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| Disc: 1 |
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| 1. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 1: Before The Creation |
| 2. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 2: Creation Of The Cosmos |
| 3. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 3: Creation Of Sentient Beings |
| 4. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 4: Creation Of Human Beings' |
| 5. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 5: Love And Joy |
| 6. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 6: Evil And Ignorance |
| Disc: 2 |
| 1. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 7: Suffering |
| 2. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 8: Compassion |
| 3. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 9: Death |
| 4. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 10: Judgment And Apocalypse |
| 5. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 11: Paradise |
| 6. Symphony No. 5 ('Choral'), for 5 soloists, chorus, children's chorus & orchestra: No. 12: Dedication Of Merit |
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Minimalism on a maximumism scale,
By
This review is from: Glass: Symphony no 5 (Choral): Requiem, Bardo, Nirmanakaya (Audio CD)
I am one of those Philip Glass fans that is always looking for him to write Koyaanisqatsi all over again, though through time I come to love all of his symphonic works. His 5th symphony is no exception. From beginning to end, it constantly builds until the opening of the symphony is recapitulated in the last moment. Everything seems to flow seemlessly in the next section, with increasing tension and power. The different texts add so much to the symphony. Not only do they add a psuedo-plot, but also add a dimension of universality. Glass added them to promote a world culture, and they succeed very well. It is amazing to see all the parallels between the different religions presented. Perhaps the most interesting thing is how this music is refered to as minimalism, but looking at the orchestration and sheer magnitude of the symphony there is nothing minimal about it. This symphony will undoubtedly be paralleled with Mahler's 8th. Preexisting texts are sung and a huge symphony, including a choir, a boy's choir, and 5 soloists, is used. Like Mahler, Glass uses these to move his audience with great power, but there are also moments of great quiet and delicacy. It all contributes to a symphony that rivals Mahler's great masterpiece. The cd's themselves come with a set of ten (one for each movement) cardboard text guides. One the inside of each one are the words sung, and on the outside is a representation of the words in their respective languages. This adds to the overall listening experience but it also adds to the price, which is my only complaint. It is alot to pay for one opus, but if you are a die hard Glass fan like I am, then perhaps price isn't an option. Still, this is a must have for any Glass fan and for me, at least until he gets around to rewriting Koyaanisqatsi.
24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hearing the Words,
By David Edmonston (Cabin John, MD USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Glass: Symphony no 5 (Choral): Requiem, Bardo, Nirmanakaya (Audio CD)
I bought the Glass Symphony No. 5 recording mainly because I had tickets to hear the work live at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, and I wanted to know in advance how to listen to the music when I went there. At first I listened to the CDs as I usually do--doing one or two other things at the same time. I thought, "That was nice music, but not exciting." Then I thought that since the work was a choral work in English, and the CDs came with such nice cards with all the words, I really should try reading along and focusing on the words. It was an investment in time and attention, but when I did it the symphony suddenly came alive to me, both musically and emotionally, and clearly that is how it was intended to be experienced. At the Kennedy Center I had the opportunity to hear Philip Glass himself speak informally before the concert, describing the writing of Symphony No. 5. He was accompanied by the Rev. James Parks Morton, the President of the Interfaith Center of New York, who had been closely involved with Glass in collecting the text excerpts from the "world wisdom traditions" that were used as a text in the work. In his talk, Glass confirmed that this work centers on the text. The symphony was intended as a large work that would be a tribute to the change of millennia. The music is in twelve sections (Glass seemed unsure whether they should be called movements), each treating a major theme found in the great scriptures. The text selections come from nearly every major world religion as well as wisdom stories from folk cultures worldwide. Not only does this work have geographic and cultural breadth, but also it has a breadth in time that boggles the mind, sweeping from "Before the Creation" to "Judgement and Apocalypse," and "Paradise." En route, the human condition is examined with sections entitled "Joy and Love," "Evil and Ignorance," "Suffering," "Compassion," and "Death." Here are some brief examples of the text: Before the Creation: The symphony opens with these memorable words: "There was neither non-existence nor existence then; there was neither realm of space nor the sky which is beyond. What stirred? Where?" (The Rig Veda, India) Joy and Love: "Come, come, whoever you are!/ Wanderer, worshipper, lover of leaving./ Come./ This is not a caravan of despair./ It doesn't matter if you have broken your vows a thousand times./ Still come, and yet again come!" (Rumi, Persia) Paradise: "There I have seen joy filled to the brim./ There falls the rhythmic beat of life and death:/ Rapture wells forth, and all space is radiant with light." (Kabir, India) Dedication: The closing lines are: "For as long as space endures/ And [for] as long as living beings remain,/ Until then may I too abide/ To dispel the misery of the world." (Bodhicaryavatara, Tibet) Glass pointed out that the last section repeats the music of the first section, "but a little more distantly." He said this is to suggest (as taught in Eastern traditions) that the great cosmic cycles of time repeat again and again, so as one cycle comes to an end another begins. Glass said that while he was writing he wondered if the work, drawing from so many sources, might come across as a mere "patchwork of texts" rather than as a unified whole. But he said when he heard it performed he was satisfied that it held together well. This is my experience also. I was impressed that in this work so many disparate cultural voices speak together with both unity and urgency. It is a tribute to the universality of these text selections, as well as the sensitivity with which they were arranged. Someone asked Glass how he came up with the music to fit each selection. He said that the music arose from the words themselves as he meditated on them, aided, of course, by a lifetime of composing music for songs and choral works. Someone else asked Glass whether working with these texts had affected him spiritually. He answered that they had very much affected him and that he continues to study the wisdom teachings. Currently he is reading "Black Elk Speaks," and, he said, some of these texts have found their way into more recent works, including a Symphony No. 6 on which he is now working. During the Kennedy Center performance, as the choruses and soloists lingered on every word, and the music embraced the beautiful thoughts of the great thinkers and spiritual seekers of the world, I felt emotionally overwhelmed. Other people too, were deeply moved as evidenced by a ten minute standing ovation for the hundreds of orchestral and choral performers, for the conductor, Dante Anzolini (who also conducted for the recording), and for Glass himself, who joined the performers for a bow.
18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Culmination of his Recent Efforts,
By A Customer
This review is from: Glass: Symphony no 5 (Choral): Requiem, Bardo, Nirmanakaya (Audio CD)
Philip Glass is something of a paradox; he is continually changing in terms of the APPLICATION of the broad spectrum of influences he brings to bear on his creative process, but the process remains fundamentally the same. A few records back, I thought he might be heading in the Wagnerian direction, perhaps fondly reminiscing about his salad days with Nadia Boulangier. Certainly, LA BELE ET LA BETE reflected a certain Wagnerian posturing.Here, in his Symphony 5, we have the final culmination of Glass's seemingly perpetual internal conflict between nineteenth century romanticism and late twentieth century modernism/minimalism. I'm not saying the result is necessarily the greatest thing on earth; I'm very fond of Glass's heavy-duty minimalism, especially MISHIMA and KOYANISQUAATSI (and of course EINSTEIN ON THE BEACH.) But here we have something more enduring and more profound than the early works. Philip's had things on his mind. The music of course revisits his trademark loops and arpeggios but also has a dark, surging urgency that the bare minimalist frameworks of his earlier pieces simply lack. This really is a tour-de-force of Philip Glass; no matter what period of his music you like (if, for instance, you prefer his CANDYMAN work, or you really like the score for THE SECRET AGENT, which I think contains some of his best moments musically), Symphony No. 5 has something for you to appreciate. If you like Philip loud, he's loud. If you like him dark, he's appreciatively millenium-compatibly dark. If you like him soft, there are moments reminiscent of SATYGRAHA or even Mahler's KINDERTODENLIEDER. It does lag if you examine it in bits and pieces; you can't just skip around and listen to random bits like you can with EINSTEIN. Listen to the whole thing and then understand how far Glass has come-- from someone who was essentially extending Satie's concept of 'furniture music' (people were free to wander in and out of the initial eight hour performance of EINSTEIN), to someone trying to reconcile his own inner spiritual vision with a newly reborn creative dynamic shed of the 'largess' of postmodern minimalism. Glass denies that his music was ever polemic, and the film-maker (and fellow Boulangier alum) Godfrey Reggio has even called Glass the last 19th century Romantic. But here, the concern (and debate) over how much the currents of modernist polemic have influenced Glass seem to fall away. It's the text that's critical. In fact, the text may be more critical here than in any other of Glass's vocal works. Fundamental questions about life and death and existence are asked, culled from the great philosophical/theosophical texts of both eastern and western civilization. I think this is the first time Glass has actually made music around words, rather than making music FOR words or adapting words to music. More powerful, in any case, than the limpid second and third symphonies, and perhaps the last of Glass's symphonic efforts, the No. 5 is definetly Glass at his apex in terms of the symphonic form. This is definetly a western symphony, and parallels can be drawn with all the great 19th century symphonic composers. Particularly Wagner. So beware. It's stained Glass; the complex architecture of 19th century romanticism is sifted through the minimalist tradition Glass himself has established. Glass referencing Glass in much the same way Bowie is forced to reference himself in his current recordings; but the disturbing implication is that we cannot escape the 'academy' of 19th century romanticism, and that the direction of the 21st century will be a final inscription of the 19th century western tradition on the complexion of music world-wide. Modernism was a boutique; maybe we really did reach the height of our aesthetic civilization during the 19th century, musically speaking. What do we do now?
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