Originally posted by Caliban
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Philip Glass
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostHer website asks, "Would you like Phamie to come and play near you?". I would't mind at all - but not the piano.
"Number 1 most played artist.”
-Caffe Nero
I'll commission her to compose me a triple-shot caramel mocha frappé latte - but nothing else...."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by eucalyptus44 View PostMy brain feels like shattered Glass with this insistent repetitive music. Could someone help me with a short, positive analysis of his work please. Love the discussion with DMcC. Thanks
Knock Knock
Knock Knock Knock
Knock Knock Knock Knock
Knock Knock Knock Knock Knock
Who's there ?
Philip Glass
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VLS's take on the matter, (you will probably have to select a player to hear it once it downloads).
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Originally posted by eucalyptus44 View PostMy brain feels like shattered Glass with this insistent repetitive music. Could someone help me with a short, positive analysis of his work please. Love the discussion with DMcC. Thanks
Well it's not exact repetition is it? And as such, it's quite common in Indian music and Jazz. And at least much of it is tonal!
I guess it's what your listening ears are attuned to. I have no difficulty in listening to minimalism without getting irritated or angry. But I can understand a listener who only listens to the Classics will have difficulties with this type of music
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Originally posted by Oddball View PostThe issue of repetition was discussed between Glass and DM in I think it was Monday's episode. As Glass stated, repetition is quite common in the Classics, e.g. Haydn. But there is not in Glass a "narrative structure", I think was the term used.
Well it's not exact repetition is it? And as such, it's quite common in Indian music and Jazz. And at least much of it is tonal!
I guess it's what your listening ears are attuned to. I have no difficulty in listening to minimalism without getting irritated or angry. But I can understand a listener who only listens to the Classics will have difficulties with this type of music
As for what I really dislike about P Glass's music.... (Contd P 364)Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 21-03-12, 21:55.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIt's mechanical, relentless and to my mind militaristic and therefore subliminally pathogenic. Unlike the nuances in earlier musics and musics of other cultures it consciously depends for its "$$$effectiveness$$$" on its machine-prescisionness, cutting it off from what it purports to draw on, rock music and, before that, blues and African rhythms, which it effectively demeans by wronged association. Minimalism, in the manner in which it has "evolved", is typically white imperialist American, to make a non-generalisation, whatever the themes it poses to. It p***** on all the advances in harmonic, rhythmic and timbral thinking in the Western concert music tradition that have made their mark on jazz and the best of popular music up to and including the twentieth century, and tramples the memories of those great musician artists who sacrificed freedom and often life in the quest to deepen the expressive range by means of which music can authentically reflect the complexity of our times.
As for what I really dislike about P Glass's music.... (Contd P 364)I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Lateralthinking1
Oh dear. I'm really sorry. I like Philip Glass and own Glassworks both on vinyl and cd. I will be listening on the I-Player.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostTo me, the only Minimalism-inspired composer who, in some of his works, has made something interesting(ly derivative) out of it is John Adams.
I'm more in tune with your #21, S_A. Apart from a couple of early Reich pieces (in particular Drumming and Music for 18 Musicians) Minimalism isn't my thing - Glass' writings about his collaborations in Opera on the Beach have always struck me as far more interesting than the actual Music that he produced for them.
But Adams has always struck me as embodying the worst characteristics that you describe in #21. I hear nothing in his work that other composers (past - Hindemith - and present - Rihm) haven't done better.
Sorry.Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 22-03-12, 10:09.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
I'm more in tune with your #21, S_A. Apart from a couple of early Reich pieces (in particular Drumming and Music for 18 Musicians) Minimalism isn't my thing - Glass' writings about his collaborations in Opera on the Beach have always struck me as far more interesting than the actual Music that he produced for them.
But Adams has always struck me as embodying the worst characteristics that you describe in #21. I hear nothing in his work that other composers (past - Hindemith - and present - Rihm) haven't done better.
Sorry.
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIt's mechanical, relentless and to my mind militaristic and therefore subliminally pathogenic. Unlike the nuances in earlier musics and musics of other cultures it consciously depends for its "$$$effectiveness$$$" on its machine-prescisionness, cutting it off from what it purports to draw on, rock music and, before that, blues and African rhythms, which it effectively demeans by wronged association. Minimalism, in the manner in which it has "evolved", is typically white imperialist American, to make a non-generalisation, whatever the themes it poses to. It p***** on all the advances in harmonic, rhythmic and timbral thinking in the Western concert music tradition that have made their mark on jazz and the best of popular music up to and including the twentieth century, and tramples the memories of those great musician artists who sacrificed freedom and often life in the quest to deepen the expressive range by means of which music can authentically reflect the complexity of our times.
As for what I really dislike about P Glass's music.... (Contd P 364)
Glass's music reminds me of a very persistent and painful migraine and something that you are delighted to see the back of!
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