Home | News | Programs | Music | Events | About Us | Contact | Business Support | Podcasts/RSS | Feedback | AIS
Inside Arts
  • Arts Index
  • Columns
  • Classical
  • Jazz
  • Pop
  • Books
  • TV
  • Headlines
  • Movies
  • Programs
  • Radio
  • Theater
  • Music
Arts Headlines
Arts Headlines
  • "A Prophet" nominated for six European film awards
  • No holding back for Alicia Keys on "Freedom"
  • Joe Jackson seeks allowance from son's estate
Features
Features
bucket link
To the Best of Our Knowledge

Ethics of Western Aid

Boots on the Ground: Stories from the War in Iraq, April 6, 2004

The World According to Pop Culture

Making Words

Searching for Shangri-La

Tools
Tools
bucket link
Search Arts
Search Arts
go
On Radio
On Radio
bucket link
Studio 360 Zombies, Gore Vidal
This American Life (Saturdays, 11 am - 12 pm)
Car Talk Puzzler (Saturdays, 9-10 am)
Riverwalk Jazz (Saturdays, 7-8 pm)
CLASSICAL
NPR
Share
Rhapsody In Blue: Gershwin At His Greatest
Rhapsody In Blue: Gershwin At His Greatest
Leonard Bernstein does full justice to the still racy and spontaneous score of Rhapsody In Blue in this 1959 recording. As both conductor and pianist, he brings a smoky, sultry jazziness to the piece. by Ted Libbey Play

On June 23rd, 1959, Leonard Bernstein and the Columbia Symphony took their places at the St. George Hotel in Brooklyn, N.Y. and made a landmark recording of Gershwin's 'Rhapsody in Blue.' To celebrate the event, Ted Libbey adds the album to our list of 50 essential classical recordings.

Rhapsody In Blue, the first "serious" composition by George Gershwin (1898-1937), is likely to remain his most popular work in any form, more for its prodigious melodic richness rather than for any deeper expressiveness or structural brilliance.

In the hands of another composer, Rhapsody In Blue could easily have turned into a disjointed exercise in symphonically dressed up jazz rhythms, melodic figures and quasi-improvisatory instrumental licks. Instead, Gershwin's uncanny sense of timing, and a gift for memorable melody unparalleled in the 20th century, turned the Rhapsody into an embodiment of the Jazz Age's upbeat lyricism and dance-driven vitality. The roaring Twenties had a soul, and this was it.

The piece was composed in considerable haste, for a concert on February 12th, 1924, organized by jazz bandleader Paul Whiteman. It took place at New York's Aeolian Hall, billed as an "Experiment In Modern Music." The piece was scored for jazz band by Whiteman's arranger, the multitalented Ferde Grofé, and Gershwin himself played the piano solo — though at the time of the premiere he had not yet written it out. Grofé also scored the work's orchestral version.

Bernstein As Pianist

Leonard Bernstein's recording is a disc for the ages. It's American music performed with mid-century flair, a moment never to be recaptured. Bernstein had the feel for Rhapsody In Blue, and he does full justice to the still racy and spontaneous score. His performance of the piano solo has a smoky, sultry jazziness to it, along with a brash exuberance; there is touching tenderness in the lullaby, riveting dynamism in the fast pages. The sound on this "Bernstein Century" CD is spectacular.

To hear last week's feature, click here.

For a full archive of NPR's Classical 50, click here.

© Copyright 2009, NPR
Related articles
Related articles
  • Gustav Holst's Peerless 'Planets'
  • The Brooklyn Cowboy
  • Jonathan Dunsby on the future of classical music
  • Americas''s Conductor
  • Waves of Sound: Debussy's La Mer


Tri States Public Radio
500 University Services Building
1 University Circle | Macomb, IL 61455-1390
E-mail: publicradio@wiu.edu | Phone: 800/895-2912 | FAX: 309/298-2133