Product Details
Philip Glass Soundtracks

Philip Glass Soundtracks
Michael Riesman

Price: $17.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

20 new or used available from $11.99

Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Anima Mundi
  2. Jenipapo: No.14
  3. Overture to La Belle et La Bete
  4. Neverwas Set
  5. Notes on a Scandal: I Knew Her
  6. A Brief History of Time Selections
  7. Mishima: Closing
  8. Naqoyatsi: Primacy of Number
  9. The Illusionist: Finale
  10. The Fog of War
  11. No Reservations Combine
  12. Candyman: Helen's Theme and More

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #99616 in Music
  • Released on: 2008-09-02
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Formats: Import, Soundtrack
  • Dimensions: .13 pounds

Customer Reviews

A solid taste of Glass5
With all due respect to InlandEmpire's opinion, Glass' soundtracks are not filled with "unimaginative doodles". To characterize them in that way is to reveal a lack of understanding of how soundtracks are written and work with a film. Quite the contrary, Glass' soundtracks work particularly well with film because they allow the filmmaker to move the film in a direction using Glass' music to add color, depth and pacing. It is no accident that so many directors want a Glass score, and that so many others cut their film using Philip Glass music as a temp score. Anyway, I do agree that this is an excellent sampling, and is very well played. Other than Glass himself, it is unlikely that anyone other than Riesman has a better insight into the music. I would imagine that hooked by these performances, listeners will want to explore the full soundtracks sampled here. Enjoy!

Tender Interpretation of Glass5
I recently heard Mr. Riesman perform a piano transcription of Glass's soundtrack for "Dracula" in New York before a projection of the movie. He transcribed it from the original score written for string quartet. It was masterful, technically complex and full of appropriate emotion.

That would describe Mr. Riesman's performance on this CD as well. I don't know of anyone who can perform Glass on the piano as well as he. Glass never "doodles" and I can assure the listener that this recording never approaches doodling. Played with guts and emotion, precision and freedom, each piece is defined but creates a most wonderfully coherent whole. Please consider adding this recording to your collection.

The best of the soundtracks5
Philip Glass' manufacturing line produces way too much soundtrack albums. Each one usually contains one decent tune and other than that lots of unimaginative doodles.
Riesman, who already released excellent piano transcriptions of Glass' Dracula and The Hours, picked the best of those soundtracks tracks, and he performs them energetically. Great album.