Tag: Philip Glass

  • Chameleonic Robert Moran Is 89

    Chameleonic Robert Moran Is 89

    A work for amplified Volkswagen, played with flashlights. An opera for eleven dogs. A piano piece in which the performer crawls inside the lid and lets the piano play him.

    Move over, Till Eulenspiegel. Today is the birthday of Robert Moran.

    Moran, who’s made his home in Philadelphia for more than 40 years, is contemporary music’s merry prankster.

    Following studies in Vienna with Hans Erich Apostel, with whom he “learned to count to twelve” (as in twelve-tone music), Moran attended Mills College, where his teachers were Darius Milhaud and Luciano Berio. His classmates at Mills included Steve Reich, Phil Lesh, and Tom Constanten. Lesh and Constanten went on to play for The Grateful Dead. I wonder what ever happened to Reich?

    While there, Moran became involved with the whole San Francisco scene. He gained notoriety in the late 1960s and early ‘70s through a series of performance pieces incorporating entire cities, including San Francisco, Bethlehem, PA, and Graz, Austria. These involved tens of thousands of performers.

    His many stage works include “Desert of Roses” (after Beauty and the Beast), written for Houston Grand Opera, and “Alice” (after “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland”), composed for the Scottish Ballet. Maurice Sendak introduced him to the Grimm fairy tale “The Juniper Tree,” which became an operatic collaboration with Philip Glass.

    For the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, Moran was commissioned to write a work for the youth chorus of Trinity Wall Street, the so-called “Ground Zero” church in Lower Manhattan. “Trinity Requiem,” scored for children’s chorus, four cellos, harp and organ, offers a similar brand of solace to that conjured in the 19th century masterwork by Gabriel Fauré.

    With Moran, you never know what you’re going to get. In his more puckish moments, he might write for harpsichord and electric frying pan. But then there are times when his natural gift for lyricism will melt your heart. Whether he’s writing for Houston Grand Opera, 39 autos, giant puppets, or electric popcorn popper, his music is always vital and worth getting to know.

    Happy birthday, Bob!

    ———

    An aria from “Desert of Roses”


    “Trinity Requiem” (its movements posted into a continuous YouTube playlist)


    Flying high over Albania


    “Obrigado” for Iowa Percussion


    “Bank of America Chandelier”


    Experimenting with spatial effects in “Solenga”


    “Alice” for Scottish Ballet


    Looking groovy and introducing his “Lunchbag Opera” for the BBC

    “Buddha Goes to Bayreuth”

    “Modern Love Waltz” by Philip Glass, arranged by Robert Moran for accordion and cello

    “Waltz. In Memoriam Maurice Ravel”


  • Happy Birthday Robert Moran Composer & Friend

    Happy Birthday Robert Moran Composer & Friend

    Today is the birthday of my good friend and steadfast companion for Mahler concerts at the Philadelphia Orchestra, composer Robert Moran. A pupil of Darius Milhaud, Luciano Berio, and Hans Erich Apostel, Bob’s experimented with all kinds music, from city-encompassing performance art “happenings,” to collaborations with Philip Glass, to commissions from Houston Grand Opera, Scottish Ballet, and Trinity Wall Street. Throughout his career, he’s often been fascinated by spatial effects in music. This is one of his more recent works, “Solenga,” from 2023:

    Bob, if you see this, I’ve been trying to contact you. My computer died the other week and my email account is now over the storage limit, so I can’t write. I’ve been trying to phone, but of course you don’t have voice mail. (Come to think of it, neither do I!) But you can call me, text, or private message me on Facebook, if you are so moved. There’s a dinner invitation in it for you. Happy birthday!


    An aria from Bob’s Beauty and the Beast opera, “Desert of Roses”

    Selections from “Trinity Requiem,” for the tenth anniversary of 9/11

    Flying high over Albania

    “Alice” for Scottish Ballet

    Looking groovy and introducing his “Lunchbag Opera” for the BBC

    “Buddha Goes to Bayreuth,” Part 1

    “Buddha Goes to Bayreuth,” Part 2

    “Modern Love Waltz” by Philip Glass, arranged by Robert Moran for accordion and cello

    “Waltz. In Memoriam Maurice Ravel”

  • Akhnaten Takes the Helm at Opera Philadelphia

    Akhnaten Takes the Helm at Opera Philadelphia

    When shopping for a new general director, one could do worse than engage the first monotheistic pharaoh.

    It has been announced that countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo, who created a sensation as Philip Glass’ “Akhnaten” at New York’s Metropolitan Opera, will become the next general director and president of Opera Philadelphia. On June 1, Costanzo will replace David Devan, who directed the organization for 13 years. It will be Costanzo’s first administrative position in an arts organization.

    In 2018, Costanzo sold out three performances at the Barnes Foundation of “Glass Handel,” a large-scale operatic art installation given its premiere at Festival O. It went on to further sell-out runs in New York and London. His most recent appearance with Opera Philadelphia was in 2022, when he led the fundraising concert “Only an Octave Apart” with Justin Vivian Bond, based on their studio album of the same name.

    Costanzo, who graduated from Princeton University in 2004, is scheduled to sing in Christoph Willibald Gluck’s “Orfeo ed Euridice” at the Met, beginning on May 16.

  • Philip Glass in Trenton Tomorrow Night

    Philip Glass in Trenton Tomorrow Night

    Very much looking forward to hearing the Philip Glass Violin Concerto, as performed by Yvonne Lam and the New Jersey Capital Philharmonic Orchestra, alongside Valerie Coleman’s “Seven O’ Clock Shout” and Igor Stravinsky’s “Petrushka,” at Trenton’s Patriots Theater at the War Memorial, tomorrow night at 7:30!

    Pre-concert lecture at 6:15; pre-concert performance by Trenton Music Makers at 6:50.

    Tickets and information at capitalphilharmonic.org.


    Rehearsing Glass at the link (not Stravinsky as labeled):

  • Philip Glass Birthday Arpeggios & More

    Philip Glass Birthday Arpeggios & More

    From the arpeggione to arpeggios! Not only is today the anniversary of the birth of Franz Schubert, it’s also the 85th birthday of Philip Glass. Regardless of what you may think of Glass’ music, you’ve got to hand it to a composer who’s managed to stay relevant for the past half century or so. Here are some links to a few of my favorites.

    String Quartet No. 5

    Violin Concerto (now the Violin Concerto No. 1)

    “Modern Love Waltz,” arranged by Robert Moran, who enlisted Glass to join “The Waltz Project,” which culminated in an album for Nonesuch Records.

    The two composers also collaborated on an opera, “The Juniper Tree,” after the Brothers Grimm

    Glass’ “Akhnaten” at the Met, with Princeton University graduate Anthony Roth Costanzo – and jugglers!

    “Composing Myself: Philip Glass”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uqJ10fkznv4

    A conversation with Philip Glass

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