Do you remember the first time you
encountered that phrase? Perhaps you saw
it in an English translation of Antoine Galland’s Les Mille et une nuits (One Thousand and One Nights…the story of Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves). In that
case, you might have pronounced it: ‘Open See-same.’
Or perhaps you - like I - just heard some
childhood friend say with a magical voice: ‘Open Ses-ah-mee!”
As much fun as it might be to remember our
first experiences with this phrase – still very much a part of English
colloquial speech – it is a saying I find myself wanting to use whenever we
present Fall in Love with Music, our
basic listening course.
But open what? Open one’s mind, of course. And so it
was a pleasure to read Michael Barrett’s article in Prelude, Fugue & Riffs (News for Friends of Leonard Bernstein
Spring/Summer 2016) entitled: High-brow,Low-brow, All-brow Bernstein, Gershwin, Ellington, and the Richness of AmericanMusic.
Erasing the imaginary boundaries between
the genres of music – classical, jazz, pop, Broadway, world, etc. – was a
personal mission of Maestro Bernstein, and Michael Barrett credits Maestro Bernstein
with helping him to shed those boundaries – the artificial genre borders
sometimes actually taught as “Gospel Truth’ to those of us who attended music
schools and conservatories in the 20th century.
The importance of developing and
maintaining an open mind is an integral concept of Fall in Love with Music.
In fact, Episode 3 ("Is This Music?”) of our new 8-part television series by the same name,
takes up this very topic.
Composers, whether they might be Mozart or
John Lennon, have very open minds. It is this quality of their personalities
that allows them to notice things they like and admire in another composer’s
music, and then permits them to restate those things in their own musical
vocabularies. This personality trait is
what also gives them the ability to reshape their own ideas in a myriad of ways.
For listeners, it is essential to bring the
same degree of open-mindedness to the
listening process that composers bring to the composing process. When someone says: “I know what music I like…and I know what music I don’t like”…I worry. I wonder: “With such a closed-minded
attitude, have they really noticed all
the wonderful details in the music they think
they like?”
One of the composers lauded in Michael
Barrett’s article is Duke Ellington. If
you’d like to spend 12 minutes with the great pianist – recorded live at a
performance in France in 1966 – view this YouTube performance.
And by the way, Michael Barrett spends
plenty of time helping people to understand and appreciate music as the
conductor for Jamie Bernstein’s educational concerts. I wrote a bit about this before in my 2013
blog The Bernstein Legacy.
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