Recent Episodes
John Harbison on Koussevitzky Said:
John Harbison on Koussevitzky Said:
Backstage With Brian Bell
08/22/12
For the 75th anniversary of Tanglewood, the Boston Symphony Orchestra commissioned John Harbison to write a new work. Harbison chose to write his work in honor of Serge Koussevitzky, the music director of the BSO at the time Tanglewood was founded, using words the conductor himself spoke. Harbison's piece is called Koussevitzky Said:, Choral Scherzo with Orchestra.
Harbison talks with Brian Bell about the reasons for honoring Koussevitzky and the connection to words spoken by the conductor.
Here are excerpts from the text:
"The next Beethoven will from Colorado come."
"I will keep playing this music -- until you hear it."
"If not in tune, it smells of office, as if price five cents."
"You have to portray the music correctly; play it from your hearts."
"Let's do it together for our own satisfaction."
BSO Founder Henry Lee Higginson
BSO Founder Henry Lee Higginson
Backstage With Brian Bell
08/20/12
Brian Bell talks with author Joseph Horowitz about his 2012 book Moral Fire: Musical Portraits from America's Fin-de-Siècle, which features a portrait of, among others, Henry Lee Higginson, the founder of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
(portrait of Henry Lee Higginson by John Singer Sargent, via Wikimedia Commons)
Conductor Stéphane Denève on Shostakovich's Symphony No. 5
Conductor Stéphane Denève on Shostakovich's Symphony No. 5
Backstage With Brian Bell
08/11/12
Related Content
Joe commented on Backstage With Brian Bell on 01.22.11
Thank you Brian for presenting this fascinating discussion with the great Maestro Maazel. I attended many concerts with Maestro Maazel leading the Cleveland Orchestra when I was in college in Cleveland in the late 1970s, falling deeper and deeper in love with classical music. What an incredible career, and yet he humbly speaks of serving the music. By example, showing that music rises above political differences between countries and speaks directly to hearts and souls, connecting in the most basic human way. Looking forward to the live concert, and considering a trip to Symphony Hall on Tuesday for the final performance. Thank you Brian, and thank you Maestro Maazel.
Producer Brian Bell talks with conductor Lorin Maazel about his BSO program of Russian composers, including two pieces he conducted in his BSO debut in 1960, as well as the historic concert he conducted in North Korea with the New York Philharmonic.
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