Overture Magazine 2013-2014 March-April 2014 | Page 11

You enjoy a first class music experience. Over such an extraordinary career, is there one performance that stands out in your memory as particularly special? WATTS: It’s a difficult question, but I can certainly say, playing with Bernstein when I was 16 and doing the Young People’s Concerts in the fall of 1962. I know that the big deal was substituting for Gould in ’63, but when I was playing the Young People’s Concerts, it was television, it was the New York Philharmonic, it was Leonard Bernstein. How do you feel you have evolved as a musician over your decades-long career? WATTS: Evolution is some version of the aging process. We learn more, we become more refined and clever, and the experience of life changes the sharpness of some emotion and blunts some others. But if you’re an extroverted performer, that d