All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 What Does Music Mean?

    • January 18, 1958
    • CBS

    Leonard Bernstein told the television audience at the start of the first young People's Concert: "No matter what stories people tell you about what music means, forget them. Stories are not what music means. Music is never about things. Music just is. It's a lot of beautiful notes and sounds put together so well that we get pleasure out of hearing them. So when we ask, 'What does it mea; what does this piece of music mean?' we're asking a hard question. Let's do our best to answer it." During the course of this first program the New York Philharmonic preforms portions of Rossini's William Tell Overture, Beethoven's Sixth Symphony, and Ravel's La Valse.

  • S01E02 What is American Music?

    • February 1, 1958
    • CBS

    From Carnegie Hall, Bernstein discusses the orgins and characteristics of American music. After an extended excerpt from George Gershwin's An American in Paris and a discussion of nationalistic and folk music, excerpts from compositions by American composers Edward MacDowell, William Schuman, Virgil Thomson, and others are performed. in closing Aaron Copland conducts parts of his own Third Symphony.

  • S01E03 What is Orchestration?

    • March 8, 1958
    • CBS

    After brief introductory remarks, Bernstein conducts the finale of Rimsky-Korsakov's Capriccio espagnol and then explains what a composer must know in order to orchestrate music successfully. He compares the flute to the trumpet, and the clarinet to the viola, with examples from Debussy and Gershwin. After asking the audience to sing two notes in a variety of ways, he contrasts the families of instruments that compose and orchestra using excerpts from Prokofiev, Hindemith, Mozart, and others to illustrate, and ends with Ravel's Bolero.

  • S01E04 What Makes Music Symphonic?

    • December 12, 1958
    • CBS

    Using the examples of Mozart's Jupiter Symphony and Tchaikovsky's Fourth Symphony, Bernstein demonstrates the techniques of repetition and variation in the development of symphonic music. After conuction part of Tchaikosky's Romeo and Juliet, he asks the audience to sing "Frere Jacques," demonstrating the uses of sequence and imitation in symphonic composition. The final movement of Brahm's Second Symphony is then analyzed and played

  • S01E05 What is Classical Music?

    • January 24, 1959
    • CBS

    Bernstein conducts Handel's Water Music and cites it as an indisputable example of classical music. "Exact" is the word that best defines classical music, Bernstein says and he demonstrates with musical illustrations from Bach's Fourth Brandenburg Concerto Mozart's Concerto No. 21 in C Major and The Marriage of Figaro, and Haydn's Symphony No. 102. The decline of classical music at the end of the eighteenth century is tied to Beethoven's innovations and the Romantic movement, and Bernstein conducts Beethoven's Egmont Overture.

  • S01E06 Humor in Music

    • February 28, 1959
    • CBS

    Using excerpts from Shostakovitch, Mahler, Haydn and others Bernstein demonstrates how a "serious" composition can take an unexpected humorous turn. Prokofiev's Classical Symphony is played in its entirety

  • S01E07 What is a Concerto?

    • March 13, 1959
    • CBS

    Leonard Bernstein discusses the development of the concerto form from Bach to Bartok. Bernstein conducts examples of early concertos - Bach's Fifth Brandenburg Concerto and Vivaldi's Concerto in C major. From the classical period, he conducts Mozart's Sinfonia Concertante and, finally, the fourth and fifth movements of Bartok's neo-classical Concerto for Orchestra.

  • S01E08 Who is Gustav Mahler?

    • February 7, 1960
    • CBS

    Leonard Bernstein celebrates Mahler's centennial by conducting excerpts from he composer's Fourth Symphony in G and discussing his career as a composer and conductor. Soprano Reri Grist joins the orchestra in a performance of the last movement of the Fourth Symphony. William Lewis sings "Youth" and Helen Raab sings from "The Farewell," both from Mahler's The Song of the Earth (Das Lied van der Erde).

  • S01E09 Young Performers No. 1

    • March 9, 1960
    • CBS

  • S01E10 Unusual Instruments of Present, Past, and Future

    • March 27, 1960
    • CBS

  • S01E11 The Second Hurricane

    • April 24, 1960
    • CBS

  • S01E12 Overtures and Preludes

    • January 8, 1961
    • CBS

  • S01E13 Aaron Copland Birthday Party

    • February 12, 1961
    • CBS

  • S01E14 Young Performers No. 2

    • March 19, 1961
    • CBS

  • S01E15 Folk Music in the Concert Hall

    • April 9, 1961
    • CBS

    Bernstein discusses folk music and its influence on orchestra music, and conducts excerpts from Mozart, Chaves, and Ives, and "Songs of the Auvergne" sung by Marni Nixon.

  • S01E16 What is Impressionism?

    • December 1, 1961
    • CBS

    Bernstein focuses on Impressionism in music, discussing the methods and styles of Debussy and Ravel. He conducts three movements from La Mer and the final dance of Daphnis et Chloe.

  • S01E17 The Road to Paris

    • January 18, 1962
    • CBS

  • S01E18 Happy Birthday, Igor Stravinsky

    • March 26, 1962
    • CBS

    Bernstein sketches a brief history of Stravinsky's musical career, noting changes of style and shifts of direction. The whole of Petrouchka is played and each scene is analyzed.

  • S01E19 Young Performers No. 3

    • April 14, 1962
    • CBS

  • S01E20 The Sound of a Hall

    • November 21, 1962
    • CBS

  • S01E21 What is a Melody?

    • December 21, 1962
    • CBS

    Bernstein discusses the different forms melody can take, including tune, theme, motive, melodic line and musical phrase. He illustrates by conducting the orchestra in excerpts from Tchaikovsky, Wagner, Hindemith, and Brahms.

  • S01E22 Young Performers No. 4

    • January 15, 1963
    • CBS

  • S01E23 The Latin American Spirit

    • March 8, 1963
    • CBS

    Bernstein discusses "the two ingredients that give this music its special Latin flavor: rhythm and color." Excerpts include Bernstein's own Symphonic Dances from West Side Story.

  • S01E24 A Tribute to Teachers

    • November 29, 1963
    • CBS

  • S01E25 Young Performers No. 5

    • December 23, 1963
    • CBS

  • S01E26 The Genius of Paul Hindemith

    • February 23, 1964
    • CBS

  • S01E27 Jazz in the Concert Hall

    • March 11, 1964
    • CBS

    Bernstein discusses the blending of jazz and symphonic music, with performances and readings to illustrate. The program ends with Larry Austin's Improvisations for Orchestra and Jazz Soloists.

  • S01E28 What is Sonata Form?

    • November 6, 1964
    • CBS

    Bernstein describes the three-part sonata form, and exemplifies it by singing the Beatles "And I Love Her." Veronica Tyler sings Micaela's aria from Bizet's Carmen and Bernsteinconducts the Philharmonic in the first movement of Mozart's Jupiter Symphony.

  • S01E29 Farewell to Nationalism

    • November 30, 1964
    • CBS

  • S01E30 Young Performers No. 6

    • January 28, 1965
    • CBS

  • S01E31 A Tribute to Sibelius

    • February 19, 1965
    • CBS

    Bernstein celebrates the one hundredth anniversary of the birth of Finnish composer Jean Sibelius, and comments on Finland, the Finnish language, and Finnish patriotism, as well as Sibelius himself. Works by the composer including Finlandia, and the fist movement of his Violin Concerto, with soloist Sergiu Luca, are performed

  • S01E32 Musical Atoms: A Study of Intervals

    • November 29, 1965
    • CBS

    Bernstein explains musical intervals and discusses their relationship to harmony, melody and inversion. After analysis, the first movement of Symphony No. 4 in E-flat Major by Brahms is performed. The discussion continues, focusing on major and minor seconds.

  • S01E33 The Sound of an Orchestra

    • December 14, 1965
    • CBS

    Bernstein explains that the duty of the orchestra is to reproduce faithfully the notes and instructions of the composer. The main focus is the first half of Haydn's Symphony No. 88. The opening music is deliberately played incorrectly and errors are pointed out.

  • S01E34 A Birthday Tribute to Shostakovich

    • January 5, 1966
    • CBS

    Bernstein celebrates Dmitri Shostakovich's sixtieth birthday by discussing his work and conducting an excerpt from his Symphony No. 7 and all of Symphony No. 9.

  • S01E35 Young Performers No. 7

    • February 22, 1966
    • CBS

  • S01E35 Young Performers No. 7

    • February 22, 1966
    • CBS

  • S01E36 What is a Mode?

    • November 23, 1966
    • CBS

    Bernstein discusses scales, intervals, and tones, and analyzes several pieces, including Debussy's Fetes, Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade, and music from the Kinks and the Beatles, to illustrate different modes. An excerpt from Bernstein's ballet Fancy Free is also performed.

  • S01E37 Young Performers No. 8

    • January 27, 1967
    • CBS

  • S01E38 Charles Ives: American Pioneer

    • February 23, 1967
    • CBS

  • S01E39 Alumni Reunion

    • April 19, 1967
    • CBS

  • S01E40 A Toast to Vienna in 3/4 Time

    • December 25, 1967
    • CBS

    Bernstein plays tribute to new York Philharmonic's "fraternal orchestra," the Vienna Philharmonic, in celebration of the 125th anniversary of both orchestras. Works by Johann and Richard Strauss, Mozart, Beethoven, and Mahler are performed and preceded by a brief discussion.

  • S01E41 Forever Beethoven

    • January 28, 1968
    • CBS

  • S01E42 Young Performers No. 9

    • March 31, 1968
    • CBS

  • S01E43 Quiz-Concert: How Musical Are You?

    • May 26, 1968
    • CBS

    Leonard Bernstein quizzes Avery Fisher Hall and television audiences on their musicality. Highlights include true-or-false questions with musical examples, and excerpts from Mozart, Prokofiev and Rimsky-Korsakov.

  • S01E44 Fantastic Variations (Don Quixote)

    • April 25, 1968
    • CBS

  • S01E45 Bach Transmogrified

    • April 27, 1969
    • CBS

  • S01E46 Berlioz Takes a Trip

    • May 25, 1969
    • CBS

    Bernstein discusses what he describes as the "first psychedelic symphony," Berlioz's La Symphonie Fantastique, examining the concept of the idée fixe in music and illustrating this concept with excerpts from the first movement. Bernstein analyzes the music and discusses the story line of the remaining movements which are performed by the Philharmonic.

  • S01E47 Two Ballet Birds

    • September 14, 1969
    • CBS

    Bernstein compares the main theme of Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake with Stravinsky's Firebird. A performance of the pas de deux from Swan Lake illustrates the concept of abstract ballet, followed by excerpts from Stravinsky's Firebird.

  • S01E48 Fidelio: A Celebration of Life

    • March 29, 1970
    • CBS

    Bernstein takes a look at Beethoven's so-called "flawed masterpiece" - his only opera, Fidelio. After discussing the story and its problems, "charming excerpts" are performed. Four vocal sections from Act II follow, each preceded by analysis and plot summary.

  • S01E49 The Anatomy of a Symphony Orchestra

    • May 24, 1970
    • CBS

  • S01E50 A Copland Celebration

    • December 27, 1970
    • CBS

  • S01E51 Thus Spake Richard Strauss

    • April 4, 1971
    • CBS

  • S01E52 Liszt and the Devil

    • February 13, 1972
    • CBS

  • S01E53 Holst: The Planets

    • March 26, 1972
    • CBS