Back in the 1950s and '60s, when George Gershwin was taken for granted more than he was respected, Leonard Bernstein was one of his only champions in high-classical-music circles, and to judge from these recordings, he got a...

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Back in the 1950s and '60s, when George Gershwin was taken for granted more than he was respected, Leonard Bernstein was one of his only champions in high-classical-music circles, and to judge from these recordings, he got away with a lot. He would seem to be attempting to out-swagger Arthur Fiedler in the jazzier passages, but on the plus side, what can sound freeze-dried with some conductors has a welcome heat here, especially in An American in Paris. That piece receives one of its best-ever recordings and sounds great in the bright, clear recording venue, Brooklyn's Hotel St. George. However, Bernstein's tempo extremes tax the cohesion of Rhapsody in Blue. And Grofé's Grand Canyon Suite receives a sympathetic performance, though the acoustics of the Lincoln Center recording venue are so cavernous and diffuse you'd think it was recorded in the location of the title. --David Patrick Stearns

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Dvorak: Symphony No. 9 - From the New World, Op. 95 / Carnival Overture / Slavonic Dances Nos. 1 & 3Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition & Night on Bald MountainGrofé: Grand Canyon Suite/Mississippi SuiteTchaikovsky: Piano Concerto No.1 / Rachmaninoff: Concerto No.2Bartok: Concerto for Orchestra / Music for Strings / Percussion & Celesta / Hungarian SketchesGershwin: Rhapsody In Blue / An American In ParisMussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition / A Night on Bald Mountain and Other Russian Showpieces