We use cookies to ensure the best possible browsing experience on our website. By clicking OK, you consent to our use of cookies. Click here to read more about our cookie policy. 

Philip Glass Another Look At Harmony

COMPOSER: Philip Glass
PUBLISHER: Dunvagen Music Publishers
PRODUCT TYPE: Score
INSTRUMENT GROUP: Mixed Choir
Another Look at Harmony Part 4 was written while Glass was working on Einstein on the Beach, and it is easy to hear similarities between the two works. In Harmony, the Voices use solfege and nonsense syllables, where inEinsteinrecognizable words are sometimes set non-narratively. There are similar
€ 10,27
incl. tax
Special order
Usually ships within 4 days
This product cannot be ordered at the moment.
Not available in your region.
Specifications
Composer Philip Glass
Publisher Dunvagen Music Publishers
Instrumentation SATB and Organ
Product Type Score
Instrument Group Mixed Choir
Style Period Post 1901
Genre Contemporary Music
EAN 5020679166758
Style Period Post 1901
Voicing SATB
No. Pages 52
No. MUSDU10005
Description
Another Look at Harmony Part 4 was written while Glass was working on Einstein on the Beach, and it is easy to hear similarities between the two works. In Harmony, the Voices use solfege and nonsense syllables, where inEinsteinrecognizable words are sometimes set non-narratively. There are similar harmonic progressions that the two pieces share, though it is less predictable in Harmony. In both works Glass takes all the time he needs toexplore histheme. Another Look at Harmony requires approximately one hour to perform with intensity building through the many repetitions over time.American composer Philip Glass is widely known as one of the most celebrated,influentialand prolific of the modern composers. He is frequently referred to as a minimalist, though he prefers to call himself a composer of ‘music with repetitive structures.’ His operas, among them the renowned Einstein OnThe Beach,are performed across the globe, and he has created work for small and large ensembles, film and experimental theatre, and founded his own performing group, The Philip Glass Ensemble.
    Loading
    Loading