Glass Orchestra | The Canadian Encyclopedia

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Glass Orchestra

Glass Orchestra. Toronto new music ensemble that works exclusively in the medium of glass, employing custom- or hand-made instruments (eg, glass harmonica, flute, xylophone) and 'found' instruments (bowls, wine glasses, bottles, tubes, etc).

Glass Orchestra

Glass Orchestra. Toronto new music ensemble that works exclusively in the medium of glass, employing custom- or hand-made instruments (eg, glass harmonica, flute, xylophone) and 'found' instruments (bowls, wine glasses, bottles, tubes, etc). It is the only permanent ensemble of its kind in the world. The Glass Orchestra dates its beginnings to late 1977, although three of its five founding members, Miguel Frasconi, Marvin Green, and John Kuipers, had previously worked in glass with other musicians (including John Oswald) at York University and the Music Gallery. V. Eric Cadesky (b Toronto 1956) and Paul Hodge (b Toronto 1955) completed the ensemble in 1977. After Kuipers's departure in 1980, the Glass Orchestra remained a quartet. Green left in 1983, his place taken by Gordon Phillips briefly; Jon Siddall 1983-5; John Puchiele 1985-9; Phillips again 1989-91; Michael J. Baker (b Edmonton 11 Aug 1949, d Toronto 9 Sep 2000) as of 1991; and Bill Parsons. Frasconi left in 1986, his place taken by Rob Poizner 1986-8 and Richard Sacks as of 1988.

The Glass Orchestra was based initially at Toronto's Music Gallery and has given many of its concerts in museums and art galleries. When the Music Gallery moved in 2000, the Glass Orchestra changed its home to The 401, an artist's collective on Richmond Street in Toronto.

Performances

The Glass Orchestra performs twice each year in Toronto, and has made many tours. Special guests have included the Evergreen Ensemble and electronic musician Eugene Martynec. It performed at the Ontario Science Centre in 1979, 1987, and 1988, at Expo 86, and at the Festival international de musique actuelle de Victoriaville in 1987. It has been heard frequently on CBC radio.

The ensemble made its European debut in 1980 with concerts in Berlin and Frankfurt; it returned to Berlin in 1981 for the Total Music Meeting and in 1982 for the OKanada cultural exhibition. Other early overseas performances included London (Victoria and Albert Museum, 1981); Bremen (Übersee Museum, 1981); and Amsterdam (Fest de Ijsbreker, 1985). It made its US debut in 1981 with performances at the State University of New York, Purchase, and at the 49th Parallel, New York City. Its other US engagements have included the International Glass Music festivals in Columbus, Ohio (1983,) and Oxford, Ohio (1985), and New Music America in Washington, DC (1983). An Asian tour in 1989 took the ensemble to China; Taiwan; Macao; Japan; Thailand (where it gave a command performance for Princess Sirindhorn with the traditional Thai ensemble Fong Nam); Malaysia; and Singapore. The Glass Orchestra has since toured extensively in the US, Europe, Southeast Asia, China, and Japan. More recent tours have taken it to Taiwan (2000) and Singapore (2003). It played at the inauguration of the Pittsburgh Glass Center during the Meltdown '01 gala in October 2001.

Style, Repertoire, and Instruments

The Glass Orchestra sets up on four carpets, each on a side of a large cube made of metal shafts. The various instruments of the ensemble - which collectively weigh half a tonne - are hung on the metal structure or placed on the carpets. The Glass Orchestra generally performs on candlelit stages in darkened halls because they "like to see the hundreds of reflections in the instruments" (Glass Orchestra website.)

It has also greatly advanced the craft of glass instrument-making. That the instruments it makes are fragile and do break highlights the exploratory and improvisatory nature of the ensemble, who regard such breakages as opportunities to discover different properties in the pieces of the shattered instrument.

The ensemble started by following more avant-garde traditions of sonic exploration. Though primarily an improvisation ensemble, it does play written works. Commissions include works by Drew Krause, John Mark Sherlock, and Jeff Harriott. Since its beginning, the Glass Orchestra has diversified its repertoire to include influences from jazz, as in All that Glazz; from Balinese music, as in the gamelan-influenced Neo Mandatto; and it performs a family show, as well as its core soundscape music such as its classic work, Dusk.

Recordings

Though the properties of glass instruments make them challenging to record, the orchestra has put out five albums: an LP, The Glass Orchestra (1977, Music Gallery Editions MGE-10); the EP Tales from Siliconesia (1980, GO-01); and the CDs Human (1988, GOMUSE Si-02) and Live from the Archives Vol I and II (2007). It recorded the soundtrack of the Hollywood film Girl, Interrupted in 2000.

Further Reading