Philippe Entremont, Zino Francescatti, New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Leonard Bernstein – Bernstein: The Age of Anxiety & Serenade after Plato’s ‘Symposium’ (1966/2017) [FLAC 24bit, 192 KHz]

Philippe Entremont, Zino Francescatti, New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Leonard Bernstein – Bernstein: The Age of Anxiety & Serenade after Plato’s ‘Symposium’ (1966/2017) [FLAC 24bit, 192 KHz]

Symphony No. 2, “The Age of Anxiety” :: Anyone who grew up in America in the late 1950s probably first encountered classical music through a series of Young People’s Concerts, presented on television by Leonard Bernstein. Bernstein’s gently narrated, eloquent descriptions examined many aspects of his art.
One program explained that music, in itself, is never “about” anything but music. For his example, Bernstein chose the tone poem Don Quixote by Richard Strauss, specifically Variation 2, in which the Don meets a flock of sheep on the road and believes them to be soldiers. Before playing the episode, however, Bernstein created a fanciful story about a group of motorcycle riders, and allowed the music graphically to illustrate a completely different idea. His point was made.
In 1947, W. H. Auden published an epic poem, The Age of Anxiety, concerned with 20th-century man’s search for God. The poem won a Pulitzer Prize, and Bernstein, deeply moved, chose it as the subject matter for a symphony. He added a solo piano part, representing himself as a spectator. The story concerns four disenchanted people searching for faith, and Bernstein composed music to illustrate the descriptions on the printed page. At the end, after a jazz interlude for piano and percussion, “the characters disperse,” and an Epilogue, for orchestra alone, represents faith itself. Later, Bernstein rewrote the finale, adding a cadenza before the coda to round out the work’s concert function. In other words, he followed his own maxim about music not being related to anything except itself. The music had acquired a life—and a separate personality—of its own, despite the words that inspired it. —Paul Myers

Glenn Gould, Columbia Symphony Orchestra, Vladimir Golschmann – Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 1 in C Major, Op. 15; Bach: Keyboard Concerto No. 5 in F Minor, BWV 1056 (1958/2015) [FLAC 24bit, 44,1 kHz]

Glenn Gould, Columbia Symphony Orchestra, Vladimir Golschmann – Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 1 in C Major, Op. 15; Bach: Keyboard Concerto No. 5 in F Minor, BWV 1056 (1958/2015) [FLAC 24bit, 44,1 kHz]

Instead of Leonard Bernstein, the Columbia Symphony Orchestra was fronted this time by Vladimir Golschmann. Born in Paris to Russian émigrés in 1893 and head of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra from 1931, Golschmann was one of the few conductors with whom Gould apparently never had problems, and vice versa. In the Beethoven concerto Gould played his own cadenza – with a noticeable nod to Max Reger…

Glenn Gould, Columbia Symphony Orchestra, Leonard Bernstein – Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-Flat Major, Op. 19; Bach: Keyboard Concerto No. 1 in D Minor, BWV 1052 (1957/2015) [FLAC 24bit, 44,1 kHz]

Glenn Gould, Columbia Symphony Orchestra, Leonard Bernstein – Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-Flat Major, Op. 19; Bach: Keyboard Concerto No. 1 in D Minor, BWV 1052 (1957/2015) [FLAC 24bit, 44,1 kHz]

Gould’s first recording with orchestra, and his first studio collaboration with Leonard Bernstein, fourteen years his senior. “During the first portion of the concerto, Mr. Gould slid out from behind the piano and loped casually about the hall. He shook his head, waved his arms, beat time, and acted generally in a manner that any conductor less accustomed to the ways of genius might have found trying in the extreme. Bernstein took no notice.”