By Terry Blain

Published: Tuesday, 02 January 2024 at 14:40 PM


‘I am experiencing a historical moment, incomparable with others in my long, long life.’ Leonard Bernstein was 71 when he spoke those words, six weeks after elated crowds began tearing down the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989.

For 28 years the wall had split the city in two, preventing those living in communist-controlled East Berlin crossing to West Berlin, where the democratic values of the Federal Republic of Germany held sway. But communism in eastern Europe had begun to crumble, and the convulsive shockwaves were causing the long-impregnable barriers between the two parts of a divided Germany, both ideological and physical, to crumble too.

Ever a master of the dramatic moment, Bernstein instinctively grasped that he, an elder statesman of international music, had a unique contribution to make at this historic juncture. So when asked to conduct two concerts celebrating the fall of the Berlin Wall, he jumped at the opportunity.

When were Leonard Bernstein’s Berlin concerts?

The concerts were scheduled for the 23rd and 25th of December 1989, and would be uniquely symbolic in nature. Three choirs would assemble from different parts of Germany, and the orchestra would be international in character, drawing players from New York, Paris, London, Leningrad, and both East and West Germany. Together they would perform Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, a work whose arduous transition from oppressive darkness into brilliant, joy-filled light seemed perfectly suited to the occasion.

When Bernstein arrived in Berlin, however, he was far from being in prime physical condition. While in London to record his operetta Candide earlier in December, he had caught a virulent strain of flu. Though still weak from its side-effects, he summoned the energy to conduct not one, but two performances of the Ninth Symphony on December 23 – the first a preliminary run-through for an afternoon audience in East Berlin, the other in the West in the evening.