Philip Glass - Metamorphosis | complete

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @coversart
    @coversart  4 года назад +283

    Starting today, *Metamorphosis* are available in all major streaming services
    Listen / Love / Share: album.link/T6mHCbPks7X4w
    I prepared this release to celebrate 4 million streams of this composition in my interpretation on RUclips (a bit late though, because the number of views has grown since then). After several unlucky attempts to make this recording on different instruments and in different studios I returned to the same living room and the same piano - Steinway & Sons model O made in 1926. I can not possibly explain this, but despite all the obvious technical obstacles that stand before you while recording in a regular room, with all the uncontrolled reflections, with the old piano in poor condition which makes you suffer a lot, with all the additional vibrations, rattling strings, hammers that require voicing, with a creaking chair - it turns out to be exactly how I perceive this music. So, one piano, 2 microphones, beloved Philip Glass, and my personal story with the place where this record session took place.

    • @Sunny25611
      @Sunny25611 3 года назад +4

      ✨🎧✨

    • @Sunny25611
      @Sunny25611 3 года назад +11

      Since 1982, Phillip Glass has been my one inspirational musical companion while writing poetry .. this is a stunning reawakening of all the emotions that I’ve felt with every line. 🙏

    • @elizabethfletcher6029
      @elizabethfletcher6029 3 года назад +4

      Thank you so much. Philip's music transports us into another world.

    • @MonastraOperaSymphonyClassical
      @MonastraOperaSymphonyClassical 3 года назад +1

      How is the complete name of the pianist?

    • @yousefxd6928
      @yousefxd6928 3 года назад

  • @victormorgado5318
    @victormorgado5318 7 лет назад +3513

    In 1980 I worked selling toe shoes for ballet dancers in New York City. One Saturday morning this guy comes in and asked for some shoes for his daughter's ballet class. We engaged in conversation about music and he invited me to see him play the piano the next day afternoon in a concert to raise funds for Tibet. It was in a church around the store where I worked. That is how I met Philip Glass. Ironically what impacted me when I saw him arriving on stage that Sunday afternoon, was that he was wearing old blue jeans and a working man's shirt. It was a total new way for me to be around a "classical" environment

    • @coversart
      @coversart  7 лет назад +202

      +Victor Morgado wow, Victor! Thanks for sharing your story with us!

    • @majoma1980
      @majoma1980 7 лет назад +251

      Played this to my mother who is in a hospice with late stage cancer, she had the night terrors and couldnt sleep, even with heavy medication. She slowly slipped off into a deep sleep half way through, with a faint smile on her face. Thankyou coversart.

    • @itiswhatitisbitch
      @itiswhatitisbitch 7 лет назад +78

      This story is a testament to what an amazing place New York is.

    • @cc9391
      @cc9391 7 лет назад +170

      That is great to read about PG wearing Jeans and that shirt at the performance, because I'm going to perform this at the Chopin Salon in Warsaw on July 4 and don't have any fancy clothes - I'm going to tell them this story :)

    • @judyneville4812
      @judyneville4812 6 лет назад +11

      Wonderful story!

  • @isaactarica
    @isaactarica 7 лет назад +342

    Hi , I m a Sonographer MD and every day I begin in my offices with this piece, my patients thanks me for the music and I thank you. Some times my work it is not about "good news"· but the music helps me to create an atmosphere of care. We need more concerts in the hospitals and less TV !!!

    • @KampelmannAcademy
      @KampelmannAcademy 3 года назад +7

      Thank you very much for that. It is a very magic, theta music ready to help a better future to create.

    • @venera327
      @venera327 3 года назад +2

      Однозначно!

    • @pb7353
      @pb7353 3 года назад +13

      I truly hate television/screens at hospitals, dentists, etc. Love the idea of having quality, healing music instead!

    • @musicalperson2806
      @musicalperson2806 2 года назад +4

      True, I wish classical music and contemporary music like this was played in shops instead of that other stuff.

    • @karenfry9229
      @karenfry9229 2 года назад +2

      I couldn't agree more, Isaac!!

  • @aminzargarian6627
    @aminzargarian6627 Год назад +211

    master of repetitions. if art could mimic the repetitiveness of being alive it’d be a clause on a sheet written by Glass. the irony is you can repeatedly listen to this and still want to listen again like you never stop repeating a breath. Thank you Mr Glass.

  • @wendyfoxmyn4584
    @wendyfoxmyn4584 2 года назад +14

    I see there are many of us commenting who find Glass to be our best accompaniment for focus on work. It's almost magical.

  • @jorgebarcelo7716
    @jorgebarcelo7716 4 года назад +52

    This is by far the best cover performance of Metamorphosis on the net.

    • @coversart
      @coversart  4 года назад +2

      Thank you, Jorge!

    • @aJarrowLad525
      @aJarrowLad525 11 месяцев назад +1

      It’s good to listen to this on the harp just blows me away

  • @robertmoore9965
    @robertmoore9965 7 лет назад +1726

    Played this to my mother who is in a hospice with late stage cancer, she had the night terrors and couldnt sleep, even with heavy medication. She slowly slipped off into a deep sleep half way through, with a faint smile on her face. Thankyou coversart.

    • @coversart
      @coversart  7 лет назад +141

      +RJ Moore You are most welcome. I wish you strength and courage.

    • @bandicoot5412
      @bandicoot5412 7 лет назад +23

      God bless you.

    • @originaldubsteppa5306
      @originaldubsteppa5306 7 лет назад +53

      you provided a bright light amongst the darkness. god bless you and your mother.

    • @rubenskiii
      @rubenskiii 7 лет назад +31

      That's heavy...i wish u strenght.

    • @benjammin6692
      @benjammin6692 7 лет назад +48

      I hope the music gave her peace. I played Rachmaninoff for my aging grandmother in her last days. she was being given a lot of morphine and my playing helped her slip into the oblivion. she could let go by the end of the piece. I guess she had never heard The Prelude of the Bells before.

  • @wouldntyouliketoknow8904
    @wouldntyouliketoknow8904 4 года назад +82

    I discovered his music in 2008 when I was 14. On an autumn afternoon, It was a very overcast rainy day in Los Angeles and I looked out my window to see the skyline gradually disappear into the dense rainy clouds. The rain was cold and when I opened the window I can smell it and feel the gusts of wind blowing in. Again, I listened to this album in Washington D.C. and Virginia on a very grey and rainy afternoon as I rode past the Potomac river and all the large government buildings - the music emphasizing the gravitas of their brutalist architecture. But for some reason it made me think of rainy days in New York before 9/11. So grey, cold, wet and melancholy, yet so beautiful and ethereal. A chilly nostalgia rains on me when I listen to this.

    • @gemmadidit4118
      @gemmadidit4118 Год назад +1

      You've touched my imagination three years later. Art is contagious and far reaching in the best way...this music...your words. Thank you 💋

  • @castanhatropicana
    @castanhatropicana 3 года назад +14

    I live in a Brazilian favela. After 4 nights without sleeping for the funk's sound and all parties, this morning, September 7th I listen this music after a few years. Thank you for transport me to other world. Thank you for the peace. Thank you for all beautiful pieces that you did, mr. Glass.

    • @MauroBalbino001
      @MauroBalbino001 Месяц назад

      Avesso às "Anitta", "Ivette" e todo o lixo musical produzido no Brasil nos últimos anos. Concordo contigo, "funk" é desestabilizador para seres pensantes. Boa sorte 😉

  • @benc5464
    @benc5464 3 года назад +15

    Never ever have I come across a composer who so immortalizes and reinforces the words of Victor Hugo....
    “Music expresses that which cannot be put into words and that which cannot remain silent”.

  • @Victoria-bh2ht
    @Victoria-bh2ht Год назад +50

    There's something about melancholy piano solos that reach right into my soul ;-;
    My fears are banished. My doubts are stilled. My mood carefully cradled and levelled.

    • @anthonydimichele837
      @anthonydimichele837 5 месяцев назад +1

      I couldn't have said it better. I feel exactly the same. Have you listened to Arvo Part's ALINA?

    • @Victoria-bh2ht
      @Victoria-bh2ht 5 месяцев назад

      @@anthonydimichele837 No, though I have listened to Arvo Part's Spiegel Im Spiegel... which... is beyond my capacity to describe adaquately.

  • @richardgolonka7585
    @richardgolonka7585 10 месяцев назад +8

    could play this all by memory crica 2010. Played my whole life up to that point, and then for some reason I moved that year to an apartment, never got a digital piano and never played again. Life has a way of getting us off track. This was the last piece II had mastered, and I am back reliving it as I literally take the plastic off my new piano in my new house.

    • @achaley4186
      @achaley4186 6 месяцев назад +1

      Good for you! Yes get back on the horse as it were 🙂🙏🏼

  • @davidsleger6476
    @davidsleger6476 5 лет назад +35

    Many of you probably are aware already but Glass was commissioned by a Brazilian ballet company to compose the score for a production called "Aguas da Amazonia" Portions of Metamorphosis were interwoven into that score. It was performed by the acoustic ensemble Uakti and can found on their album 'Glass: Aguas Da Amazonia'

  • @Jimpassarotri
    @Jimpassarotri Год назад +113

    I've been listening to Philip Glass since 1982, but your pace really moved me. Thank you. You're one of the few people who give each note its time and space . Especially the space between the notes.

    • @maureenbowerman5300
      @maureenbowerman5300 Год назад +6

      Yes, as important as the note is the space between - like life's great moments, the pause for reflection in between is as sweet.

    • @debraward8502
      @debraward8502 10 месяцев назад +2

      the space between the notes is sacred - the instant when all things are possible. If you believe in a god, this is where they live. This interpretation of Metamorphosis moves me to tears.

  • @stacylee2775
    @stacylee2775 2 месяца назад +2

    I met him in person he’s shy, brilliant and humble. I attended a 3 day Philip Glass event 5 years back. Such an honor to met him and he shook my hand. All of the people in the room didn’t even know anything about him. He literally walked past a lot of people to use the men’s restroom. I was waiting for my boyfriend who was in the restroom at the same time. He was so humble and kind. ❤

  • @pmcdonough77
    @pmcdonough77 6 лет назад +118

    Hauntingly beautiful and calming, was driving home late last night from work and came across this on the radio, parked in front of my house until it was over, couldn't stop listening to it.

    • @KampelmannAcademy
      @KampelmannAcademy 3 года назад +2

      yes, I understand....it is so much theta. It is like life in the best way.

    • @liammurphy2725
      @liammurphy2725 3 года назад +3

      I know a piece has "got me" when my mind is playing it on waking.

    • @Onionbaron
      @Onionbaron Год назад +2

      Oh how I wish all countries have such radio...

  • @a6ustbby774
    @a6ustbby774 Год назад +9

    I hate hearing repetitive sounds, but this song makes me calm rather than mad. I discovered him because of our group project, it doesn't feel like one cause i did most of the work it's about a research about composers of the 20th century and i was like "why not search up their songs for reference?" Glad i did cause the songs of the composers I've heard so far is into my likings. I've always liked listening to solo piano songs but i didn't expect to love it this much, it reminds me of the time when i wanted to study how to play piano but couldn't cause it's expensive and my top priority back then was to get high grades so even if i could've afforded it i wouldn't be able to study it anyways. I hope somewhere near or even if it's far from the future i hope i could study how to play piano and play beautiful songs like this too. I mean it's never too late to learn new things

  • @beatricevh8606
    @beatricevh8606 8 лет назад +694

    Absolutely essential for all P. Glass fanatics...marvelous interpretation of this powerful and hauting piece of art

    • @LisaMichele
      @LisaMichele 7 лет назад +13

      totally agree, perfect interpretation, so much texture, really wonderful!

    • @OsakaGai420
      @OsakaGai420 7 лет назад +6

      How is this like 'Ragas in Minor Scale?' You might broaden your exposure, mate! :)

    • @ougenven3531
      @ougenven3531 7 лет назад +1

      Where is development?

    • @sarasimoes5381
      @sarasimoes5381 7 лет назад

      Musicas de natal

    • @pithet1953
      @pithet1953 6 лет назад +39

      He clearly inspired some of the best contemporary composers tho. Might be worth more to him than "attention" they don't all do art to flatter their ego. He's not your "struggling artist" he's vastly regarded as one of the most influential musician of the late 20th. He chose minimalism. He studied at Julliard and even got a Fullbright scholarship so i guess professionals perceived his potential and through the decades his talent as been recognized all over world as he got to work with many many operas, symphonic ensemble and artists. Bottom line is...have some fucking respect the man's a legend not a mainstream candyman.

  • @italobino7167
    @italobino7167 5 лет назад +15

    I'm an "old" man, but about 30/40 years ago i discovered Philip Glass.. still today is always great. Hoping also for new generation

  • @scarletblack666
    @scarletblack666 4 года назад +34

    Sometimes I listen to this twice in a row. It is haunting, sad yet deep and strangely uplifting.

    • @musicfanBRA
      @musicfanBRA Год назад +3

      There is sadness, but not despair. There is hope, a little hope, imbued in all this.

  • @ritaangelicasales6557
    @ritaangelicasales6557 Год назад +67

    Absolutely admirable. It's like I can feel the pain of the metamorphosis in me at the same time of observe the relief of transformation. Art and music have their way of touching the soul as we need it

  • @deefindlay4666
    @deefindlay4666 7 лет назад +22

    Anyone who has seen the movie or read the book "The Hours" can appreciate Phillip glass's fine music. It is extremely fitting. When I cease to live I would surely like this music playing, as it's heavenly. Also it helped me with the loss of a loved one, even before my actual loss.

    • @connykomen4237
      @connykomen4237 Год назад +3

      this music is so good that every movie fits this music.

    • @Terri1976
      @Terri1976 3 месяца назад

      I just saw the movie and my plan is to write my Advanced Directives to say I want his music from The Hours played at my memorial. I have not been so moved by music in so long. The tears and sobs would not cease....

  • @jocelyngroomm.a.322
    @jocelyngroomm.a.322 6 лет назад +233

    You don't know me, but you have been with me as I write my thesis. When my brain needed a bittersweet jolt to aid reflection, your interpretation of Glass' incomparable imagination provided just what I needed to get through the countless hours. Thank you!

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom Год назад

      was this one of these theses that you humanities people write, about how your roids itch?

    • @Atreyuwu
      @Atreyuwu Год назад +4

      ​@@DrWhom Why make more room for the asshole when you can fill the cart with heart?

    • @overrated3237
      @overrated3237 Год назад +2

      @@DrWhom going by your other comments, you have a personality that makes stale bread seem exciting.

  • @gracehopper2409
    @gracehopper2409 6 лет назад +127

    It’s amazing how wordless music can speak directly to your soul. Love love love this piece and everything else Phillip Glass has created.

    • @alexgabriel5423
      @alexgabriel5423 3 года назад +4

      Listen to the soundtracks on Powaqaatsi and Koyanisqaatsi...beautiful

    • @strigoi_beats
      @strigoi_beats 3 года назад +2

      Music is wordless, songs have lyrics.

    • @nicolassusmel5761
      @nicolassusmel5761 3 года назад +4

      Este hombre propuso un prototipo de composición simple para que otros como Rick Wakeman o Vangelis la usaran a modo de ADN Para fundar la transgresión lirica, como lo fue y lo es, el Rock Sinfonico...

    • @liseohlala7397
      @liseohlala7397 2 года назад +2

      Search for Alexandra Streliski you'll be even more amazed :)

    • @lukescomb
      @lukescomb Год назад +2

      Thanks for taking out time to comment, I can't return all the love that's been showed to me through these comments ,Thanks for viewing.
      Where are you from dear 🌹🌹🌹🌹

  • @reidimus
    @reidimus 5 лет назад +27

    This music touches a place in my heart I previously knew not existed.

  • @margaretfarquhar9567
    @margaretfarquhar9567 4 года назад +88

    The right hand asking the question
    The left hand answering
    The left hand asking
    The right answering

    • @stefan1632
      @stefan1632 4 года назад +3

      Hans Zimmer explains his music in this context.

  • @ivokory
    @ivokory 4 года назад +17

    To compensate the repetitiveness, the lack of variation, the music must be absolutely beautiful - this is the essence of minimalism.

  • @paulascholtes7412
    @paulascholtes7412 4 года назад +78

    Finding solace here during the pandemic. Thank you.

    • @jp-qn4je
      @jp-qn4je 3 года назад +1

      God offers real solace.

  • @stzw613
    @stzw613 Год назад +5

    Silence in between hurts but that's live if you live it fully. Thank you for bringing the Light among us.

  • @mirrorimage5423
    @mirrorimage5423 5 лет назад +28

    Asked to write a piece that never ends, Glass nailed it.

    • @theletterwriter-n8q
      @theletterwriter-n8q Месяц назад

      Funny, I used to have this looping in a black Blazer of mine, first on the market, which I order with no identifying logos. It was the vehicle's theme song, for my Route 66 journeys of the heart

  • @NothingHumanisAlientoMe
    @NothingHumanisAlientoMe 5 лет назад +9

    What a marvel...
    It's like Clair de lune on a sorrowful morn, Erik Satie just chilling musing at the world shifting as it all walks by an empty cafe, then Beethoven arises from apparent nothingness then with fragrant wild hair casts the Earth into a beauty beholden to a tremendous terror. Just wonderful.

  • @R00t470
    @R00t470 6 лет назад +38

    I originally came for the reason that Person of Interest played this song. Now each time whenever I play this song, it has a new meaning. I lost almost all of my friends, I changed schools, my love cheated on me, I had issues with my mom, continuing problems with my father; I broke and I wept for almost an hour. On one windy and cloudy afternoon as I was listening to Metamorphosis 5, I realized something. I realized that I don't really need to worry about all those friends I've lost, because in the end they never cared. Losing my best friend hurt, because all that happened was that I was being pushed away. I lost my other best friend, because he thought I was trying to "get at" him. I've lost a few family members, and a place where I thought was safe is just as bad as I thought - maybe even worse. Playing this song was a bit emotional for me, but also helpful; for the reason that I got to relive some of the memories that helped me. It sucks because majority of those friends helped shape me, my father is just someone who will never grow up and always stay in the past. I will grow and move, and since they're no longer with me, it has to be without them

  • @martinebourdeau4540
    @martinebourdeau4540 7 лет назад +14

    I attended Philip Glass's first concerts in Paris and right away was mesmerized by his compositions; now my son is a great admirer of his work as well.

    • @Stenis7
      @Stenis7 3 года назад

      Me too, for the Festival d'Automne, it was amazing, a wonder, au Centre Culturel du Marais and before I went for the première of Einstein of the Beach at the Opera Comique.

  • @adriennebeecker5000
    @adriennebeecker5000 4 года назад +16

    Philip Glass is a musical genius in our lifetime with modernism in his music with classical undertones. Classical training is obvious.

  • @lueurtrouble
    @lueurtrouble 2 года назад +17

    I remember the first time I listen to Glass.
    It was like "what is happening to me ? I didn't knew these emotions before".
    Years after, I feel exactly the same effect

  • @joannamortreux1
    @joannamortreux1 3 года назад +43

    The unbelievable power of music, as a visual artist I am often in awe of how visceral and powerful music is. Hitting our emotions and feelings so much more directly often than any painting can.

  • @marsmile666
    @marsmile666 6 лет назад +15

    Just cooked my self a good meal & have been listening to Philip Glass while eating it.
    Lovely

  • @mcalcada11
    @mcalcada11 4 года назад +9

    I had the fortune of listening to him playing this very album in Lisbon in early 90's and i still can feel getting lost in nowhere and the music filling the space as a unique existing presence. Woooowwwww

    • @anacristinaantunes4384
      @anacristinaantunes4384 3 года назад

      I saw him conducting an orchestra while playing "Powaqqatsi" in LIsbon and I was mesmerized. And become a fan. Until today.

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom Год назад +1

      you can say "I had the misfortune of" but not "I had the fortune of" - it is what linguists call a polarised expression, sadly there is no general rule that explains why this is so. you can say e.g. "I was fortunate enough to"

  • @InternetKev
    @InternetKev 3 года назад +16

    I heard Metamorphosis One first during the BSG episode Valley of Darkness. I'm pleased that I can listen to more of Philip Glass' amazing work here. Thank you!

  • @mrinvader
    @mrinvader 4 года назад +21

    That piano sounds. Nothing short of magical. Old pianos really sound so much sharper and more refined.. like a well-loved piece of wooden furniture - all the soft parts are worn away with wonderful stories, all the seams, joints, and grain are as dark as the most mysterious unknown, the tones are clear and carry forever unmuffled... your interpretation of Glass really showcases the output of such a fine instrument with an almost synaesthetic response in my perception.
    This is full of win!

    • @bettertomorrow2625
      @bettertomorrow2625 Год назад +2

      As wood ages, it gets drier and drier and this causes the cell walls shrink even further. This shrinkage and loss of even more water (wood is put into a dry box before building an instrument to get it down to 7%) allows the sound waves to travels even better along the woodgrain. This is why older instruments sound better and better with age.

  • @denniskessler2349
    @denniskessler2349 Год назад +17

    You've breathed new life into this exquisite music - it feels like a living thing, like no version I've ever heard

  • @BelleFlower15
    @BelleFlower15 4 года назад +10

    One of my graphic design teachers would play music while we worked. Every class she asked what we wanted to hear and no one ever spoke up so I just always said Philip Glass.

    • @coversart
      @coversart  4 года назад +2

      haha! BelleFlower15, you are fantastic!
      Well, in my case, I would probably alternate: a day with Philip Glass / then a day with Boards of Canada..

  • @PhilipFClark
    @PhilipFClark 4 года назад +8

    Glass's whole musical world is that of the mesmerist. From the first, his work completely captured me. The Photographer was my introduction. I have continued to be mesmerized by his work, and how it has developed over so many years. Yes, some of the work does not reach the best of him -- The Tirol Concerto, etc. But his prolific output, when listened to in progression shows that he is truly one of our great composers. From classical compositions to film scores, he intrigues every time. At least this listener. Yes, it is work that needs attention -- close attention to its subtle but very real changes. But would you call Monet repetitive? Not if you actually see the those magnificent lilies in front of you. For me, it is the same with Glass. He does for my ear what Monet does for my eyes. If one listens closely, you can't help hearing the influence of Chopin's 'Nocturnes' in this work. His classical training is obvious. This video is even more compelling to watch because of all the hand work -- you can see the composition become visually alive. It's a superb performance.

  • @kulikieb
    @kulikieb 2 года назад +7

    Seven+1 weeks ago we discovered our female cat Macka sitting in front of a big TV screen full of Philip Glass music Metamorphosic. She was glued to the tv screen for more than 33 minutes...Me too...🎶

    • @lambchop6278
      @lambchop6278 10 месяцев назад +1

      😂😂 That's an excellent review right there!

  • @thesoundunit
    @thesoundunit 4 года назад +17

    Philip Glass shatters the ceiling on how music can be created constructed and imagined, beyond words.

    • @nialas1
      @nialas1 4 года назад

      So did sparks....

  • @leelokje
    @leelokje 5 лет назад +4

    I don’t agree with the critics’ description of Philip Glass’ music. This music if full of life, lows and highs, passion, intrigue. If you don’t hear this in this music you’re not getting it. I can’t believe you can be a music critic and not be able to hear!
    It is of the highest finesse how he puts in this much emotion in his "repetitive" music And that’s why it’s so beautiful!

  • @jackgalmitz1883
    @jackgalmitz1883 5 лет назад +12

    Just two chords and my feelings are touched. It's such a sad and dignified piece of music. Hauntingly beautiful.

  • @jaysimoes3705
    @jaysimoes3705 2 года назад +3

    The daughter of my neihbour is an excellent piano player, giving recitals in front of substantial audiences and it seems about a year ago she discoverd philp glass and metamorphosis. Gardening has become so much nicer these days!

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom Год назад

      she is a dark child

  • @shin-i-chikozima
    @shin-i-chikozima 6 лет назад +40

    This play gives me comfort and solace ,and heals my tired mind , and melts away my suffering and sorrow , and purifies my stagnant soul .

  • @connykomen4237
    @connykomen4237 3 года назад +4

    One of the most simple and most beautifull pieces in excistance! 35 year old man, this can make me cry if i think about certain things.

  • @breathingyan8795
    @breathingyan8795 2 года назад +5

    at first i was thinking to read some essays and use this album as the background music, but i couldn't, i just can't help to stop what am doing and sink in the music to feel deep in it. It was so beautiful, one just simply can't ignore this beauty lies behind the lyrics.

  • @scarletblack666
    @scarletblack666 6 лет назад +21

    I have never heard this before but I have already listened to it about a dozen times. I am in love with its haunting embrace.

    • @coversart
      @coversart  6 лет назад

      it makes me happy)

    • @уралочка-ж2э
      @уралочка-ж2э Год назад

      Метаморфозы как река, возле которой можно сидеть и смотреть долго долго. Река жизни...

  • @jaapburgers9583
    @jaapburgers9583 6 лет назад +13

    listen to this so often while developing pictures in my bathroom and to see a photo emerge from nothing during on of the climaxes makes me marvel about the entire world at once. truly great piece and excellent performance

  • @lovenikolatesla846
    @lovenikolatesla846 2 года назад +5

    Give the gift of classical music to your children it will be like best gift to live on in them this is a masterpiece 👌

  • @mk715
    @mk715 6 лет назад +13

    An extraordinary moment. I am not normally a Philip Glass lover but l keep on going back to his Metamorphosis - heart rending

  • @melissaferland8538
    @melissaferland8538 2 года назад +6

    My daughter's music teacher made me discover that masterpiece during online class, when he was teaching the kids about repetitions and contrasts.

  • @moisesagudo6805
    @moisesagudo6805 3 года назад +17

    The first song I heard on the Person of Interest and had no idea it was Phillip Glass. Fantastic work! 👏

  • @davidkeller2832
    @davidkeller2832 6 лет назад +24

    This piece was used in a Battlestar Galactica episode titled Valley of Darkness. Amazing matching of music with the mood of the scene in that episode.

  • @Lewis-wr8ec
    @Lewis-wr8ec 4 года назад +4

    Thank you humanity, for sharing in this brief moment on a spec of dust in the great cosmic dance

  • @SophiaPerpetua
    @SophiaPerpetua 5 месяцев назад +1

    This is such a masterpiece. I can't count how many times I've listened to it.

  • @faithhynoski5874
    @faithhynoski5874 5 месяцев назад +2

    This is such an absolutely beautiful piece and you perform it so well. Thank you. I listen to you play this every time I sit down at my computer. Today it just makes me weep. Phillip Glass music has a way of reaching down into the depths of my soul.

  • @soulscanner66
    @soulscanner66 6 лет назад +23

    Haven't listened to as much Glass as I should, but I've always enjoyed his work. Always saw Philip Glass as a minimalist Bach, systematic theme and variation. The expressiveness here makes me see him as more romantic, perhaps Beethoven, Chopin,Wagner, Debussy. You know it's a good performance when it changes the way you see the composer.

    • @georgetate6055
      @georgetate6055 6 лет назад +2

      I think anyone composing today has many, many, many years or decades or centuries of "styles" available flowing through the blood/DNA. I think we have to always caveat our tendency to box in ANY modern composer - box in a composer when it comes to style or comparing him/her to a composer from the past. It's natural for us to want to pigeonhole any composer. This is the post-everything period. Post-post-post! :-)
      Renaissance, Baroque, romantic, post-romantic, 12-tone, and any other style you can think of is alive in modern music. Some music (a lot of music) is composed/published every year that is not worth our time - or, is it?
      The long and short of it is, I like to approach new compositions with an open mind - as open as I can, at least. I just realize that we ALL have a reaction to new material that can be instantaneous and that sometimes - many times - I find my first reaction is not what is true for me after another listening (or 2 or 3).
      My quartet has performed several of the Glass Quartets and loves them. Just the other day a couple of us were reminiscing and we agreed that some of the best times - most enjoyable times - was practicing and performing Glass!

    • @soulscanner66
      @soulscanner66 6 лет назад

      True about the styles. Getting 4 people to agree on how the approach Glass must have been challenging! His deceptive simplicity must make it tempting to embellish.

    • @ЕленаИванова-ш5и6к
      @ЕленаИванова-ш5и6к Год назад

      @@georgetate6055 вы так глубоко правы..
      Музыка тот неземной язык,который проходит сквозь время и пространство в своей кодировке.Этот язык удивительным образом достигает души как комета или ангел после задания к Богу..я считаю композиторов волшебниками.Поклон им и благодарность за слезы и волнения души!❤

  • @Ihsomiet
    @Ihsomiet 7 лет назад +13

    i love that part on 9:27. gets me every time. it's like the music is trying to get a feel for itself throughout its own uncertainty.

  • @bobcanapary7084
    @bobcanapary7084 7 лет назад +16

    This particular piece has grown with me over time. I keep taking away different meanings as my life continues to change. sometimes hopeless, sometimes full of hope. I suppose there is a particular beauty in the repetition that is hard to describe. I hope to see it live sometime.

  • @anandaom6927
    @anandaom6927 6 лет назад +24

    My son (3 months old) and I listened to this together and LOVED it! He was kicking around and smiling so big. Thank you!

  • @dianalaczkowski9803
    @dianalaczkowski9803 4 года назад +30

    This is not intended to be morbid, but this music is what I want played as I transition from this body back to Spirit. I can feel the metamorphosis happening so sweetly and lovingly.

    • @lukescomb
      @lukescomb Год назад

      Thanks for taking out time to comment, I can't return all the love that's been showed to me through these comments ,Thanks for viewing.
      Where are you from dear

  • @davidlee6720
    @davidlee6720 2 года назад +3

    Philip Glass so evocative of unnameable, subtle yearnings and master of suspense .

  • @samanthasmith5676
    @samanthasmith5676 7 лет назад +7

    With today being Veterans Day I listened to Adagio for Strings, op11 by Samuel Barber. It was performed by a pianist who conducted it on September 15th 2001. I saw it live on TV from London in 2001. Its on you tube. I cried my eyes out. Then right after that video a pianist named Nobuuki Tsujii wrote and composed "Elegy for the victims of the Tsuami of March 11, 2011. It was so sad and he cried throughout the whole song as tears dripped down on his piano keys. And now I find Philip Glass. Piano solos have so much feeling and yes these are sad yet beautiful. 11/11/2017

    • @WaltzingMattDillon
      @WaltzingMattDillon 6 лет назад +1

      Sam -- thank you for sharing -- The experience of The True Divine is beyond words to describe, nonetheless:
      "Last night I dreamt I saw the Sun.
      I knew it was the Sun
      Because it was Warm, and gave Light,
      And because it brought Tears to my eyes."

    • @lukescomb
      @lukescomb Год назад

      Thanks for taking out time to comment, I can't return all the love that's been showed to me through these comments ,Thanks for viewing.
      Where are you from dear 🌹🌹🌹

  • @sakuntalabasu1493
    @sakuntalabasu1493 4 года назад +8

    Astounded by the beauty of this music. I hadn't heard any of Philip Glass's works before, clicked on the video because I liked the photo in black and white. Indeed that's the spirit of the music too- unnecessary detail stripped away so that one can focus the mind on just a few ideas. It almost felt like Indian classical music in spirit, in that the left hand mimics the role the tanpura plays while the right hand takes care of melody and rhythm both. Mesmerizing experience, thank you for opening up a new vista for me.

  • @jolantaciesielska8336
    @jolantaciesielska8336 6 лет назад +7

    I am fanatic falling in love with this music. Thank you Mr Glass.

  • @jeanluno2521
    @jeanluno2521 5 лет назад +8

    Western soft voodoo that brings up the deepest emotions. Amazing how acoustic strings can send people into such state. Merci Monsieur Glass !

  • @Hey_MikeZeroEcho22P
    @Hey_MikeZeroEcho22P 3 года назад +6

    I was introduced to Mr. Glass music when 'Koyaanisqatsi' ( ha missed only one "a" ) was played on a PBS viewing. And ever since then I watched all "Qatsi" trilogy!!
    Thanks Philip Glass, a Great American composer!

  • @shlarry3184
    @shlarry3184 5 лет назад +42

    My heart weeps for the 869 thumbs in the wrong direction.

  • @micahthecomfortablehuman1324
    @micahthecomfortablehuman1324 5 лет назад +7

    We were just learning about Modernism in English class, and I brought up how minimalist music kinda has the same sort of properties as Modernist literature, mentioning Philip Glass specifically. I had no clue that this song was directly inspired by "The Metamorphosis," arguably the most well known Modernist story!

  • @TheFeralBachelor
    @TheFeralBachelor 4 года назад +7

    It's hard to deal with, sometimes, how much this music moves me. Thank you.

    • @coversart
      @coversart  4 года назад +2

      Thank you for listening, Kevin!

  • @danedmiston7734
    @danedmiston7734 7 лет назад +17

    Dark and beautiful at the same time. I have been playing the piano for 43 years and also teach. I have several students that are now discovering Philip Glass's music. It's great music to teach students how to feel,control and articulate their emotions. I love it and my students love it! Great job to the pianist!

  • @melissablackman9499
    @melissablackman9499 4 года назад +12

    So powerful. I'd love to be in the room with this being played from start to finish.

    • @lukescomb
      @lukescomb Год назад

      Thanks for taking out time to comment, I can't return all the love that's been showed to me through these comments ,Thanks for viewing.
      Where are you from dear 🌹🌹

  • @elizabethfletcher6029
    @elizabethfletcher6029 3 года назад +6

    I love Philip's operas, his piano music..all his music. He played piano in our small city, Norwich UK. What a privilege. Playing and hearing his piano music is a huge solace during this dreadful pandemic. Just so marvellous. Sending this with huge appreciation and love to the wonderful composer.

  • @atakantur1
    @atakantur1 3 года назад +1

    Met with him by coincidence via a cheap second hand CD I found many years ago that I was curios to listen. Now I appreciate the little money I have paid for that CD so that I discovered a great artist and still listening..

  • @jaydacupcake8517
    @jaydacupcake8517 8 месяцев назад +1

    Hello I'm listening to this because I have a music exam. Usually with the other pieces I'm assigned I don't really enjoy them, but this one moved me and made me appreciate the art of musique. Thank you.

  • @NicholasHerriman
    @NicholasHerriman 7 лет назад +6

    Metamorphosis 1: The low notes evoke such rich sound. First time I played this, I wasn't watching only half paying attention; for a second I thought there was a string section coming in there. Now as I watch carefully I'm hanging as I watch your right hand reach across. Sonorous tone and great interpretation. Thanks for this!

  • @charlesmurphy4172
    @charlesmurphy4172 6 лет назад +17

    Incredible performance. Loved every moment. Plan to listen again and again.🎹🎹

  • @nsburden
    @nsburden 6 лет назад +4

    I had no idea who I was meeting back in 1989 on a train from Amsterdam to Berlin when I met PhillipGlass and his musicians...they were playing in Berlin and invited us to come see the show for free....VIP tickets...really?!, we were backpackers.....It ended up being one of the most memorable parts of our journey And now I see just how influential he was beyond his own work. It seems to me he also instilled a similar passion in Nils Frahm, who to this day I am enthralled with too. So beautiful to experience such passion in the artistry of music!

    • @MegaJezeBelle
      @MegaJezeBelle 5 лет назад

      Филип гласс музыка из фильма иллюзионист

  • @MrDnipropetrovsk
    @MrDnipropetrovsk 4 года назад +3

    I hear this music ever since I've been in Kafka museum in Prague... Also right now when I'm reading "Process" and also thinking about "The Castle".
    It's masterpiece🙏

  • @martagilvazartlife
    @martagilvazartlife 5 лет назад +2

    So much can be heard in the pause making you crave for the next note, that edge

  • @sjangcoenen1358
    @sjangcoenen1358 5 лет назад +4

    thank you and thank philip... I think it would sound even more desperate on a saloon stand up piano. not to choose.
    I guess this grand piano is the holy grail. thanks again... I listened it when the sun was going down in my childrens' garden, all by myself

  • @ArticWolfPT
    @ArticWolfPT 6 лет назад +19

    What a masterpiece, it was the first time I heard Philip Glass and I love it

    • @coversart
      @coversart  6 лет назад +1

      :happy:

    • @Rosebud2503
      @Rosebud2503 5 лет назад +1

      Same here...

    • @markkulahti1877
      @markkulahti1877 2 года назад

      Still have to listen...

    • @markkulahti1877
      @markkulahti1877 2 года назад

      I know some good music from Philip Glass but this, needs some thinking. No, I don't like this.

  • @leelokje
    @leelokje 5 лет назад +3

    The right hand tells the story. And it did what I was hoping it would do. Building and building up the pressure and then, the crescendo! But it doesn’t end there. There is no let down afterwards. What goes up must come down but Glass kept the momentum going. I get this music.

  • @arothko8939
    @arothko8939 5 лет назад +2

    Im seeing Philip glass for the first time in Montreal this September ‘19. And, I can’t wait!

  • @Mingtree10
    @Mingtree10 4 года назад +3

    I do not remember exactly which composition lo so many years ago now that first drew me to Glass but I have been enthused ever since. So captivating. Oddly, I find comfort in Glass; room to breathe and think in the repetitiveness. I saw him in concert and it was wonderful.

  • @lucetina337
    @lucetina337 2 года назад +5

    Essa sensível e linda melodia foi utilizada pelo grupo de dança de Petrópolis do Estúdio Renata Abreu. A coreografia representou a tragédia sofrida pelos Petropolitanos em fevereiro de 2022. Com essa apresentação venceram em 1°lugar o 9°Festival de Dança Movimento Carioca. Parabéns a TDS!!!

  • @jasminhamilton1147
    @jasminhamilton1147 5 лет назад +3

    My six year old daughter loves watching this. Thank you for sharing!!

  • @jeffbird5082
    @jeffbird5082 5 лет назад +15

    Wow what a performance! You have opened up my eyes to the beauty of Phillip Glass! It’s dark, mysterious, haunting, and beautiful all at the same time! I need to discover more of his work!
    Thank you for this! I’m going to learn this piece!

  • @Nadie-f1d
    @Nadie-f1d 2 месяца назад +2

    Casi, Parlic. Brillante ejecución. Un privilegio escucharte.

  • @arijitchief
    @arijitchief 2 года назад +2

    It's midnight now, am trying to finish work, and this piece is helping me concentrate...am also smiling to myself...imagining myself playing this (I can't play the piano)...anybody who sees me now will be wondering whom I'm chatting with 😛...

  • @signore1043
    @signore1043 7 лет назад +127

    Music that saturates my emotions with memory and some regrets. Deeply moving and the reason why music -along with poetry- is an almost divine activity. I think of Rilke. I think of Yeats. Glass clarifies their imagery.

    • @Zeokoz
      @Zeokoz 6 лет назад +2

      Rilke is really something isn't he? I've learned so much from his poetry and prose.
      I love that interpretation of Glass' piano as a form of their imagery.
      Have you ever read Robert Boy? Probably most influenced by Rilke and Yeats in many ways.

    • @hakonsoreide
      @hakonsoreide 5 лет назад +2

      Poetry is very different to music, however, in that its emotional impact is more often than not due to a more or less conscious interpretation of the words rather than the inherent musicality in the words and their rhythms. The latter can enhance the emotions but are seldom the main carrier of them unless you pick words only for their musicality and not for their semantic content, put them together in a repetitive pattern until you forget what the word might have originally meant and just experience the rhythm and melody of them, which would be a poetic equivalence of a Glass piece, I guess. I don't know of any poets who makes such poetry, though I am sure there would be some who do.

    • @kickbam213
      @kickbam213 4 года назад +1

      @@hakonsoreide me

    •  Год назад

      @Richard Signore, I totally agree with you. Music and poetry dive deep in our soul and bring us back meaning, images and symbols that remind our shares humanity.

  • @allenr10000
    @allenr10000 4 года назад +9

    I've never heard anything like this - it's haunting, mesmerizing and infinitely sad.

  • @philipstantonstudio
    @philipstantonstudio 4 года назад +19

    i have just discovered this channel after following Philip Glass since 1979, thank you so much for these wonderful, delicate and difficult interpretations!

  • @cloudhand-taichi-berlin
    @cloudhand-taichi-berlin 4 года назад +7

    My Dad was a great classical music fan, loved things from Bach through to the Romantics (but pretty much stopped there). Mozart and Beethoven were his absolute favorites. He had no time for anything too modern, certainly not avant-garde or minimal. I sent this link to him just a few months before he died (age 87) and his response was: - "I have never been a big Philip Glass fan but this I like and I will do some more searching." - So good on you, Coversart, you opened up a new pair of ears there. :-)
    -->> A year on, listening to this again and thinking of him. I miss him.

  • @dennismason3740
    @dennismason3740 4 года назад +3

    @Coversart - Well played. Never blame the tech (physical components) for perceived limitations. I heard Philip on the radio in the late eighties (KPFK Los Angeles) and my tape machine was recording. I still play that tape and I am still searching for the name of the piece. Much Glass to cover to solve this mystery. Could be Metamorphosis, we'll see. Your interpretation is bloody brilliant, like hearing Satie played slow (Gnossienne #3).