dmoth
08-02-2014, 12:50 PM
Philip Glass - Symphony No. 5 Requiem. Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra. Dennis Russell Davies, conductor. Nonesuch 79618-2 (96'54)

My own Lossless CD rip



After working abroad and being apart from my extensive CD collection it has been so good to be re-united with my music again. And I am able to finally upload and re-pay this fantastic forum for some of the brilliant shares I've discovered from you guys whilst in Asia.

This is an epic piece, particularly poignant with the current atrocities happening in Gaza. This music soars in an attempt to bring humanity together across all religious rhetoric and speak to the soul. I realise it may not be for everyone, but it is an interesting composition with many familiar Glass traits.

At first glance, or in this case listen, Philip Glass' Symphony No. 5 Requiem, Bardo, Nirmanakaya (1998-99) seems like a piece that continues the grand 19th century musical tradition of big works taking on big subjects. It does, after all, call for huge performing forces -- five vocal soloists -- soprano, mezzo, tenor, bass, bass-baritone --girls chorus, large mixed chorus, in addition to an orchestra of about 80, and it's in 12 movements and lasts 100 uninterrupted minutes. But the 5th's musical and philosophic point of view is thoroughly contemporary because it draws the texts for its book from 5000 years of this planet's sacred "wisdom" traditions, and seeks to find unity by blending them together and setting them all in one language -- English -- so that they speak in a single global-universal voice. This can't have been an easy task for either Glass or the Very Reverend James Parks Morton and Kusumita K. Pedersen who found and combined sources as disparate as the Bible, the Koran, the Mayan Popul Vuh, a Japanese Noh play, the Tibetan Book of the Dead, Zuni and African myths, the Bhagavad Gita and the Buddhist saint Shantideva. But the scope of this piece wouldn't matter if it failed to please the ear, engage the mind and touch the heart, and its success in doing all three things puts it on a par with that of the Verdi, Brahms and Faur� requiems which speak to the listener in both intimate and communal terms. Glass' "message" here is that we should strive for the common good of all beings, and this certainly hit home when I heard the Brooklyn Philharmonic perform it at BAM on the eve of Yom Kippur when Israel and her neighbors were at war. Dennis Russell Davies conducted that performance and he leads this new 2-CD Nonesuch set with the orchestra which gave the work's triumphant premiere at the Salzburg Festival last year, the Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, and it's stunning, richly detailed and very moving too.

But that's hardly surprising because Davies has been closely involved with Glass' music for over 20 years, and their mutual experience in the theatre shows. Glass keeps him busy by continually altering the work's shape and scale with solos, duos, trios and quintets -- there's even a quasi-madrigal at one point -- and using the chorus singly or in mixed configurations, supported by the orchestra's rich and complex textures. The composer's vocal settings are also extremely close to the spoken rhythms of American English -- correct, yet heightened according to his expressive needs. And that starts at the very beginning where the girls and womens chorus enter chiming "There was neither non-existence nor existence then..."over swirling figures in muted strings, the mixed chorus comes in at "Darkness was hidden by darkness in the beginning ..." and, with a sudden pullback in tempo, the male chorus dramatically sings "Desire came upon That One in the beginning..." the vocal and instrumental colors here being being light and fluid as Mozart. Plus the music has tremendous drive.

Glass' writing here and throughout is an object lesson in how to build a piece by controlling its component parts -- metric, harmonic, vocal and instrumental -- so that it flows with inevitable ease. And though both rhythms and textures are sometimes complex they always feel right as in the stunningly dramatic Movement 6: "Evil and Ignorance" and 10: Judgment and Apocalypse." The score also has its sensuous side, particularly in 5: "Love and Joy" where the mezzo(the right on target Denyce Graves) gets two seductive yet elegaic solos -- the first a poem by the Persian Rumi about an expectant lover, the second a Bengali Indian one addressed to a lover, the vocal line descending and ascending in each half. Glass' setting is almost religious in tone because the object of worship in both these cultures was spoken to as if they were a god (Glass does a similar thing in Akhnaten and Nefertiti's love duet in his 1984 opera Akhnaten.) Another sensuous aspect of the 5th is Glass' masterful scoring for every instrumental choir, and some of the most effective and original writing happens in the percussion, a true battery here numbering 17 (4 players), including unusual choices like anvil, marimba, and large and small Tam-Tams (gongs), though what they do always enhances both mood and word. In movement 6, "Evil and Ignorance", for example, Glass gets especially striking sonorities by having the xylophone doubled by celeste, and combining flute 1 with Eb clarinet -- with glockenspiel, piano doubled by harp, muted tuba and pizzicato strings. And I don't think I'm going out on a limb when I say that some of these choruses and solos, especially like the knockout setting of Job 3: "Let the day perish wherein I was born"(6), and the concluding prayerful one of Shantideva's "Dedication of Merit" will be picked up by choruses and become classics. And why not? This symphony speaks of our highest human aspirations, and though the tritone which medieval theorists called "the devil in music" haunts the work, it seems to be saying that we're still capable of great things. Davies and his phenomenally alert orchestra put that message across, as do his expressive vocal soloists soprano Ana Maria Martinez, mezzo Denyce Graves, tenor Michael Schade, baritone Eric Owens and bass-baritone Albert Dohmen. And you'd never know that the Hungarian Radio Children's Choir and the Morgan State University Choir were recorded separately in Vienna and New York.

Michael McDonagh

Symphony No. 5

Requiem, Bardo and Nirmanakaya (2000)

Music by Philip Glass
Dennis Russell Davies, conductor

CATALOG:
Nonesuch 79618-2

DISC ONE
1. I Before the Creation 6:56
2. II Creation of The Cosmos 6:36
3. III Creation of Sentient Beings 7:41
4. IV Creation of Human Beings 7:27
5. V Love and Joy 8:23
6. VI Evil and Ignorance 5:56
DISC TWO
1. VII Suffering 8:29
2. VIII Compassion 9:14
3. IX Death 8:38
4. X Judgment and Apocalypse 8:52
5. XI Paradise 8:32
6. XII Dedication of Merit 10:0

CREDITS:
Original music composed by Philip Glass. Texts compiled and edited by Philip Glass, James Parks Morton, and Kusumita P. Pedersen.

Performers: Ana Maria Martinez, soprano. Denyce Graves, mezzo-soprano. Michael Schade, tenor. Eric Owens, baritone. Albert Dohmen, bass-baritone.

Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra. Morgan State University Choir. Dr. Nathan Carter, music director. Hungarian Radio Children'S Choir. Gabriella Th�sz, music director.


DISC 1
https://mega.co.nz/#F!dspSzKTB!UxhvX-LDRUTOBNPWdBXVMA

DISC 2
https://mega.co.nz/#F!kpRBAYqL!1dbOKlgBSW1SXwX621Cy3w



If you enjoy please 'like' and leave a comment, always nice to get feedback.


Wish list:
The Illusionist FLAC/Lossless
Aaron Jay Kernis - Symphony in Waves FLAC/Lossless
Jerry Goldsmith - Raggedy Man FLAC/Lossless



Support the artist and label and buy the CD

Yen_
08-02-2014, 01:20 PM
Thank you. I have the booklet if you want it.


Petros
08-02-2014, 01:44 PM
"This is an epic piece, particularly poignant with the current atrocities happening in Gaza."

Great!
I have it, but I want to thank you for your upload.

Yen, I would love the booklet.

Yen_
08-02-2014, 03:11 PM
Here you are Peter ADrive | Online Storage, Online Backup, Cloud Storage (http://www.adrive.com/public/kxcyNR/Glass%2C%20Philip%20-%20Symphony%20No.%205%20(1999)%20art.rar)

Petros
08-02-2014, 03:45 PM
Thank you for the nice booklets, my friend!

scoremaniatic
08-03-2014, 02:08 AM
Thanks both and Free Palestine !!

samy013
08-03-2014, 02:53 AM
Thank you share!

Secret Society
08-03-2014, 02:58 AM
Thanks, never heard many Glass symphonies.

FilmscoreFan
08-03-2014, 03:09 AM
Thanks for the awesome share!

laohu
08-04-2014, 01:59 AM
thanks guys

Inntel
10-29-2014, 06:40 PM
Thanks.

Kaolin
03-08-2015, 08:12 PM
Thanks.

jamo1234
03-09-2015, 02:01 AM
thanks

KipnisStudios
03-09-2015, 02:19 AM
Awesome SHARE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Doctor Go
03-10-2015, 01:17 AM
Heard a funny thing today - Philip Glass has been signed to score the "Fantastic Four" reboot.

jakegittis
03-10-2015, 04:21 PM
thanks for the share.

barknuggets
05-04-2015, 11:47 PM
Nice!! Thank you

dconline
05-05-2015, 02:58 AM
Thanks for this. However I think track 2-04 is no good. At the 2 minute mark the track is no good. A re-rip and re-upload of this track would be greatly appreciated!

javiman25
05-05-2015, 06:23 AM
thanks!!

Petros
05-05-2015, 10:59 AM
However I think track 2-04 is no good.

You are right.
Here is track 2-04 in FLAC:

https://mega.co.nz/#!69pxGbaJ!IxWr4vMSoANsKtEHhxgA48NahxXSl1wkK3w5wIO 8Img

KevinG
05-05-2015, 01:11 PM
Thanks very much for this, the booklet and the corrected track!! Everyone working together!

pvman
05-05-2015, 05:11 PM
Thank you!

wimpel69
05-05-2015, 05:22 PM
Unfortunately, Glass has become a PARODY of himself. I was at the UK premiere of his Toltec symphony, which was SO BAD it drew Boohs from the crowd. He's composing too much in the same vein.

dconline
05-13-2015, 12:36 AM
You are right.
Here is track 2-04 in FLAC:

https://mega.co.nz/#!69pxGbaJ!IxWr4vMSoANsKtEHhxgA48NahxXSl1wkK3w5wIO 8Img

Efharisto Megale! Thanks very much. All is good when Petros is around!

Three Wishes
01-26-2017, 11:12 AM
Many thanks dmoth (OP) + Petros (corrected track) for sharing Philip Glass - Symphony 5 - Requiem ;-) Rated thread: excellent! ;-)

User 7526
01-26-2017, 05:19 PM
Thank you!

dmoth
02-21-2017, 06:14 AM
You are right.
Here is track 2-04 in FLAC:

https://mega.co.nz/#!69pxGbaJ!IxWr4vMSoANsKtEHhxgA48NahxXSl1wkK3w5wIO 8Img

Thank you very much Petros, I have only just seen this message and correction! Forever the gentleman.

Petros
02-21-2017, 04:42 PM
Hi my friend.
I hope everything goes well in กรุงเทพมหานคร อมรรัตนโกสินทร์ มหินทรายุธยา มหาดิลกภพ นพรัตน์ราชธานีบุรีรมย์ อุดมราชนิเวศน์มหาสถาน อมรพิมานอวตารสถิต สักกะทัตติยะวิษณุกรรม.

Inntel
02-22-2017, 10:39 PM
If someone still has the booklet and covers would it be possible to get a link to them? Thank you.

dmoth
02-23-2017, 07:55 AM
Hi my friend.
I hope everything goes well in กรุงเทพมหานคร อมรรัตนโกสินทร์ มหินทรายุธยา มหาดิลกภพ นพรัตน์ราชธานีบุรีรมย์ อุดมราชนิเวศน์มหาสถาน อมรพิมานอวตารสถิต สักกะทัตติยะวิษณุกรรม.

Thank you Petros, I'm very well, hope you are too. โชคดี