Leo Ornstein: Modernist Dilemmas, Personal Choices traces the
meteoric rise and heretofore inexplicable disappearance of the
Russian-American, futurist-anarchist, pianist-composer from his
arrival in the United States in 1906 through a career that lasted
nearly a century. Outliving his admirers and critics by decades Leo
Ornstein passed away in 2002 at the age of 108. Frequently compared
to Igor Stravinsky and Arnold Schoenberg, for a time Ornstein
enjoyed a kind a celebrity granted few living musicians. And then
he turned his back on it all. This first, full-length biographical
study draws upon interviews, journals, and letters from a wide
circle of Ornstein's friends and acquaintances to track the
Ornstein family as it escaped the horrors of the Russian pogroms,
and it situates the Russian-Jewish-American musician as he carved
out an identity amidst World War I, the flu pandemic, and the Red
Scare. While telling Leo Ornstein's story, the book also
illuminates the stories of thousands of immigrants with similar
harrowing experiences. It also explores the immeasurable impact of
his unexpected marriage in 1918 to Pauline Mallet-Prevost, a Park
Avenue debutante.
Leo Ornstein: Modernist Dilemmas, Personal Choices finds
Ornstein at the center of several networks that included artists
John Marin, William Zorach, Leon Kroll, writers and activists Paul
Rosenfeld, Waldo Frank, Edmund Wilson, and Clair Reis, the
Stieglitz Circle, and a group of English composers known as the
Frankfurt Five. Ornstein's story challenges directly the
traditional chronology and narrative regarding musical modernism in
America and its close relation to the other arts.
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