I saw the San Francisco Performance press release for next season a couple of months ago, and didn't comment at the time. Now the brochure has dropped into my mailbox, and YUM.
At the top of the must-see list, of course, is the Carter Centenary Celebration, starring the Pacific Quartet, which plays all five of the string quartets, and Ursula Oppens, who plays all of the piano music. The weekend also includes a long talk by Robert Greenberg, a film, and a reception. Okay, well worth missing jujitsu camp for.
But that's not all. A recital by Leif Ove Andsnes and Christian Tetzlaff, a joint recital by the retiring Guarneri Quartet and the Johannes Quartet, sundry other chamber groups and soloists, and an evening I need advice on: a traversal of Philip Glass's Music in Twelve Parts. Should I go? Will it drive me crazy?
17 comments:
I think it may be his best piece; I'd go if I could.
Which doesn't mean it won't drive you crazy.
Why not get hold of the recording and preview it in the privacy of your own home :-)
Recording! Oh, WHEW. I didn't know there was one. :)
http://www.amazon.com/Music-in-Twelve-Parts/dp/B0011ZWOMU/ref=pd_bbs_sr_3?ie=UTF8&s=dmusic&qid=1212155995&sr=8-3
Ten bucks to download the whole thing from Amazon.
I've already sent in my subscription -- how could I resist a Carter weekend? I also signed up for the Glass because even if it drives me crazy, it's a rare opportunity to be driven crazy by this particular piece. . . .
I need to download the thing from Amazon, but I'm leaning toward going for exactly that reason. I can leave if it's really torture.
Go, it's a good piece, and I'm not minimalist-inclined most days. It's relaxing, pretty, and...yeah.
I'd probably nap instead of leave, I've found that's the best strategy for Glass (and Feldman, for some reason).
No guarantees about driving you crazy.
Hmmm, yeah!
I will have to look at the Amazon downloads and how they work. I got some stuff from the DG web site, and they recommend iTunes, which I don't have because I don't have an iPod or other MP3 player. But using Windows Media Player to organize music is a royal PITA.
iTunes is a pretty useful tool for organizing your MP3s even if you don't have an iPod. Of course, it may put on the slippery slope to buying one.
Probably not - I have CD players at home, at work, and in the car, and don't have any particular interest in having more than, say, ten or twenty sets available at a time.
iTunes works great for Amazon downloads- you don't need an iPod (i have several from being gifted with them and never think to use them though the men in my life are glued to theirs)
i've been told they're good for more than just music files- they're like little portable flash drives
i'd go to the Philip Glass, btw
Lol, you could sell them on eBay!
Thanks - and, yeah, you can put photos and other stuff on an iPod, or use it for backup.
I am thinking seriously about Glass.
Marijuana brownies, if your system gets along with them, is also a helpful pre-concert item for four hours of Philip Glass.
Lol, I'm sure, but I am the only person of my generation who has never tried marijuana.
I'd definitely go to theGlass if I could.
Uh-oh! I guess I'll have to go. :)
This post just showed up in an RSS feed for some reason. Five years later, I'm guessing you still regret the concert. Not all of us share this sentiment, of course.
Hahahaha. Well, I regret not bringing ear plugs!
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