Philip Glass - Akhnaten HQ [Prelude; Refrain, Verse 1, Verse 2]

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Uploaded by on Dec 31, 2009

Set in the key of A minor, the strings introduce a ground bass theme, with following variations. (A passacaglia).

The orchestra's size is about the size employed for early 19th-century opera: 2 flutes ( one doubling piccolo), 2 oboes (both doubling oboe d'amore), 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, 2 french horns, 2 trumpets, 2 trombones, tuba, percussion (3 players), celesta (doubling synthesizer), 12 violas, 8 celli, 6 double basses.


The last installment of Philip Glass' operatic trilogy, begun with Einstein on the Beach and continued with Satyagraha, Akhnaten also unfortunately established the sort of musical rut in which he was to be ensnared for much of the rest of the century. As with Satyagraha, he opted for a relatively traditional orchestration, with only Michael Riesman's electric keyboards supplementing the standard instrumentation, and with six main voices deployed in various configurations. Here, Glass, in his own libretto, tells the story of the man who supposedly introduced monotheism into classic Egyptian culture (and thereby the Western world), thus complimenting the realms of science and politics as portrayed in his previous two operas. Whereas in Satyagraha he used Sanskrit transcriptions of the Bhagavad-Gita to lend the work at least a tinge of an Indian atmosphere, here there is little if anything that connotes the Egyptian short, presumably, of the stagecraft in a live performance. The music by this time had taken on the "by the yard" feel of much of his work in the mid-'80s and beyond, possibly a result of simply having too many coals in the fire. Though still capable of creating the odd enchanting melody or haunting passage, most of the music sounds like a pallid rehash of previous works. The most noticeable difference is an increased used of percussion, which is all well and good, but the ponderousness of the horn writing in particular applies more weight than can be comfortably borne. The scattered lovely moments, as well as its vaunted place in his oeuvre, make this worth hearing, but it suffers greatly compared to its companions in the trilogy

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Top Comments

  • This piece reached in and grabbed my soul, stunning!

  • Thank you for the description ...

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All Comments (13)

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  • @stanislavtokarev That was by phillip glass, but it was just another piece of music he wrote for the movie Koyaanisqatsi. Almost all of his music sounds like this, by the way. But its all different in its own way.

  • when i hear this i see the world flashing by, like a movie about global warming or something. (if you know what i mean)

  • this is what all music should sound like, not the pop shit music people are on this days

  • I believe that another version of this piece of art was used in the Soundtrack of Grand Theft Auto IV on The Journey radio station.

  • @dwhofmann I think it was used in "Koyaanisqatsi" back in the 80's.

  • Hail the sun! Hail Philip Glass maker of sun music and the power of A minor over the rhythms of the heart.- Charles

  • @dwhofmann Nope it is an opera by Philip Glass

  • can anyone tell m ehif this was on a movie? I can feel it was and its driving me nuts!

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