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Hourglass album review โ€“ Simone Dinnerstein gives Glass room to breathe
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๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง United Kingdomโ€ขJune 5, 2026

Hourglass album review โ€“ Simone Dinnerstein gives Glass room to breathe

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Originally published byThe Guardian

Dinnerstein/Baroklyn
(Naรฏve)

With a refreshingly organic approach, the US pianist and her string ensemble revitalise the modern minimalist masterโ€™s score for The Hours and his Tirol Concerto

Getting ahead of next yearโ€™s 90th birthday celebrations, American pianist Simone Dinnerstein presents two works by Philip Glass, performing alongside her own string ensemble. Baroklyn โ€“ the name conflates her home borough of Brooklyn and the baroque sensibilities of JS Bach โ€“ take a far-from-mechanical approach to the composerโ€™s minimalist tics. Their aim is to emulate the passage of time like sand through an hourglass (hence the title) rather than chopping the music into segments like the hands of a clock. And it works.

Arranged by Michael Riesman, Suite from The Hours splices Glassโ€™s score for Stephen Daldryโ€™s film into an almost symphonic three-movement work. The storyโ€™s pain and poetry is encapsulated in an immersive score for piano, strings, harp and celesta, with Dinnerstein raising the emotional stakes by adopting considerably slower tempi than the movie soundtrack.

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