Michael Beckerman (born 1951) is an American musicologist specializing in Czech and Eastern European music. He has served as Carroll and Milton Petrie Chair and Collegiate Professor of Music at New York University and as Leonard Bernstein Scholar-in-Residence at the New York Philharmonic. He is Dean of the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music. One music journalist summarized Beckerman's career with: "In short, he's a big deal."
Early life and education
Beckerman graduated from Hofstra University in 1973. He intended to study Mozart in graduate school, but while working at a record store, he was offered free recordings of Czech music in exchange for promoting their sales, since customers rarely showed interest in composers such as Josef MysliveÃÂek, Josef Suk, VitÃÂslav Novák and Bohuslav MartinÃ
¯. Beckerman earned his Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1982. He described his choice of JanáÃÂekâÂÂs theoretical works for his doctoral subject as an unwitting example of "buying low and selling high".
Career
Beckerman held faculty positions at Washington University in St. Louis and the University of California, Santa Barbara before arriving at New York University, where he was Chair of Music from 2004-2013. Beckerman served as Distinguished Professor of History at Lancaster University in England. He was the Leonard Bernstein Scholar-in-Residence at the New York Philharmonic from 2016 to 2018.
Beckerman organized a symposium at the Library of Congress about DvoÃ
Âák's American years.
Beckerman commented for the NPR series "Fishko Files" about "symphonies that swing" when composers bring jazz music to the concert hall and about Tchaikovsky's use of 5/4 time for the so-called "waltz" from the Pathetique symphony. Beckerman commented for WQXR about DvoÃ
Âák's African-American student Harry T. Burleigh's influence on DvoÃ
Âák's composing and about getting beyond the antisemitism to appreciate Wagner's music.
Beckerman has written for the New York Times about subjects including DvoÃ
Âák, Bach, Schubert, the music of baseball, and the dark sides of Christmas songs. In one piece, Beckerman noted that the tune that most excites students in grade school orchestras is the theme from "Jeopardy". The NYT quoted Beckerman's 'amusing' program notes about a musical suite based on a Gogol novella: "it is never useful to scold composers for their taste in literature".
Beckerman co-edited a volume of essays on MartinÃ
¯ for the 2025 Bard Music Festival.
Awards
- ASCAP Deems Taylor Award for outstanding liner notes
- DvoÃ
Âák and JanáÃÂek Medals from the Czech Ministry of Culture
- Laureate of the Czech Music Council
- Honorary doctorates from Palacký and Masaryk Universities in the Czech Republic
- Gratias Agit Award from the Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- Harrison Medal from the Society of Musicology in Ireland
Books
- Classical Music: Contemporary Perspectives and Challenges, Open Book Publishers, 2021.
- MartinÃ
¯'s Mysterious Accident, Pendragon Press, 2007.
- JanáÃÂek and His World, Princeton University Press, 2003.
- New Worlds of DvoÃ
Âák, W.W. Norton, 2003.
- JanáÃÂek and Czech Music (with Glen Bauer), Pendragon Press, 1995.
- JanáÃÂek the Theorist, Pendragon Press, 1994.
- DvoÃ
Âák and His World, Princeton University Press, 1993.
Articles for The New York Times
- âÂÂBach was a MusicianâÂÂs Companion to Tragedy,â 2019.
- âÂÂThe âÂÂCzech Lute,â A Baroque Masterpiece, Gets Filled In,â 2015.
- âÂÂExploring Bach for his Gypsy Side,â 2009.
- âÂÂElectronica from the 1920âÂÂs; Ready for Sampling,â 2005.
- âÂÂThe Guitarist is Metal. No, Not Heavy Metal,â 2004.
- âÂÂMagic, Music, and Toys That Talk Back,â 2004.
- âÂÂCzech Music With Nary a Polka to Be Found,â 2004.
- âÂÂDon Quixote Adrift in Unreality Squared,â 2004.
- âÂÂThe Cunning Little Video,â 2003.
- âÂÂAn Experimental Composer on a Good Day,â 2003.
- âÂÂPolanskiâÂÂs âÂÂPianistâ and the Case of the Missing Nocturne, 2003.
- âÂÂRattle Raps, and 12 Cellists Serenade,â 2002.
- âÂÂDvoÃ
Âák and the American Soul,â 2002.
- âÂÂTheir Stage is a Box, Their Music Exquisite,â 2002.
- âÂÂA Laggard Goes to the opera By a Circuitous Route,â 2002.
- âÂÂMusic of Cold,â 2002.
- âÂÂHigh and Low Meet, and Mix With Drink,â 2001.
- âÂÂPushing Gypsiness,â 2001.
- âÂÂSchubert Takes a Hand in a Clever Film Score,â 2000.
- âÂÂRavelstein Knows Everything, Almost,â 1999.
- âÂÂDreaming of a White Christmas,â 1998.
- âÂÂTripping With Mr. Broucek,â 1996.
- âÂÂDvoÃ
Âák Does Disney? If Anything the Opposite," 1996.
- âÂÂMaking History Sound as Good as It Looks,â 1995.
- âÂÂThe Tales Overtures Could Tell,â 1994.
- âÂÂThe Odd Pull of âÂÂJeopardyâ on 62 Flutes,â 1994.
- âÂÂTonality is Dead--Long Live Tonality,â 1994.
- âÂÂCapturing the Pounding Pulse of New York City,â 1994.
- âÂÂAll Right, So Maybe Haydn DidnâÂÂt Write Them. So What?,â 1994.
- âÂÂItâÂÂs Time to Play Ball, and Stretch and Sing,â 1994.
- âÂÂClaire Bloom CanâÂÂt Sing, So If Opera is Out, Melodrama Must Be In,â 1994.
- âÂÂIn This Little Opera, of Sorts, the Piano is a Hero, of Sorts,â 1994.
- âÂÂDvoÃ
Âák Loved Pigeons and Trains, Not Ideology,â 1994.
- âÂÂA Tradition, From Boom to Bust,â 1993.
References
External links