Frases célebres de Leonard Bernstein
“¿Maria Callas? Ella fue pura electricidad.”
Recogida por John Ardoin en Callas: el arte y la vida (1974).
“¿Por qué no correr escaleras arriba y escribir una bonita melodía gershwiniana?”
Refiriéndose a George Gershwin, compositor de Rapsody in Blue.
Fuente: The Atlantic Monthly, abril de 1955.
Declaración de 1953, citada por Ciro M. Copeland en A Wonderful Life: 50 elogios para levantar el ánimo (2006), p. 190.
Leonard Bernstein: Frases en inglés
"What Makes Opera Grand?", Vogue (December 1958)
Leonard Bernstein, statement of 1953, quoted in A Wonderful Life : 50 Eulogies to Lift the Spirit (2006) by Cyrus M. Copeland, p. 190
“So why do so many of us try to explain the beauty of music, thus depriving it of its mystery?”
— Leonard Bernstein, The Unanswered Question
The Unanswered Question (1976)
Contexto: Einstein said that "the most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious." So why do so many of us try to explain the beauty of music, thus depriving it of its mystery?
Leonard Bernstein: The Gift Of Music
Of George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue
"Why Don't You Run Upstairs and Write a Nice Gershwin Tune?", in The Atlantic Monthly, April 1955.
The Cambridge Companion to Conducting p. 16.
— Leonard Bernstein, libro The Joy of Music
Fuente: The Joy of Music
“I'm no longer quite sure what the question is, but I do know that the answer is Yes.”
Fuente: The Unanswered Question: Six Talks at Harvard (Charles Eliot Norton Lectures)
“To Bach, notes were not just sounds but the very stuff of creation.”
Leonard Bernstein, "Leonard Bernstein discusses material & structure in Bach's St. Matthew Passion," Bernstein Century - Bach: St. Matthew Passion / Nypo, Et Al (1999) (at 6:31)
“Callas? She was pure electricity.”
As quoted in Callas: The Art and the Life (1974) by John Ardoin