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Steve Reich
 

offline CS2x from London (United Kingdom) on 2005-05-04 09:18 [#01585982]
Points: 5079 Status: Lurker



I've just realised how increadable "Music For 18 Musicians"
is.

I've always liked it just for listening purposes, but there
are a lot of formulas and clever musical tricks going on
throughout.

Didn't someone here write an essay about it, and SAWII?


 

offline Opto on 2005-05-04 09:25 [#01585985]
Points: 1016 Status: Addict



ah
steves my top3 second place.

i love how hes playing with patters.

if you want to notice, all patterns on this mentioned album
are the same, just putted in different places, but main
pattern remains the same. and hes doing pretty much the same
on other albums - i reccomend "drumming" and, his best work
"different trains".
hes just incredible, and he doesnt get the credit he
deserves, but hes over 50 and i think he doesnt give a
shit.which probably makes him so special, and his music
aswell.

check these two other albums, and the rest after that, thats
worthy the hassle ( coz its hard to get his works nowadays
).


 

offline CS2x from London (United Kingdom) on 2005-05-04 09:50 [#01586023]
Points: 5079 Status: Lurker



Thanks for the reccommendation.

Is his new one (called something like "The City") any good?
I've heard mixed things about it.


 

offline Opto on 2005-05-04 09:54 [#01586032]
Points: 1016 Status: Addict



new one is called "three tales " and comes with DVD that
fits the music.
its very good, very very moody.and beautiful.recommended
aswell.


 

offline qrter from the future, and it works (Netherlands, The) on 2005-05-04 09:54 [#01586033]
Points: 47414 Status: Moderator



he's 69.

I would recommend "the four sections" and "sextet" purely
for the beauty of the melodies he creates.

and I would recommend "city life" for the excellent use of
samples.


 

offline plaidzebra from so long, xlt on 2005-05-04 09:58 [#01586042]
Points: 5678 Status: Lurker



some of my other favorites are "music for large ensemble"
and "octet" and "tehillim."

it's implicitly spiritual, i think, like bach; some of my
all time favorite music. i'm not very knowledgable in a
technical sense, but the aesthetic and emotional experience
of reich's music has has a huge impact on me.

during one of the early performances of "four organs" the
audience started leaving, booing and shouting out for them
to stop! then again, that's a pretty relentless piece for
the blue haired classical crowd...


 

offline Torture Garden from Feelin' 2Pacish on 2005-05-04 10:20 [#01586067]
Points: 974 Status: Lurker



My favourites are Drumming, Eight Lines, Different Trains &
Music For 18. Everything I've listened to has been good. I
wouldn't say he is ignored or anything, he gets enough
credit.

Reich uses a technique called phasing where you have 2 exact
rhythms working in phase to start with and gradually, he
displaces one of them. He'll keep pushing one rhythm from
the other to create a feeling of movement until it comes
back into phase.


 

offline HeWhoCannotBeNa from -qp- (Netherlands, The) on 2005-05-04 10:41 [#01586092]
Points: 218 Status: Lurker



Eight Lines is a great pice of music, prolly my favorite.
Music for mallet instruments, voices and organ and the four
movements are great too.

If you're into Reich's work i highly recoomend listening to
Terry Riley's "in C"


 

offline dariusgriffin from cool on 2005-05-04 10:42 [#01586096]
Points: 12426 Status: Regular



You used to like his music just for listening purposes?


 

offline CS2x from London (United Kingdom) on 2005-05-04 10:57 [#01586114]
Points: 5079 Status: Lurker | Followup to dariusgriffin: #01586096



I used to just enjoy listening to it, and now I can see
there's a lot more to it than I initally thought. As others
have said, as well as it being emmotionally impacting it
also has lots of clever little patterns all over the place
that I never used to notice.



 

offline CS2x from London (United Kingdom) on 2005-05-04 11:33 [#01586183]
Points: 5079 Status: Lurker | Followup to HeWhoCannotBeNa: #01586092



Yeah, I just had a listen to "8 Lines" and it sounds great.

I'll have to check out his new DVD album. I'm glad someone
here likes it, as I heard negative things about it
previously.


 

offline qrter from the future, and it works (Netherlands, The) on 2005-05-04 12:42 [#01586245]
Points: 47414 Status: Moderator | Followup to CS2x: #01586183



it's great.


 

offline Opto on 2005-05-05 01:16 [#01587228]
Points: 1016 Status: Addict | Followup to CS2x: #01586183



man that dvd album has 3 parts.first is based on Hindenburg
Zeppelin disaster ( im sure youve heard about it ), and
watching the dvd with archived material + hearing those
instrumentals + hering the choir tellin you the story of it
- its fucking amazing. amazing kinda like first listening -
goosebumps on your hands. its just amazing.
that album played in my headphones by more than a
month.constantly.


 


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