All Reich

All Reich

You’ll definitely feel more than all right after seeing Cluster Ensemble performing ALL REICH. Steve Reich ALL NIGHT long. We did it in a dance club. And it worked!

„The term to best describe my music is ‘music’ and for myself it’s ‘composer’….“

 

Steve Reich

 

Steve Reich was born in New York in 1936 where he also got his classical musical education. His interest focused on baroque and classicist music, but he had an inclination for jazz and twelve-tone technique as well, the latter causing his curiosity especially about the rhythmical features. He lived on and off in New York and in California, collaborating with the Tape Music Centre in San Francisco in 1963. Here he met Terry Riley, participating as keyboard player in the premiere of Riley’s legendary piece In C and also introducing the rhythmical pulse, so typical of the composition. In New York he also collaborated briefly with his peer Philip Glass, not only in the field of music but also business – together they had a moving company called Chelsea Light Moving.

Reich later became a respected composer with significant influence on the so called minimal music in the US of the 70’s. He was awarded the Grammy of his holocaust-related piece Different Trains for string quartet and tape from 1988. Reich, then 29 years old, discovered in 1965 a technique which had a decisive importance for his work. In a San Francisco square, a black priest speaking passionately about the Flood and the end of the world caught Reich’s attention. He recorded the speech and picked up a phrase, setting it to play in loop on two tape players in the studio. Due to slight technical inequalities between the two devices the playback was not in sync. He later manipulated the difference by pushing with his thumb against one of the tapes to make it play slower but in the same tuning. The outcome is recorded as the piece It’s Gonna Rain, which is the first one to use the phase-shifting technique. It can be regarded as a prototype of Reich’s early compositional system. Later he deliberately worked upon this principle, trying to get the most out of it. He discovered that he could use phase shifting not only in electroacoustic but also in composed music. One of the first such pieces is Piano Phase for two pianos – a piece in which a twelve-tone model is played simultaneously by two pianists, with one of them soon changing the tempo and getting behind by one twelfth of the model. Reich describes the circumstances of the composing of the piece and its first performances as feeling very “strange, because he was neither playing the notes nor improvising, but practicing some special kind of meditation…”

The second main feature of Reich’s music is processuality. Reich believes that musical processes should be identifiable be the listener. These two principles form the base for his three pieces Four Organs, Music for Pieces of Wood and Six Pianos. The first, Four Organs, was written in 1970 for 5 instruments – 4 electric organs and maracas. The idea of the piece is quite simple, extending the duration of a cluster’s resounding in different registers of the instruments. Whereas this cluster can be heard for 11 eighth note beats in the beginning, it becomes multiplied almost 24 times at the end – for 265 eighth note beats. Reich uses here the principle of linear processuality and vertical music time.

The imagined time line of the work is turned into vertical position and time as we know it ceases to exist. The whole piece can be perceived as a single extended moment. In the composition Music for Pieces of Wood (1973) Reich also applies this processual principle, adding a worked out phase- shifting compositional technique. It is written for 5 players on wood blocks. A rhythm model, so typical for Reich, is applied here in its basic form and during the piece’s progression others are added, simply being phase-shifted.

When the players reach a complete unison sound of the model, they move to the next model. This piece is a simplified representative of Reich’s compositional work, which makes it easier to understand it. In 1973 Reich had the idea to write a piece for all pianos in a music instruments store, and that’s how Six Pianos was born. Here we are completely aware of the so called resulting models, which are formed by mixing overtones and differential tones. The sound of these models is intensified by their elaboration for additional instruments, which multiply it. Besides being so pioneering, there is one more fact to thank Six Pianos for – it lead in 2009 to the formation of Cluster Ensemble, whose members gave it its Slovak premiere in a music shop…

 

 

Juraj Beráts 2015

Recenzie

Je to ako keď sa prvý krát zamilujete

Je to rovnaký pocit ako keď sa zamilujete. Vôbec to nečkáte, a zrazu vás zasiahne úžasná hudba. Nemôžete jej odolať,vykašlete sa na všetko, čo ste práve chceli robiť a želáte si, aby to nikdy neskončilo. Mne sa to stalo jednu augustovú stredu.Okolo Mada Music, obchodu s hudobnými nástrojmi na tej istej adrese ako náš Nu Spirit Bar, chodím niekoľkokrát denne. Namiesto obvyklého rockového gitarového zavíjania na mňa v tú stredu odtiaľ „zaútočil“ Steve Reich. Medzinárodný Cluster Ensemble tam trénoval jeho Šešť klavírov. O štvrťhodinu som už s jedným z mladých klaviristov, Daliborom Kociánom známym v elektronickom svete ako Stroon, dohodol koncert v našom klube. Bude to prvá akcia u nás, na ktorej sa bude hrať vážna hudba. Som veľmi rád, že bude pri tom práve Dalibor, pretože on najlepšie stelesňuje spojenie svetov koncertnej sály a elektronického klubu. Vždy sa tešíme z toho, ak sa nám podarí na klubovú scénu priniesť niečo nové..

15. septembra 2010 | Rado Tomek aka DJ Kinet | Nu Spirit Club

Reich dobyl klub, vyrástol tu New York

…Zrazu sa bratislavský Nu Spirit Club vyprázdnil. Bolo tesne pred desiatou večer a v klube, kde väčšinou znie elektronická hudba, zaznel hudobný minimalizmus Steva Reicha. Medzinárodné zoskupenie súčasného umenia Cluster Ensemble začalo vystúpenie skladbou Štyri organy. … Keď Cluster Ensemble zahral skladbu Music for Pieces of Wood (1973), čo znie jedine na drevených rytmických nástrojoch, poslucháči sa vlnili do rytmu. A keď znelo dynamických Šesť klavírov, servírka pri bare si nezbedne poskakovala, akoby práve svoj set uvádzal jej obľúbený dídžej. Reichova hudba znela v klubovom prostredí azda príhodnejšie, ako vo veľkej koncertnej sále. Nad scénou, čo Cluster Ensemble, v ktorom hrala aj hudobníčka z Kórey či Talianska, naplnil šiestimi elektronickými klávesmi, prebiehali opakujúce sa pohyblivé obrazy, výrezy z pohybu, z vlaku, z diaľnice. Boli ako hudba…

14. septembra 2011 | Juraj Fellegi | ekumst.sk

Program

Steve Reich, Octet (1979)
Steve Reich, Six Pianos (1973)
Steve Reich, Music for Pieces of Wood (1973)
Steve Reich, Four Organs (1970)
Steve Reich, Phase Patterns (1970)
Steve Reich, Piano Phase (1967)
Šarūnas Nakas, Merz Machine (1997)
Marek Piaček, Ragtime (2012)
Peter Machajdík, Six Nepijanos (2012)

Umelci

Ivan Šiller, umelecký riaditeľ, paličky, klavír, elektrický organ
Fero Király, paličky, klavír, elektrický organ
Zuzana Biščáková, paličky, klavír, elektrický organ
Dalibor Kocián, paličky, klavír, elektrický organ
Lenka Novosedlíková, klavír, elektrický organ
Eun Joo Noh, paličky, klavír, elektrický organ

    2018

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    Banská Bystrica

  • 2017

  • Oct 7

    Bratislava

  • Aug 30

    Nitra

  • 2013

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    Trenčín

  • 2012

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    Ružomberok

  • Sep 9

    Bardejov

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    Drienovská Nová Ves

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    Sabinov

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    Sabinov

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    Prešov

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    Bratislava

  • 2011

  • Sep 13

    Bratislava

  • Sep 12

    Banská Štiavnica

  • Sep 10

    Hradec Králové  /  CZ

  • 2009

  • Jun 15

    Bratislava