Since you are interested in From the Philip Glass Archive Vol. 2: Orchestral Music, here is a list of other items that you may find interesting.
PHILIP GLASS
Music From 'The Thin Blue Line' :-Original Soundtrack Ensemble / Michael Riesman (conductor) [ Orange Mountain Music / CD - released 20/Mar/2008 ] In continuing with their mission to bring you prime material from the Philip Glass archive of recordings, OMM decided to release the original score without the voice-over along with the extra material that was written and recorded for the film but... |
PHILIP GLASS
Glass Cuts (Philip Glass Remixed) Luciano Supervielle / Dave Wesley / Dietrich Schoenemann / Sebastian Escofet / Androoval / Taylor Deupree / etc [ Orange Mountain Music / 2 CD - released 1/Oct/2006 ] It has been said that Philip Glass is the 'Godfather of Trance' and evidence of that is found in the remixes that a number of young producers / musicians began sending to Orange Mountain Music as early as 2002. |
PHILIP GLASS
Orion Philip Glass Ensemble with Mark Atkins (didgeridoo), Wu Man (pipa), Foday Musa Suso (kora), UAKTI (multi-instrumentalists) etc [ Orange Mountain Music / 2 CD - released 1/Oct/2006 ] Orion, a new concert work for the Philip Glass Ensemble and world musicians, was commissioned by the Cultural Olympiad 2001-2004 and premiered in Athens in June 2004, preceding the Olympic Games. |
PHILIP GLASS
Alter Ego Performs Philip Glass Alter Ego [ Orange Mountain Music / 2 CD - released 10/Mar/2008 ] Alter Ego, a group from Italy, here performs a group of early Glass works and generally tries to evoke the heady days when minimalism first came on the scene in New York. If anything, the group exceeds the hypnotic, mechanical yet relaxed precision... |
PHILIP GLASS
Reflections Cello Octet Conjunto Iberico [ Orange Mountain Music / CD - released 25/Mar/2008 ] "Highlights both the compositional prowess of Glass and the virtuosity of the players" (MusicWeb March 2008) |
PHILIP GLASS
Les Enfants Terribles [Children of the Game] Philip Glass Ensemble / Michael Riesman [ Orange Mountain Music / 2 CD - released 10/Mar/2008 ] Les Enfants Terribles, Jean Cocteau's novel (written in 1929 and was later made into both a play and a film) forms the basis of the third installment of the trilogy of music/theater works of Philip Glass. |
PHILIP GLASS
Symphony No 8 Bruckner Orchester Linz / Dennis Russell Davies [ Orange Mountain Music / CD - released 25/Mar/2008 ] "(Symphony no. 8) is about continuous change...the chromaticism that has crept into Mr. Glass' music since 'Koyaanisqatsi' is now more extreme, and more fluid. Indeed, the great attraction of the work is the unpredictable orchestration." (New York... |
PHILIP GLASS
Theater Music Vol. 1 Peter Rejto (cello) and ensemble [ Orange Mountain Music / CD - released 25/Mar/2008 ] Theater Music Vol. 1 represents the first release in a series of 10 discs to be released on Orange Mountain Music from the vast archive of recordings made in the last 40 years of Philip Glass' incredible recording career. |
PHILIP GLASS
Symphony No. 6 'Plutonian Ode' Lauren Flanigan (Soprano) / Bruckner Orchester Linz, Dennis Russell Davies, with Allen Ginsberg (speaker) [ Orange Mountain Music / 2 CD - released 1/Nov/2012 ] "By some way Philip Glass's most powerful concert work, Plutonian Ode, sets a scathing anti-nuclear poem by Allen Ginsberg." (BBC Music) |
PHILIP GLASS
Analog: etoile Polaire, Dressed Like and Egg, Mad Rush Philip Glass (electric organ) [ Orange Mountain Music / CD - released 1/Nov/2006 ] Analog contains three seminal works in Glass's musical history. |
PHILIP GLASS
The Voyage (complete opera) Soloists / Landestheater Linz / Bruckner Orchester Linz / Dennis Russell Davies [ Orange Mountain Music / 2 CD - released 12/Oct/2006 ] "The Voyage combines the eccentricity of 'Einstein on the Beach' and the monumentality of 'Satyagraha'." (New York Times) |
PHILIP GLASS
Aguas da Amazonia Uakti / Marco Antonio Guimares [ Orange Mountain Music / CD - released 1/Oct/2006 ] Philip Glass's serious work in the field of "world music" was recognized long before the term entered the popular vocabulary. |