Einstein On The Beach Philip Glass Raritan

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Einstein On The Beach Philip Glass Raritan Rating: 3,6/5 1670 votes
  1. Einstein On The Beach Audition

The recording of the original production of Philip Glass' and Robert Wilson's Einstein on the Beach has iconic significance both in the development of the musical style unfortunately known as minimalism, as well as in the history of music in the late twentieth century. It was a watershed moment when Glass and his ensemble brought the nearly five-hour opera to the Metropolitan Opera House in 1976; his unique aesthetic convictions moved from the rarefied atmosphere of loft concerts into the face of the classical music establishment in a way that could not be ignored.

May 06, 2012  Philip Glass's list of stage works stretches well beyond 20.The majority have reached Britain, but until now Einstein on the Beach – the work he devised in 1976 with director Robert Wilson.

One of the strengths of the work is the diversity of musical worlds it encompasses, from moments of a cappella choral singing, to relentless electro-techno tracks, to ensembles of sonically overwhelming grandeur. The most striking characteristic of Einstein is its use of repetitions, which are rarely exact -- a large part of the music's allure lies in Glass' subtle varying of the repeated patterns. The length of the patterned sections demands an extraordinary level of concentration from the performers, and listeners, regardless of their feelings about the music itself, cannot help being amazed at the virtuosity of the singers, speakers, and instrumentalists who could pull off such a remarkable feat of memory and endurance. For the listener willing to give him- or herself over to the music's spell, it can have a visceral, mesmerizing effect.

The recording features a number of memorable performances, not the least by the Philip Glass Ensemble, which plays with remarkable focus, precision, and energy, and the same can be said for the disciplined vocal ensemble. Violinist Paul Zukofsky negotiates the composer's patterns with deeply felt musicality and nuance, never with a sense of meaningless repetition. The actors, Lucinda Childs, Samuel M. Johnson, Paul Mann, and Sheryl Sutton, perform with a comparable verbal and dramatic virtuosity. The sound is clear, bright, and present. Einstein belongs in the collection of anyone concerned with the most significant developments in music of the twentieth century, and of opera in particular.

Title/ComposerPerformerTime
Einstein on the Beach, opera
1
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
03:52
2
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
17:19
3
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
23:18
Einstein On The Beach Philip Glass Raritan
Title/ComposerPerformerTime
Einstein on the Beach, opera
1
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
06:50
2
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
13:40
3
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
13:52
4
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
05:38
Title/ComposerPerformerTime
Einstein on the Beach, opera
1
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
01:07
2
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
10:24
3
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
06:45

Einstein On The Beach Audition

Title/ComposerPerformerTime
Einstein on the Beach, opera
1
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
07:30
2
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
11:49
3
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
13:22
4
Philip Glass Ensemble / Philip Glass / Michael Riesman
05:30
blue highlight denotes track pick

'For me,' Philip Glass once claimed, 'minimalism was over in 1974.' It was in the spring of that year that Glass began meeting with stage director Robert Wilson with the purpose of collaborating on a new work for musical theater. The result, Einstein on the Beach, changed the course of Glass's career while also blurring the boundaries between art music and pop music and dismantling the barriers that separated their respective audiences. Considering the grand theatrical scale of Einstein, the economy of means implied by minimalism was no longer appropriate for the task. The repetitive gestures and driving rhythms found in Glass's earlier works are still present, but piled upon each other in greater measure, and combined with image and word to create a synergistic effect of 'maximalist' proportion.

Far from a 'The Life and Times of..' approach, Einstein on the Beach is more an abstract, five-hour musing on Einstein's personality and ideas than a biographical sketch -- an approach that Glass has described as a 'portrait opera.' All of the performers on stage sport the scientist's trademark short-sleeved white shirt, suspenders, and pipe, while a violinist wanders between proscenium and pit in full Einsteinian garb (complete with wig and moustache), representing the physicist's noted musical hobby. The actual texts are rather vague in their references to Einstein. In fact, his name is mentioned in just two places and in contexts that are completely unclear in their meaning.

The work is a kaleidoscopic look at technology and modern life, using the figure of Einstein as a sort of mantra, than it is a picture of Einstein the man. Three primary visual images 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/bed setting (modern life and modern science examined); and a spaceship/field (a metaphor for transcendence and/or an escape from nuclear disaster).

As Robert Wilson put it, 'You don't have to listen to the words, because they don't mean anything. I'm not giving you puzzles to solve, only pictures to hear.' Many of the most profound and moving elements of the work are, in fact, art by accident. Since the score calls for a chorus of untrained singers (who must also dance and act), Glass aided the performers learning his constantly shifting rhythms and melodies by having them sing numbers and solfège syllables (do-re-mi, etc.). The overall effect was so striking that it was used in performance. The fragmentary nature of the text owes to its various and unique origins. During their initial meetings, Glass and Wilson were sometimes joined by Christopher Knowles, a 14-year-old autistic boy. Knowles' contributions, which constitute about two thirds of the entire spoken text, are intriguingly sporadic in their subject matter.

While Glass's music for Einstein on the Beach bears strong familial resemblance to his earlier works, it served a new, unique dramatic function -- one that would reappear in his next opera, Satyagraha, as well as his numerous film scores, including The Thin Blue Line and Kundun.

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Appears On

YearTitleLabelCatalog #
2016 Sony Classical / Sony Music Distribution 88985337612
2011 Sony Classical 88697985152
2007 Sony Classical Essential Classics 87970
1993 CBS Masterworks / Elektra 79323
1993 Nonesuch 7559793232