Two Pages' liner booklet includes a fine photograph: the 1971 riverside debut of
Glass' group, presented as low rent, public permit spectacle. The
Philip Glass Ensemble sit in concentration over their instruments, with the Brooklyn Bridge lights appearing next to them. Mop-haired
Glass wears jeans and denim jacket while leaning into his electric organ, the lights of Manhattan in view across the water behind him. By the '90s, he made an estimable public success of his opera and movie scores, rarely presenting electric music. But he didn't forget his roots as a bandleader. In 1987, the
Ensemble recorded the second half of Music in Twelve Parts, then released them with the previously recorded six segments in a three-CD set on Virgin America. In 1994, longtime
Glass associates engineer Kurt Munckasi and
Ensemble keyboardist
Michael Riesman did the same for these four early works, originally released on small labels in the early '70s. Excepting
Glass' collaborations with filmmaker
Godfrey Reggio, all of the operas and soundtrack encountered have been uneven -- too much the regular opera, too obvious the movie score. In contrast, these four harmonic strings spoofed the music world's conventional wisdom -- in fact, "Music in Fifths" sets note against note as a violation of first-species counterpoint.
Glass found other ways to twit his mentors. Not only were the harmonies skewed, not only were the keyboards electric, but the composer recharged his counterpoint using Indian concepts of time. The razor-sharp woodwind and keyboard sound of the last two cuts are terrific -- those who prefer electric
Glass enjoy their speed and brightness of these compositions, which might even intrigue fans of
Glass' symphonic work. The organ and synthesizers add steel to his sound, as well as a certain creative tension: the guy's ambitions are banked by the limits of his
Ensemble's keyboards and woodwinds, but they never falter in pushing to become bigger. That's the story behind the picture. ~ John Young, All Music Guide