The Unanswered Question VI : The Poetry of Earth

Bernstein at Harvard

This series comprised six lectures on music, which cumulatively took the title of a work by Charles Ives, The Unanswered Question. Bernstein drew analogies to other disciplines, such as poetry, aesthetics, and especially linguistics, hoping to make these lectures accessible to an audience with limited or no musical experience, while maintaining an intelligent level of discourse: This lecture takes its name from a line in John Keats' poem, "On the Grasshopper and Cricket". Bernstein does not discuss Keats' poem directly in this chapter, but he provides his own definition of the poetry of earth, which is tonality. Tonality is the poetry of earth because of the phonological universals discussed in lecture 1. This lecture discusses predominantly Stravinsky, whom Bernstein considers the poet of earth.

Documentary
Music

You Might Also Like

  • Beyonce & Jay-Z: Power Love
  • Rolling Up the Welcome Mat (A Short Film)
  • Dua Lipa: Elevating
  • Even Hell Has Its Heroes
  • Guitar
  • Yo Creo En El Ruido
  • The Last Pirates: Britain's Rebel DJs
  • André Rieu's 2018 Maastricht Concert
  • La voz de mi ciudad
  • The Art of Conducting - Legendary Conductors of a Golden Era
  • Around You
  • Teaches of Peaches
  • Everybody's Cage
  • Adagio
  • The Magic of Spirituals
  • Bolero: A Global Hit
  • Googoosh: Made of Fire