “On the Town” and “West Side Story,” with only one relatively rare number, “Dream With Me” (from “Peter Pan”), to be heard. I would have expected more digging for treasure from Feinstein.

Also, I could not feel the spirit of Bernstein hovering over this program as he has on other events I’ve attended this last year. Perhaps there were too many other voices jamming his signal?

 ?? Melissa Kobe ??
Melissa Kobe
 ?? Photograph­s by Melissa Kobe ?? LOVE IS BLUE as the Pasadena Symphony celebrates Leonard Bernstein’s birthday Saturday night at the Arboretum in Arcadia.
Photograph­s by Melissa Kobe LOVE IS BLUE as the Pasadena Symphony celebrates Leonard Bernstein’s birthday Saturday night at the Arboretum in Arcadia.
 ??  ?? GATHERED onstage during the performanc­e are singer Finn Sagal, left, Ali McGregor and Julian Ovenden and conductor Michael Feinstein.
GATHERED onstage during the performanc­e are singer Finn Sagal, left, Ali McGregor and Julian Ovenden and conductor Michael Feinstein.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States