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RECOMMENDED RECORDINGS
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My "desert island" choices (not in any particular order):
Bernstein / Berlin Philharmonic (live recording 1979) Searing, red-hot. More electric than the one Bernstein did with the New York Phil (on Sony). Could it be that his one and only time with this orchestra in Berlin, the former seat of anti-Semitic horror, was the subtext and that the players were giving their all for a Jewish conductor and, yes, a Jewish composer?
Bernstein / Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra (1979) At the time he made this recording, Bernstein considered it the culmination of his work with the Vienna Philharmonic. One can hear why: the delicate finesse of a complete orchestral string section playing music originally written for only four players is phenomenal. (And, besides, I wrote the album notes.)
Bernstein / New York Philharmonic You have to buy an expensive five-volume package of historic broadcasts by the New York Philharmonic's to get this, but it's well worth it. This performance belies the myth that LB was unsympathetic to music of the Second Viennese School.
Bernstein / Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra & the Chorus of the Vienna State Opera Bernstein, the consummate theater man, led (and preserved) far too few repertoire operas. You can count them on the fingers of one hand: Carmen, Cavalleria Rusticana, Falstaff (delicious!), Tristan and Isolde--and this glorious document, which helped to remind the Viennese of their lost traditions.
Bernstein / Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra LB believed in the original versions and never tampered with them, as have so many other conductors. His belief in the rightness of the orchestration is here for all to hear.
Bernstein / New York Philharmonic An early LP transferred to CD, but fascinating for its mix of the sacred and the profane.
Bernstein / New York Philharmonic The perfect music for long, sensuous weekends in countryside forests and pastures.
Bernstein / New York Philharmonic
Bernstein / New York Philharmonic Two cups of 'tschai' (Russian for 'tea') with literary sweeteners.
RCA Gold Seal 60915 No one, but no one plays the Copland Sonata with so much insight. So why didn't LB also record Copland's Piano Variations, his so-called 'party piece'?
Bernstein / Chicago Symphony Orchestra Fireworks, blazing brass, and 105 (perhaps more?) musicians playing as one.
Bernstein / ORF Orchestra (1986) Not successful on stage, this is haunting on disc. Obviously, you won't be distracted by the mise-en-scene, so you'll be able to concentrate only on the music. Superbly written for the voice, but perhaps over-orchestrated.
Roz Russell is a hoot as a zoot suiter! More spontaneous than the TV remake.
I much prefer Barbara Cook and Co. to any of the later versions.
Columbia (Sony) 32603 & DG 415963 Now if only the original Broadway cast of "West Side Story" (Lawrence, Rivera, Kert et al) could hook up with the orchestra of the so-called opera cast version. That would be an album to behold!
Michael Tilson Thomas / London Symphony Orchestra As for 'On the Town,' I look forward to the new Broadway production with the reworked, spiffy orchestrations by Bruce Coughlin. But, in the meantime, you might want to try DG's recording conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas.
Leonard Bernstein / Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra Swings like a jam session. While I prefer Simon Rattle's recording (no longer in print), you may want to try Bernstein's own version with the Vienna Philharmonic.
David Zinman / Baltimore Symphony Orchestra I am not crazy about LB's Candide Overture with the NY Phil. It's too frenetic. Sometimes it takes an outsider to see the forest for the trees. And Zinman delivers.
Bernstein / Norman Scribner Choir, Berkshire Boy Choir, Orchestra (original production) LB sometimes bemoaned the fact that others did not record his music because they figured: why bother. They were correct in this instance.
Bernstein / New York City Ballet Orchestra I consider this Bernstein's shining masterpiece, a perfect blend of intellect and emotion. I do wish, however, that Jonathan Sheffer's recent outing with the EOS Orchestra could be preserved.
Bernstein / Israel Philharmonic It was hard to choose between this and the previous version with The New York Philharmonic, but these are the performances currently in print.
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