Writer and Cultural Commentator

Daniel Gelernter

32 articles 2004–2017

Daniel Gelernter is a writer and technology entrepreneur who contributed to The Weekly Standard from 2004 to 2017. His writing for the magazine spanned a range of topics including gun policy, Middle East affairs, anti-Semitism, and the arts, with particular attention to cultural criticism and Israeli security issues. He is the son of Yale computer scientist David Gelernter and a co-founder of the software company Dittach.

A Good 'Marriage'

December 29, 2017 · culture, Today's Blogs, Daniel Gelernter

The Marriage of Figaro debuted in Vienna in 1786. The audience was so enthusiastic that, after just two performances, Emperor Joseph II ordered posters put up in the theater warning the public against too many encores, “to prevent the excessive duration of operas.” Mozart directed a second…

Piano Men

June 2, 2017 · Music, Daniel Gelernter, Today's Blogs

Of the generation of pianists who became well-known in the 1970s, famous in the '80s and great in the '90s, Murray Perahia and Maurizio Pollini are the remaining twin pillars. On the weekend of May 20, both of them were in Manhattan, at Carnegie Hall, playing exceptional programs to packed houses.

A Monument to Beethoven

May 18, 2017 · Music, Today's Blogs, Daniel Gelernter

Two musical forms dominated Beethoven's mind and rounded every chapter of his life: the piano sonata was his vanguard. The string quartet was the ultimate expression. Beethoven's five late quartets, the last works he wrote, represent more than his total subjugation of the most difficult frontier he…

Beethoven Takes Manhattan

May 2, 2017 · Today, Music, Daniel Gelernter

Last week, the New York Philharmonic presented Beethoven's Second Piano Concerto as part of a wide-ranging program under visiting Belfast-born conductor Courtney Lewis and pianist Jonathan Biss.

The Bloom is off 'Der Rosenkavalier'

April 22, 2017 · Daniel Gelernter, opera, Blog

When the curtain rose on the second act of the Met's new production of Richard Strauss' Der Rosenkavalier, the audience applauded and cheered for the set. Represented onstage was the circa-1910 palace of a nouveau-riche arms merchant, complete with two giant mortars on wheels, a dozen Josef…

Beethoven Tries Opera

April 3, 2017 · culture, Daniel Gelernter, opera

Fidelio was the first opera performed after the Second World War in Berlin and Vienna respectively. It was chosen to mark the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union. It was also the first opera Toscanini broadcast with the NBC Symphony. The Met has been producing it since…

Tech Savvy Is Not the Same As Wisdom

March 23, 2017 · magazine_repost, Silicon Valley, start-ups

Not long ago I visited a friend who'd moved to Silicon Valley to work in the startup industry. He had undergone a baffling change: The formerly sports-jacketed East Coaster had become a gluten-free, paleo-dieting, T-shirt-wearing Burning Man.

Startupworld

March 17, 2017 · Silicon Valley, start-ups, technology

Not long ago I visited a friend who’d moved to Silicon Valley to work in the startup industry. He had undergone a baffling change: The formerly sports-jacketed East Coaster had become a gluten-free, paleo-dieting, T-shirt-wearing Burning Man.

B-List Mozart

March 14, 2017 · Daniel Gelernter, Conservative Newsstand, opera

Idomeneo is the earliest of Mozart's major operas and, traditionally, the least popular. It opened in Munich in 1781, a year before the Vienna debut of The Abduction from the Seraglio, which was a smash-hit. In Munich, a press notice praised Idomeneo's set design but forgot to mention Mozart.…

A Heroic Night at Carnegie Hall

March 7, 2017 · Music, Daniel Gelernter, Blog

On Wednesday, March 1, the Boston Symphony Orchestra appeared at Carnegie Hall under conductor Andris Nelsons with pianist Emanuel Ax in what may have been the most remarkable performance of the season.

This Night Belonged to a Violinist

February 27, 2017 · Music, Daniel Gelernter, Conservative Newsstand

Playing Beethoven symphonies is what a symphony orchestra really ought to be doing most of the time. The New York Philharmonic performed Beethoven's Seventh and Eighth Symphonies last week under American-born Swedish conductor Herbert Blomstedt. Blomstedt is an emeritus of the Swedish and Danish…

Tchaikovsky's Triumph

February 20, 2017 · culture, Daniel Gelernter, Blog

Russian-American conductor Semyon Bychkov was supposed to be conducting Tchaikovsky's Sixth Symphony last week with the New York Philharmonic. Instead he got the flu—presumably as a warning to all those New Yorkers who haven't listened to their mothers about getting a flu shot—and his concerts were…

A Master at Work

January 31, 2017 · culture, Music, Daniel Gelernter

Daniel Barenboim is at Carnegie Hall with the Staatskapelle Berlin conducting a Bruckner Symphony Cycle. So all is well with the world, except for the choice of music. Which is only to say that, of the three composers famous for writing nine symphonies, Bruckner would be our third choice. But I was…

The Battle of the Bulge, Nazi Germany's Last Gasp Attack

December 16, 2016 · Nazis, Army, Battle of the Bulge

The last German offensive of World War II began at 5:30 a.m. on December 16, 1944. The rank-and-file German soldier thought he was giving Paris back to the Führer for a "Christmas present." The more experienced Wehrmacht commanders knew that, even should they reach the Meuse or—more…

Mahler Takes Manhattan

December 6, 2016 · culture, Music, Daniel Gelernter

The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam performed at Carnegie Hall last week under Russian-American conductor Semyon Bychkov. Because the venue is so well known and the performers are so good and the seats so expensive and hard to get, Carnegie's programmers are rather blasé on the question…

Art in Isolation

June 24, 2016 · Daniel Gelernter, Magazine, Books and Arts

This new Matisse cut-outs show is odd, since you can see some of the greatest artworks of the 20th century and still leave feeling disappointed. Good curatorship, like good umpiring, is most obvious when it’s not there: John Elderfield helped set the bar impossibly high with the Museum of Modern…

Was Dropping the Atomic Bomb Necessary?

August 27, 2015 · Japan, Daniel Gelernter, Blog

Many of my friends think Hiroshima was an unjustifiable atrocity. My usual course in atom-bomb disputes is to refer the belligerent to Donald Kagan’s brilliant 1995 piece in Commentary, “Why America Dropped the Bomb.” The reaction is consistent, and surprising: My friends do not challenge any of…

Save the Enterprise!

August 17, 2015 · Daniel Gelernter, Magazine

The beautiful planes that flew over the National Mall on the seventieth anniversary of V-E Day are rare not because few survived the war but because few survived the war’s aftermath. 

College Kicks Off 'Disinvitation Dinner' By Hosting Speaker Shunned by University

April 17, 2015 · College, speech, Daniel Gelernter

Now that the liberals who were once insurgent voices in the undergraduate student body are the presidents and deans of American universities, they’ve decided it is high time for those universities to reevaluate their outdated devotion to freedom of speech.  The proper modern university, they…

Dutch Masters

December 23, 2013 · Daniel Gelernter, Magazine, Books and Arts

What may be the greatest painting in our hemisphere is on temporary loan from the Mauritshuis in The Hague. Girl with a Pearl Earring (ca. 1665) hasn’t been in the United States since 1996 and is unlikely ever to be here again. We owe this traveling show of Dutch masterpieces, centering on Johannes…

Look and Learn

September 2, 2013 · Daniel Gelernter, Magazine, Books and Arts

New Haven 

Yes President

January 16, 2012 · Daniel Gelernter, Commerce, Government

Last Friday, President Obama asked Congress for the power to consolidate government agencies, saying he’d start by rolling Commerce and five lesser departments into a single business and trade department.

Yale Cancels Program on Study of Anti-Semitism

June 8, 2011 · College, anti-Semitism, Daniel Gelernter

Yale University has now canceled the Yale Initiative for the Study of Antisemitism (YIISA), the only such program in the country. The New York Post reports that the reason for the program's termination was not lack of interest, but, likely, the program's insistence on covering all forms of…

Terrorists Strike Israeli Family in Itamar

March 15, 2011 · Israel, Terrorism, Gaza

Last Friday night, March 11, Palestinian terrorists broke into a home in the West Bank settlement of Itamar and stabbed to death everyone they found inside. The father, Udi Fogel, and his three-month-old daughter, Hadas, had their throats slit in bed. The mother, Ruth, was stabbed as she came out…

Student Gun Laws — and Liberal Critics

March 2, 2011 · Daniel Gelernter, Texas, guns

The Texas legislature is likely to approve a measure that would allow students with pistol permits to carry guns on college campus.  Although the proposed law would do nothing to change the requirements for getting a permit—one would still have to be over 21, have no criminal record, no record of…

As Thousands Cheer

February 7, 2011 · book reviews, Daniel Gelernter, Magazine

Brian Wilson’s album is a new take on favorite Gersh-win songs, as arranged and sung by the great Beach Boys songwriter, and includes two brand-new songs that Wilson assembled from Gersh-win’s uncompleted manuscripts. Larry Starr teaches music history at the University of Washington, and George…

Unarmed is Dangerous

February 27, 2008 · Daniel Gelernter, Blog

THE VALENTINE'S DAY SHOOTING at Northern Illinois University, following last year's Virginia Tech Massacre, makes college shootings seem like an emerging fad among suicidal lunatics. There were no such shootings in the 2005-2006 academic year, one last academic year, and three this academic…

An Army of One

October 25, 2004 · Daniel Gelernter, Magazine

I GO TO AMITY SR. HIGH SCHOOL in Woodbridge, Connecticut--a liberal public school in a liberal state. Conservatives are scarce around here and outspoken ones are scarcer. I am so "unusual" that people (friends and even some I don't know) call me "Dan, Dan, Republican," which is a good-natured joke,…