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Browse by Artist: SENTIERI SELVAGGI
Artist:
SENTIERI SELVAGGI
Title:
Plays Gavin Bryars & Philip Glass
Label:
CANTALOUPE
Format:
CD
Price:
$7.00
Catalog #:
CA 21048CD
16-minute CD EP. "Sentieri Selvaggi is a group made up of some of the best Italian musicians, united in a cultural project aimed to bring contemporary music to a larger audience. Founded in 1997 by Carlo Boccadoro, Filippo Del Corno and Angelo Miotto, the group has garnered much international acclaim and has developed close working relationships with renowned composers -- Philip Glass, Michael Nyman, David Lang, James MacMillan, Gavin Bryars and Louis Andriessen. In Sentieri Selvaggi's new EP, the Italian ensemble presents pieces from two of today's most celebrated composers -- Gavin Bryars and Philip Glass. When Bryars recorded his first album for ECM,
Three Viennese Dancers
, Manfred Eicher (the founder of ECM) introduced him to American guitarist Bill Frisell's
In Line
. Bryars transcribed the melody of one of Frisell's solos, and the result transported Frisell's notes into a magical, but melancholy world -- distinctive of Bryar's music. Notably, he slowed down the tempo of the theme and used the piano to play a simple pattern, which continued for the entire piece. Bryars also added sweet melodies performed by a strange ensemble of a recorder, a clarinet, a vibraphone (played with a bow to produce harmonies), a violin and a bass. The result, 'Sub Rosa,' is a sense of almost ethereal lightness pervading through the score. The second piece -- 'Facades,' was originally composed for the score of
Koyannisquatsi
, a cult film directed by Godfrey Reggio and Glass' debut to film scoring. As 'Facades'' scene was cut from the film, Glass transposed it into a piece for his ensemble of saxophones and electronic keyboards, and released it on
Glassworks
. Sentieri Selvaggi's recording is a further re-orchestration, including strings, a flute and a clarinet. Stylistically, the piece is halfway between Glass' first period, based on few cells obsessively repeated which undergo very gradual harmonic changes, and the following decade, a period more melodic and lyrical. The immediate communicability of this piece made it into one of the most popular works of Glass."
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