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Stories of Music with Cantor Matthew Austerklein: A Musical Light Unto the Nations: Ernest Bloch & Leonard Bernstein

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Stories of Music with Cantor Matthew Austerklein: A Musical Light Unto the Nations: Ernest Bloch & Leonard Bernstein

 

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How does music reflect the American Jewish experience? What does Jewish music tell us about our identities and history? Join us to explore these questions and more through Stories of Music, an adult education project of the Lowell Milken Fund for American Jewish Music at UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music, where you will have the opportunity to learn with top faculty from UCLA and the Cantors Assembly.

This Unit: A Musical Light Unto the Nations: Ernest Bloch & Leonard Bernstein [Unit 7] 

Giants of 20th Century Art Music

Since the emergence of Jewish art music in the first decades of the twentieth century, composers, critics, musicians, and listeners of many stripes have struggled with—and argued about—how to define Jewish identity and what it means. For composers, the question of Jewish identity can be a vexing issue that intersects with larger questions about Jews and society more generally.

What does it mean to be a Jew in the world? How do one’s experiences as part of a religious and ethnic group influence one’s identity? How does that identity influence one’s approach to making music?

This lesson explores the music of two prominent Jewish composers who had very different American and Jewish experiences: Ernest Bloch and Leonard Bernstein.

Factors Explored and Questions Asked

Learners will explore how self-identified Jewish classical composers like Bloch & Bernstein used their particular Jewish cultural background in relation to universal human questions in their musical works.

Learners will be asked to consider questions such as:

  • How did the time and place in which Bloch and Bernstein lived influence the way in which they approached music from a Jewish perspective?
  • How does music with Jewish content/themes still speak in “a universal language?”
  • How might Bernstein & Bloch have thought differently about this?
  • To what extent do a composer’s ideas about Jewish music represent their own view versus the view of the society in which they live?
  • What does it mean for Jews to be a light unto the nations? Does this relate, in any way, to Jews as creators of American music and culture?

The Stories of Music curriculum is developed in partnership with the Cantors Assembly, the American Conference of Cantors, and our colleagues at the Milken Archive of Jewish Music. Our goal is to provide prepared lesson materials on a broad range of musically related topics to engage participants in adult education programs to think about the American Jewish experience through stories of the evolving nature of Jewish music.

This program is made possible by the Lowell Milken Fund for American Jewish Music at The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music.