Glass: Songs from Liquid Days - Philip Glass, Michael Riesman & The Philip Glass Ensemble

Glass: Songs from Liquid Days

Philip Glass, Michael Riesman & The Philip Glass Ensemble

  • Genre: Classical
  • Release Date: 1986-03-31
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 6

  • ℗ 1986 SONY BMG MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Songs from Liquid Days: No. 1, Michael Riesman, Bernard Fowler, The Philip Glass Ensemble & Paul Lustig Dunkel 9:56
2
Songs from Liquid Days: No. 2, Philip Glass, Michael Riesman, The Philip Glass Ensemble, Janice Pendarvis, Jack Kripl, Richard Peck & Jon Gibson 6:42
3
Songs from Liquid Days: No. 3, Michael Riesman, Linda Ronstadt, The Philip Glass Ensemble & Kronos Quartet 3:15
4
Songs from Liquid Days: No. 4, Michael Riesman, The Roches & The Philip Glass Ensemble 4:45
5
Songs from Liquid Days: No. 5, Michael Riesman, Douglas Perry & The Philip Glass Ensemble 6:59
6
Songs from Liquid Days: No. 6, Michael Riesman, Linda Ronstadt, The Roches, The Philip Glass Ensemble & Kronos Quartet 8:09

Reviews

  • Liquid Days by Crouch End

    3
    By gammelld
    As good as this is, Please find the Crouch End Festival Chorus version. It beats it 10 fold!
  • MAGIC GLASS

    5
    By Plastico Fino
    Finally, I found Him! One more time, I'm mesmerized, transported through his music, to a place where dreams intoxicate with amber, the deepest core of my soul.
  • Glass: Songs from Liquid Days

    5
    By brian?
    I had this recording on LP until it burned up in a house fire some years ago. I recently got it on CD, played it at home, at work (a bakery kitchen), in my car. It is lush, enthralling, humorous. I would say if one does not like Philip Glass, or the Kronos Quartet, or David Byrne, or the Roches, or Suzanne Vega, or Paul Simon, or Linda Ronstadt, then one may not like this recording. Otherwise listen to it for the musical humor, the rich minimalism that is Glass, the wonderful quality of all the performers.
  • ouch

    1
    By IDontNeedANickname
    No genre, composer, time period, or experiment is a good excuse for this. I realize the technology Glass used at the time wasn't exactly great, but he, and everybody else involved, should have realized that this sounds horrible. Everything about this is amature at best. I don't even know where to begin, so I won't start. I need some Tylenal.

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