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Leo Ornstein was born the son of a
Jewish cantor. As a child, Ornstein demonstrated exceptional talent at the piano, and was sent at age ten to the
St. Petersburg Conservatory on a recommendation from his uncle, legendary pianist
Josef Hofmann. Owing to renewed hostility towards
Jews in Russia, Ornstein's family fled to the
United States in 1907
. In the U.S., Ornstein studied with
Bertha Fiering
Tapper at the
New England Conservatory of Music and
Percy Goetschius at the
Institute for
Music Art in
New York City (later Julliard). Ornstein made his debut as pianist in
New York in
March 1911.
In 1913, Ornstein composed
Danse sauvage (
Wild Men's
Dance), a violently rhythmic piano piece that is entirely dissonant and fashioned out of large tone clusters. This was followed by a series of such works, including Two
Impressions of
Notre Dame and
Suicide in an
Airplane (both
1914),
A la chinoise (
1917) and others.
Beginning in 1914, Ornstein appeared in programs combining these pieces and those of
Schoenberg,
Ravel's
Gaspard de la nuit,
Bartók,
Kodály,
Debussy,
Scriabin, among others, advertised as "
Futurist music." Ornstein was soon recognized as the foremost advocate of difficult, ultramodern music. Inasmuch as Ornstein's own work was concerned, critics were overwhelmingly negative at first, one stating that his music "transformed the concert hall into a dental parlor." Some critics recognized the value of Ornstein's idiom.
Famous New York critic
James Huneker once remarked that Schoenberg's atonal music sounded "timid" next to Ornstein's and dubbed him "most emphatically the only true-blue, genuine, Futurist composer alive." In
1918 Frederick H. Martens was sufficiently moved by Ornstein's music to publish what has to be the earliest book-length biography written on an
American modern musician, Leo Ornstein:
The Man, His
Ideas, His
Work. That same year Ornstein married pianist
Pauline Mallét-Provost
.
In the 1920s Leo Ornstein was respected as one of the chief talents on the piano recital circuit. In 1923, Ornstein launched his
Piano Concerto in
Philadelphia under the baton of
Leopold Stokowski. That year he also co-founded the
League of Composers, going on to serve on its board of directors. By this time, Ornstein began to temper his ultra-modernism with late-Romantic elements, realizing as early as the
Sonata for violin and piano (
1915) that he'd reached a saturation
point with dissonance.
In 1933, at age 41 Leo Ornstein dropped out of the concert circuit. He and Pauline founded the Ornstein
School of Music in Philadelphia, which they piloted until Leo retired in
1955. In 1936, the League of Composers commissioned his
Nocturne and
Dance of the
Fates, which were premiered in
St. Louis under
Vladimir Golschmann. This would be the last honor for Ornstein for some 40 years, as he and his music slipped into total obscurity. The Ornsteins took up residence in a mobile home in
Brownsville, TX. Throughout this period, Ornstein continued to compose, oblivious to changing trends in the concert world.
In the
1970s, Ornstein was rediscovered, and in
1975 he was awarded the
Marjorie Waite
Peabody Award by the
American Academy and
National Institute of Arts and
Letters. Musicologist
Vivian Perlis arranged for Ornstein to devote his papers to
Yale University. In
1985, Pauline Ornstein died, and the composer relocated to
Green Bay, WI. In
1990, Ornstein's son Severo published a 10-volume edition of Ornstein's piano works, oddly coinciding with Ornstein's own final work, the
Piano Sonata No. 8.
Having outlived most of his contemporaries by a substantial period of time, Leo Ornstein is the only concert musician known to have inhabited the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries. Ornstein died on
February 24,
2002.
- published: 18 Apr 2016
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