Repetition is a form of change – statement on a card
from Brian Eno’s Oblique Strategies deck
There’s a joke that goes like this:
“Knock Knock. Who’s there? Knock Knock. Who’s there? Knock Knock. Who’s
there? Knock Knock. Who’s there? Philip Glass.”
That’s the edited version that I
cut in half from where I found it and it’s funny because it’s (kind of) true.
Glass uses repetition in his music sure, but in reality it’s never quite as
redundant or as minimal as all that.
But let’s start here – for those
unfamiliar with the works of Philip Glass, it’s common to hear his name associated
with the minimalist movement in 1960s and 1970s classical music, though he has
distanced himself from the term for his work after the mid-70s, preferring to
say that he makes “music with repetitive structures.” The difference may sound
academic, but it’s crucial in the case of an album like The Photographer.
Where minimalism employs fewer instruments and less overall movement, Glass’s
music here is decidedly maximal, with the final piece especially an intense,
breathtaking climax to the album.
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“Act I: ‘A Gentleman's Honor’”
was originally centered around a poem Muybridge had written, but Glass noted
that Muybridge was perhaps more influential in the photographic arts than the
poetic ones so he asked David Byrne to help out with the words using
transcripts of the trial. Byrne obliged and used snippets for the vocalists to
sing to create the piece heard here. It’s performed by the ensemble as a short
prelude and instrumental reprise around the longer “Act II” – the “concert”
portion of the program.
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“Act III”
is the dance portion, which starts out slow but works up to a head of steam
that can drive you nuts if repetition and variation isn’t your thing. But there
is definitely variation – while motives are played a few times, dropped, and
then come back there are very few (if any) bars of this music that are actually
identical. And though it starts mellow, it heats up around the 3 ½ minute mark,
kicks it up another notch at about 7 minutes, and from about 8 ½ minutes it’s a
full-on boil until the end with nothing other than a momentary breather to
relieve the relentless rhythmic drive of the strings, horns, keyboards, and
vocalists singing their phonemes.
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- Patrick
Brown
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