Leonard Bernstein - Young People's Concerts - Complete
- Type:
- Video > Music videos
- Files:
- 52
- Size:
- 12.15 GiB (13041161024 Bytes)
- Uploaded:
- 2011-05-30 20:44 GMT
- By:
- rosie1966
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- 4
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- Info Hash: 745389743D14707F448BF2791A66CDF3D4A10CA7
Ripped from the DVD's (DVD1-DVD9). Direct audio streamming Leonard Bernstein - Young Peoples Concerts (1961/2004) Language: English | 1500 minutes | 706 x 480 | FPS (29.97fps) | x264 MKV 1150-1400 Kbps | 12.1 GB Audio#1: AC3 @256Kbps 2 CH Genre: Classical | Studio: Kultur Video Each episode file has 498 MB, 9 episodes fit one DVD. I have also included the scripts for each episode in PDF. Leonard Bernstein earned glory as a composer, conductor, and pianist (classical and jazz), but nothing gave him more pleasure than the joy of teaching. He presented the unique blend of spoken words and music known as the "Young People's Concerts" throughout his tenure as music director of the New York Philharmonic and for several years after. His enjoyment, and his audience's, can be seen vividly captured by the video cameras. He is an intensely interactive teacher, getting his audience to sing, springing a quiz full of trick questions, and singing a Beatles song to demonstrate a point. Bernstein is completely at ease talking to his audience. He can take the most abstruse subject - the meaning and function of intervals, tonality and atonality, the links between Gustav Mahler's troubled life and his music - and present them to a young audience with clarity, without condescension, and with a clear sense of the material's value. His subject-matter is enormously varied. For Igor Stravinsky's 80th birthday, he simply tells his audience the story of Petrouchka while conducting a dazzling performance of the colorful ballet. For a program on "Folk Music in the Concert Hall," he plays some of Canteloube's folk song arrangements and the boisterous finale of Ives's Symphony No. 2, full of borrowed pop and folk melodies. The influence of folk music is shown in folk song imitations by Mozart and Carlos Chavez. The sound and images, taped over a 15-year span when the art of recording was rapidly advancing, are varied in quality; the series begins in black-and-white and ends in vivid color. Not all of the programs are equally compelling, but all are worth close and repeated attention. scripts: http://www.leonardbernstein.com/ypc.htm http://www.amazon.com/Leonard-Bernstein-Peoples-Concerts-Philharmonic/dp/B0002S641O Here is a listing of the episodes contained in the set: 1. What Does Music Mean? 2. What is American Music? 3. What is Orchestration? 4. What Makes Music Symphonic? 5. What is Classical Music? 6. Humor in Music 7. What is a Concerto? 8. Who is Gustav Mahler? 9. Folk Music in the Concert Hall 10. What is Impressionism? 11. Happy Birthday, Igor Stravinsky 12. What is a Melody? 13. The Latin American Spirit 14. Jazz in the Concert Hall 15. What is Sonata Form? 16. A Tribute to Sibelius 17. Musical Atoms: A Study in Intervals 18. The Sound of an Orchestra 19. A Birthday Tribute to Shostakovich 20. What is a Mode? 21. A Toast to Vienna in 3/4 Time 22. Quiz-Concert: How Musical Are You? 23. Berlioz Takes a Trip 24. Two Ballet Birds 25. Fidelio: A Celebration of Life Some episodes not found on this set include: Anatomy of a Symphony Orchestra Bach Transmogrified Charles Ives: American Pioneer Farewell to Nationalism Forever Beethoven! Holst: "The Planets" Liszt and the Devil Modern Music from All Over Overtures and Preludes The Genius of Paul Hindemith The Road to Paris The Second Hurricane Thus Spake Richard Strauss. Enjoy and Seed!!