Brahms the progressive.

The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center at Alice Tully Hall
The New York Times, October 23, 2006

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Sunday night’s concert at Zankel Hall by Steve Reich and Musicians proved revelatory in an unexpected way. Not for the video-aided performances of Cello Counterpoint by Maya Beiser and Piano/Video Phase by David Cossin: these were expected hits, although Cossin’s thorough rethinking of the early Piano Phase remains technologically magical. Not even for the American premiere of Daniel Variations, a deeply humane and ultimately celebratory remembrance of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, murdered by religious zealots.

Instead, the most illuminating aspect of Sunday night’s concert was Reich’s description to interiewer Ara Guzelimian of the thought processes that shaped an early compositional summation, Drumming. Tuned bongos on stands were the result of Reich having heard a student performance by a percussionist at Juilliard. Those throbbing beats were reminiscent of marimbas, whose woody overtones conjured female voices. Removing the bass line led to glockenspiels, which in turn suggested whistling and a piccolo.

Reich mentioned all of this in the opening interview. Then, after intermission, he played Drumming with his ensemble. Suddenly, music that previously had seemed abstract took on a decidedly human dimension; every impulse Reich described in his pre-concert interview was made manifest. The last section, in which all of the preceding timbres are combined, was, in Reich’s own words, a concession to the classical-music expectation that everybody gets a word in at the end.

My neck is now a bit sore from having bobbed to to the beat all night long. Happy birthday, Mr. Reich.

Playlist:

Poul RudersThe Handmaid’s Tale – Marianne Rørholm, Hanne Fischer, Anne Margrethe Dahl, Susanne Resmark, Poul Elming, Aage Haugland; Royal Danish Opera Chorus, Royal Danish Orchestra/Michael Schønwandt (Da Capo)

4 responses to “Brahms the progressive.”

  1. Steve–
    Thanks for the overview of the Reich concert. I love his early music as much as any other music I know. I have to admit, though, that this rankles:

    Suddenly, music that previously had seemed abstract took on a decidedly human dimension
    Since when is abstraction not a “decidedly human” experience? In fact, it is abstraction of the sound experiences he had that led to the soundworld of Drumming, and their expressive re-presentations as new abstractions, or so it seems to me.

  2. Fair enough, Steve. There’s probably a better way of saying what I was trying to get at, which was simply that a piece previously shrouded in a certain degree of austere mystery was humanized to some extent by Reich revealing the very matter-of-fact processes that led him through the piece.

  3. Thanks, Steve. That makes sense.

  4. Great Reich comments, Steve, but I was also excited by your Ruders “Play of the Day.” I was lucky to see the opera staged, in Minneapolis, and for the life of me can’t imagine why it hasn’t been done here.

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