Today, 3 P.M., selected Hanukkah songs, excerpts from Leonard Bernstein's "Jeremiah Symphony."
Leonard Slatkin conducted instead the Overture to "Candide," the "Jeremiah" Symphony and the "Chichester Psalms."
Someone else - someone special - might have written the "Jeremiah" Symphony or the Serenade.
At Tanglewood, she was chosen by Leonard Bernstein to be the mezzo-soprano soloist in a presentation of his Jeremiah Symphony with the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
Leonard Bernstein calls for maracas on timpani in both the "Jeremiah" Symphony and Symphonic Dances from West Side Story.
James DePreist leads a two-concert tribute to Leonard Bernstein, with the "Jeremiah" Symphony in the second.
This fall, the New York Philharmonic presented the "Jeremiah" Symphony, the "Age of Anxiety" Symphony, and the "Serenade" for violin, strings, and percussion.
(A similar figure appears in the lamentations of the "Jeremiah" Symphony.)
In January 1944 he conducted the premiere of his Jeremiah Symphony in Pittsburgh.
The cantors referred to Bernstein's "Jeremiah Symphony" as an example of contemporary music based on ancient modes.