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In C review — barefoot dancers spark joy from a minimalist masterpiece
In C review — barefoot dancers spark joy from a minimalist masterpiece

Times

time30-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Times

In C review — barefoot dancers spark joy from a minimalist masterpiece

Minimalist music and postmodern dance — which both originated in the 1960s — were made for each other. The insistent pulse, rhythmic architecture and hypnotic meditative state of composers such as Philip Glass and Steve Reich have been catnip to choreographers, from Lucinda Childs to Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker and beyond. Now, in her 21st-century work, the German dancemaker Sasha Waltz winds back the clock to 1964, when Terry Riley's landmark In C announced the birth of minimalism. Her dance, presented at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London as part of the Southbank Centre's Multitudes festival, follows the template of Riley's music, played here by a dozen members of the London Sinfonietta on stage next to the dancers. The score comprises 53 sequential phrases that

The Documentary Podcast  In the Studio: Steve Reich
The Documentary Podcast  In the Studio: Steve Reich

BBC News

time14-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

The Documentary Podcast In the Studio: Steve Reich

For 60 years, New York composer Steve Reich has been one of classical music's most celebrated revolutionaries. Pioneering minimalism in the 1960s, a musical style based on repetition and shifting rhythms, his strange experiments with cassette tape led to orchestral masterpieces – now performed around the world. His career has not only helped define the latest era of classical music, but had an enormous influence on pop, rock and electronica. He has helped shape 20th Century music in a way few can claim to match. To mark 60 years since his first major piece,1965's It's Gonna Rain, he takes Alastair Shuttleworth through the process and stories behind some of his greatest works, including Clapping Music, Different Trains and City Life. He also reflects on his legacy, his plans for the future and what, at the age of 88, still inspires him to compose

This 27-disc Steve Reich box set is not the work of a minimalist
This 27-disc Steve Reich box set is not the work of a minimalist

Washington Post

time30-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Washington Post

This 27-disc Steve Reich box set is not the work of a minimalist

One thing I learned spending an entire week listening to a big box of Steve Reich's music is that there's no box big enough for Steve Reich's music. I had originally intended to listen to 'Collected Works,' a comprehensive collection of the pioneering composer's music, from beginning to end. The 27-disc set, freshly out on Nonesuch Records, collects all of Reich's recorded works across a 60-year stretch, anchored by his four-decade relationship with the label.

Post your questions for composer Steve Reich
Post your questions for composer Steve Reich

The Guardian

time03-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Post your questions for composer Steve Reich

At the age of 88, Steve Reich has had a long lifetime of artistic brilliance, harnessing power through repetition and minimalism – and as he releases a career-spanning box set, he will be answering your questions. Born in 1936, Reich (pronounced 'rysh') is one of the greatest living American composers, who after passing through a series of esteemed colleges – Cornell, Juilliard, Mills – began producing a series of works from the mid 1960s onwards that were methodical, even mathematical in their arrangements, but which became transcendent experiences for audiences. Initially using sampled speech, simple instruments and handclaps, he moved towards composing large ensemble works, and expanded his vision to encompass other countries and cultures such as those of Ghana and Bali. His Jewish heritage informed Tehillim, which set Jewish scripture to music, and his unforgettable work Different Trains, which reflected on the Holocaust. His native New York was also a big influence, from the playful New York Counterpoint to his chilling September 11 piece, WTC 9/11. Along the way he has been embraced by the classical establishment while also being a huge influence on rock and dance music. He won the Pulitzer prize for his work Double Sextet and collaborated with greats outside music, from choreographer Alvin Ailey to visual artist Gerhard Richter. His impressive body of work is now being collected by his longtime label Nonesuch into Steve Reich Collected Works, a 27-disc box set ranging from 1965's It's Gonna Rain to first recordings of his two latest works: Jacob's Ladder (2023) and Traveler's Prayer (2020). Ahead of the release on 14 March, Reich will be joining us to answer your questions about his life and work. Post them in the comments below before 6pm GMT on Thursday 6 March. His answers will be published on 21 March.

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