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On Demand

Evening Music

Monday, October 06, 2008
  • Bernstein and his children at the Watergate complex, Washington D.C. Holiday card
    LOC, Music Division

    Bernstein: In His Own Words

    WNYC's "Our Lenny" Festival wraps up with a Leonard Bernstein musical sampler. We also hear examples of Bernstein in conversation, including his introductions to Beethoven's "Eroica" Symphony and Copland's "Outdoor Overture," as well as a discussion of composer Charles Ives.

"Our Lenny" Contest Winner

Congratulations to Karen Sweeney of Jersey City, the winner of WNYC's "Our Lenny" Festival contest. Listeners were asked to answer the question "How did Leonard Bernstein change your life" in 250 words or less. You can read Karen's winning entry, below, as well as the essay of our runner-up, Bonnie Stein. Honorable mentions also go to contestants Amanda Cooper, Harriet Semegram, Daniel Molendyke, Mark Dacey, and Michael Safdiah.

"I never met Leonard Bernstein or had the chance to see a live concert, but through the magic of television, there he was in my living room. Handsome, classy, intelligent, funny, and there he was explaining to me why I should listen to his music. My living room was in Johnstown, PA — as far away from New York as one can be. I fell in love. For a girl of eight or nine, it is a love that lasts a lifetime. I went to sleep with his voice in my head and the music serenading the romantic interludes. Fantasy allows a child to expand their horizons and experiences, but here was Lenny, a world renowned conductor and composer, talking on my level about a world I never thought I would be privileged enough to enter. He not only let me in but created the key to the light bulb that sent me in search of knowledge. I wanted to read more, hear more music, travel to more places and met people like Lenny. The amazing idea that humans are capable of creating and playing music brings such joy to me that it is always the one thing I turn to for sanctuary from this crazy world. And if it had not been for the simple idea that Lenny wanted to teach children that classical music is for everyone, my ears may not have been opened to a larger world right there in my living room. He is my hero."
– Karen Sweeney
I was a kid in Detroit. I listened to the radio a lot, since we had no TV. I heard Leonard Bernstein's shows for young people. I think they were called Young People's concerts. I thought they were designed for me. I would sit next the radio and listen to him and he would explain instruments and music in a way that I understood, and that changed me. I felt liberated. I was never a musician, and I loved to dance. When WEST SIDE STORY came out, I was smitten. In my side of Detroit, we were fighting blacks and whites and trying to live next to each other, and to go to school together. This story was my story. It gave me reason to try to make peace with my new black neighbors and schoolmates. He also had my last name, so that really impressed me as a kid! What more can I say? At the age of 56, I now live in NYC, and manage a number of great musicians, even though I still do not play anything. I found classical and popular music through Bernstein. My teenage daughter first saw WEST SIDE STORY when she was a tot, and it is part of her vocabulary. I believe that Bernstein changed my life, like he changed so many American children, by playing music for us and making it accessible to us.
– Bonnie Stein (runner-up)

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69th American Music Festival: American Blend

May 21-22, at 7pm; May 23-24 at 8pm; May 25-27 at 7pm

Hosts Terrance McKnight and David Garland will curate and host a weeklong festival with special guests and rare recordings, concluding with live performances in WNYC's Jerome L. Greene Performance Space by Dafnis Prieto, Paola Prestini, Ezequiel Vinao and Yungchen Lhamo May 27.

globalFEST 2009

Listen on Demand

On January 11th, WNYC and NPR Music presented a live webcast of globalFEST 2009, the annual showcase that provides a "sneak peek" of global musicians on the verge of international fame.

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WNYC presents web-exclusive concerts from the Wordless Music Series, hosted by Radio Lab's Jad Abumrad. Devoted to the desegregation of musical boundaries, Wordless Music pairs rock and electronic musicians with more traditional chamber and new music performers, to create an entirely new concert experience.

Deerhoof/Metropolis Ensemble

Live Webcast

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