Those who think that the music of Philip Glass is just tweedly-deedly argeggios, repeating incessantly all tweedlily and deedlily and arpeggiotically and then doing it again with incessant repetitivity again, and again, and then again, and yes I said yes, again --
A which some of his very best music is, actually,
A not that there's anything wrong with that
-- have not paid sufficient attention to his Symphonies.
In particular, Glass's Symphony No. 3 for strings has become, over the past year or two, one of my favorite orchestral works ever. In its structure and approach, I hear the Glass 3rd as a contemporary echo of/rejoinder to Beethoven's Symphony No. 7.
A"The apotheosis of the dance! Thumbs up! A non-stop rollercoaster of whiz-bang orchestral action!"
-- R. Wagner on the B7
The Glass 3rd is written for strings and strings only. It is not meant to be performed by a high school marching band. And yet, what is not meant to be may be, mayn't it? It may.
Here we have the final movement of the PG3 arranged for and performed by a high school marching band, to wit, the Bloomington North Cougar Marching Band of Bloomington, Indiana. No strings are attached.
It is quite wonderful.
The Cougar band's repertoire also includes a selection from PG's score for The Hours, which sounds a bit more obviously Glass-y:
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For further reading:
- Philip Glass is interviewed by Nico Muhly for the Guardian and reveals himself to be a bit of a copyright miser.
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