Glass: Einstein On The Beach

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (34 ratings)
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Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 164:57

eMusic Review

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John Schaefer

eMusic Contributor

06.30.09
One of the true revolutionary moments in music history
1985 | Label: Sony Classical

One of the true revolutionary moments in music history, the 1976 debut of Einstein sent shock waves through the worlds of classical music, and eventually rock music, and forced a complete re-thinking of what the word "opera" might mean. EOTB consisted of a dreamlike sequence of tableaux by avant-garde director Robert Wilson, often accompanied by a headlong rush of winds, keyboards and vocals from the Philip Glass Ensemble. The tension between the slow movements on stage and the energy of the music made the full experience something akin to a trance state, or a hallucination. The recording, which of course is the music only, can still hint at the overall experience because of two unusual features: one is the series of short connecting musical joints, the so-called "Knee Plays," between the larger Acts. With the singers using do-re-mi syllables and counting the rhythms of the music, the "Knee Plays" might just be the most transparent pieces of music ever written. The other feature is a series of texts, again almost hallucinatory in nature, and many written by an autistic young man who was living at the time with Robert Wilson, which may not make "sense" but which portrays obsession just… read more »

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Glass + Wilson

EMUSIC-00E2E520

Really the only Phillip Glass I still listen to besides Music in 12 Parts. Less cloying than the later operas, and fresher than everything since. And yes, not as accessible as much later Glass (but more so than Music in 12 Parts).

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better than 1993 recording

mcwittmann

What a fabulous, groundbreaking album. It's almost worth it to write down what you're hearing, just to catch themes that show up again an hour or two into the piece. Fabulous energy, bizarrely captivating, and thoroughly meaningful music. It's worth the effort. I like this recording more than the 1993 version, which is softer, muddier, and not as energetic. This one thrives with a punk mentality. It's not perfect, consistent with the idea that people should just damn well take a breath when they need it. It's human. It's not lush. It's raw. It's perfect. I love it.

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What's after Glass?

richard.watson8

What's next after this album? What else can I listen to now that doesn't seem superficial and pale?

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Ridiculous! Throw Caution to the Wind

frankiepop

Download this masterpiece. Risk a little. Live a little. This music can change your life.

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Approach with Extreme Caution

mrothello

If you're familar with Philp Glass from his film scores or"Songs From Liquid Days",I don't think you're going to get into this work. I have the original LP and to this day, i can't listen to it all the way through. It's musical torture.I've tried to find a way into the music, but i just can't. Consider this a warning.

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Not Really Expensive

stevesmith2

At first, I too thought that 48 credits was too much, but checking out iTunes and several music sites, the cheapest price that I found was $39 for this recording. So 48 credits (or $24) is not really bad. Psychologically though, it hurts to spend that many credits on one recording.

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I'm quitting emusic.

BitchesBrew

48 credits?! I can buy the album for the cost of 48 credits. This is a total scam.

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A Marvel

jazzmine

Simply of the 2 or 3 best records on eMusic.

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48 credits??

picklepete

How is this supposed to work? It requires 48 credits to download the set, yet under the new pricing I'll only get 35 credits a month. I have to buy a booster pack just to get this? No thanks. (Didn't really mean to rate this, as my complaint is re. e-music, not the recording itself)

eMusic Features

Scene: Downtown New York Punk and Post-Punk, 1976-83

By Douglas Wolk

There's always music going on in New York City, always young artists coming to town to seek their fortune. But from the mid '70s to the early '80s, a bunch of interlocking music scenes popped up around downtown Manhattan, where the rents were still low enough for young people to find a cheap loft to live in, make big noises and push their art as far as it could go. The center of the early New… more »

They Say All Media Guide

This opera, composed in 1975 and premiered in 1976, is scored for four principal actors, 12 singers doubling as dancers and actors, a solo violinist, and an amplified ensemble of keyboards, winds and voices. It is imbued with the postmodern spirit both in its non-linear, poetic, mystic narrative and the floating, eternal world created by the shifting, mathematically precise patterns of Philip Glass’ modal music. There are three primary visual sets linked to three musical themes that recur within the work: trains (recalling the metaphors Einstein used to illustrate the theory of relativity, and with which he played as a child), a trial setting (modern life and modern science examined), and a spaceship (a metaphor for transcendence, and/or an escape from nuclear disaster). Also, Einstein himself appears midway between the orchestra and the stage as a violinist (his hobby) and as observer/witness. There are also additional spoken texts written by Christopher Knowles, Samuel M. Johnson and Lucinda Childs, which appear in various arrangements for single and multiple voices. This work locates itself as a midpoint between the composer’s early-’70s work, linking rhythmic and harmonic structures and his later series of operas and vocal works and film scores employing expanded narrative and/or timbral experiments. – “Blue” Gene Tyranny

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