
Steve Reich - Collected Works (2025)
BAND/ARTIST: Steve Reich
- Title: Collected Works
- Year Of Release: 2025
- Label: Nonesuch
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 17:33:49
- Total Size: 4.74 GB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
CD 01
1. Come Out (12:59)
2. Piano Phase (20:37)
3. Clapping Music (4:48)
4. It's Gonna Rain, Pt. I (1965) (8:00)
5. It's Gonna Rain, Pt. II (1965) (9:56)
CD 02
1. Drumming: Pt. I (17:30)
2. Drumming: Pt. II (18:11)
3. Drumming: Pt. III (11:13)
4. Drumming: Pt. IV (9:50)
CD 03
1. Music for 18 Musicians: Pulses (5:26)
2. Music for 18 Musicians: Section I (3:59)
3. Music for 18 Musicians: Section II (5:13)
4. Music for 18 Musicians: Section IIIA (3:55)
5. Music for 18 Musicians: Section IIIB (3:49)
6. Music for 18 Musicians: Section IV (6:37)
7. Music for 18 Musicians: Section V (6:49)
8. Music for 18 Musicians: Section VI (4:54)
9. Music for 18 Musicians: Section VII (4:19)
10. Music for 18 Musicians: Section VIII (3:35)
11. Music for 18 Musicians: Section IX (5:24)
12. Music for 18 Musicians: Section X (1:51)
13. Music for 18 Musicians: Section XI (5:44)
14. Music for 18 Musicians: Pulses II (6:11)
CD 04
1. New York Counterpoint: I. Fast (5:03)
2. New York Counterpoint: II. Slow (2:44)
3. New York Counterpoint: III. Fast (3:40)
4. Eight Lines (Octet) (17:36)
5. Four Organs (15:53)
CD 05
1. Tehillim, Pt. I (Fast) (11:46)
2. Tehillim, Pt. II (Fast) (6:02)
3. Tehillim, Pt. III (Slow) (6:19)
4. Tehillim, Pt. IV (Fast) (6:24)
5. Three Movements: I. quarter note=176 (6:43)
6. Three Movements: II. quarter note=88 (3:41)
7. Three Movements: III. quarter note=176 (4:19)
CD 06
1. The Desert Music: First Movement (Fast) (7:54)
2. The Desert Music: Second Movement (Moderate) (6:59)
3. The Desert Music: Third Movement, Pt. 1 (Slow) (7:00)
4. The Desert Music: Third Movement, Pt. 2 (Moderate) (5:54)
5. The Desert Music: Third Movement, Pt. 3 (Slow) (5:55)
6. The Desert Music: Fourth Movement (Moderate) (3:35)
7. The Desert Music: Fifth Movement (Fast) (10:48)
CD 07
1. Sextet: 1st Movement (10:29)
2. Sextet: 2nd Movement (4:13)
3. Sextet: 3rd Movement (2:28)
4. Sextet: 4th Movement (3:14)
5. Sextet: 5th Movement (5:59)
6. Six Marimbas (16:19)
CD 08
1. Different Trains: America—Before the war (8:59)
2. Different Trains: Europe—During the war (7:31)
3. Different Trains: After the war (10:31)
4. Electric Counterpoint: I. Fast (6:51)
5. Electric Counterpoint: II. Slow (3:22)
6. Electric Counterpoint: III. Fast (4:30)
CD 09
1. The Four Sections: I. Strings (With Winds and Brass) (11:25)
2. The Four Sections: II. Percussion (2:30)
3. The Four Sections: III. Winds and Brass (With Strings) (5:54)
4. The Four Sections: IV. Full Orchestra (6:14)
5. Music for Mallet Instruments, Voices and Organ (16:59)
CD 10
1. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 1: Typing Music (Genesis XVI) (2:59)
2. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 2: Who Is Abraham? (1:33)
3. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 3: Genesis XII (2:19)
4. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 4: Who Is Sarah? (3:06)
5. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 5: Who Is Hagar? (2:38)
6. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 6: Typing Music Repeat (1:14)
7. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 7: Who Is Ishmael? (4:42)
8. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 8: Genesis XVIII (2:33)
9. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 9: Who Is Isaac? (4:57)
10. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 10: Genesis XXI (2:37)
11. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 11: The Casting out of Ishmael and Hagar (5:26)
12. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 12: Machpelah Commentary (3:28)
13. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 13: Genesis XXV (1:21)
14. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 14: Interior of the Cave (4:30)
15. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 1: Surah 3 (4:41)
CD 11
1. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 2: Who Is Ibrahim? (4:27)
2. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 3: Who Is Hajar? (3:55)
3. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 4: The Near Sacrifice (5:05)
4. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 5: El Khalil Commentary (5:20)
5. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 6: Interior of the Cave (3:47)
6. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 1: Who Is Abraham? (6:30)
7. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 2: Who Is Sarah? (4:23)
8. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 3: Who Is Hagar? (4:40)
9. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 4: Who Is Ishmael? (4:05)
10. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 5: The Binding of Isaac (4:28)
11. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 6: The Cave of Machpelah (8:42)
CD 12
1. Proverb (14:09)
2. Nagoya Marimba (4:36)
3. City Life: I. Check it out (5:51)
4. City Life: II. Pile driver / alarms (3:54)
5. City Life: III. It's been a honeymoon—Can't take no mo (4:47)
6. City Life: IV. Heartbeats / boats & buoys (3:59)
7. City Life: V. Heavy smoke (4:43)
CD 13
1. Triple Quartet: First Movement (7:11)
2. Triple Quartet: Second Movement (4:05)
3. Triple Quartet: Third Movement (3:28)
4. Electric Guitar Phase (15:11)
5. Music for a Large Ensemble (14:51)
6. Tokyo / Vermont Counterpoint (9:05)
CD 14
1. Three Tales, Act 1 - Hindenburg: Nibelung Zeppelin (3:19)
2. Three Tales, Act 1 - Hindenburg: A Very Impressive Thing to See (2:35)
3. Three Tales, Act 1 - Hindenburg: I Couldn't Understand It (5:15)
4. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: In the Air - 1 (1:24)
5. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: The Atoll - 1 (1:46)
6. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: On the Ships - 1 (2:46)
7. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: In the Air - 2 (1:54)
8. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: The Atoll - 2 (2:28)
9. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: On the Ships - 2 (2:44)
10. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: In the Air - 3 (1:58)
11. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: The Atoll - 3 (2:48)
12. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: On the Ships - 3 (2:16)
13. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: Coda (2:17)
14. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Cloning (2:45)
15. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Dolly (1:53)
16. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Human Body Machine (6:13)
17. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Darwin (4:04)
18. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Interlude (0:31)
19. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Robot / Cyborgs / Immortality (10:37)
CD 15
1. You Are (Variations): I. You are wherever your thoughts are (13:14)
2. You Are (Variations): II. Shiviti Hashem l'negdi (I place the Eternal before me) (4:15)
3. You Are (Variations): III. Explanations come to an end somewhere (5:24)
4. You Are (Variations): IV. Ehmor m’aht, v’ahsay harbay (Say little and do much) (4:04)
5. Cello Counterpoint (11:29)
CD 16
1. Daniel Variations: I. I saw a dream (6:24)
2. Daniel Variations: II. My name is Daniel Pearl (I'm a Jewish American from Encino, California) (8:23)
3. Daniel Variations: III. Let the dream fall back on the dreaded (4:43)
4. Daniel Variations: IV. I sure hope Gabriel likes my music, when the day is done (10:08)
5. Variations for Vibes, Pianos, and Strings: I. Fast (11:35)
6. Variations for Vibes, Pianos, and Strings: II. Slow (6:52)
7. Variations for Vibes, Pianos, and Strings: III. Fast (3:34)
CD 17
1. Double Sextet: I. Fast (8:39)
2. Double Sextet: II. Slow (6:43)
3. Double Sextet: III. Fast (6:53)
4. 2x5: I. Fast (10:12)
5. 2x5: II. Slow (3:12)
6. 2x5: III. Fast (7:08)
CD 18
1. WTC 9/11: I. 9/11 (3:40)
2. WTC 9/11: II. 2010 (7:27)
3. WTC 9/11: III. WTC (4:37)
4. Mallet Quartet: I. Fast (6:47)
5. Mallet Quartet: II. Slow (3:10)
6. Mallet Quartet: III. Fast (4:43)
7. Dance Patterns (6:10)
CD 19
1. Electric Counterpoint: I. Fast (6:51)
2. Electric Counterpoint: II. Slow (3:22)
3. Electric Counterpoint: III. Fast (4:26)
4. Piano Counterpoint (13:43)
5. Radio Rewrite: I. Fast (3:52)
6. Radio Rewrite: II. Slow (3:23)
7. Radio Rewrite: III. Fast (3:21)
8. Radio Rewrite: IV. Slow (3:53)
9. Radio Rewrite: V. Fast (2:59)
CD 20
1. Pulse (14:22)
2. Quartet: I. Fast (6:46)
3. Quartet: II. Slow (3:59)
4. Quartet: III. Fast (5:54)
CD 21
1. Runner: I. Sixteenths (4:30)
2. Runner: II. Eighths (1:27)
3. Runner: III. Quarters (2:10)
4. Runner: IV. Eighths (2:33)
5. Runner: V. Sixteenths (5:00)
6. Music for Ensemble and Orchestra: I. Sixteenths (4:59)
7. Music for Ensemble and Orchestra: II. Eighths (3:13)
8. Music for Ensemble and Orchestra: III. Quarters (2:24)
9. Music for Ensemble and Orchestra: IV. Eighths (3:46)
10. Music for Ensemble and Orchestra: V. Sixteenths (5:23)
CD 22
1. Reich/Richter: Opening (9:08)
2. Reich/Richter: Patterns & scales (10:03)
3. Reich/Richter: Cross fades (12:53)
4. Reich/Richter: Ending (4:35)
CD 23
1. Jacob's Ladder: I. Genesis (4:06)
2. Jacob's Ladder: II. Vayachalom (And he dreamed) (2:27)
3. Jacob's Ladder: III. V'hinei, sulam mutzav artza (And behold, a ladder set up on the Earth) (3:20)
4. Jacob's Ladder: IV. V'rosho magia hashamayima (And its top reached heaven) (3:41)
5. Jacob's Ladder: V. V'hinei, malachei Elokim olim v’yordim bo (And behold, messengers of G-d ascending and descending on it) (5:35)
6. Traveler's Prayer (12:32)
CD 01
1. Come Out (12:59)
2. Piano Phase (20:37)
3. Clapping Music (4:48)
4. It's Gonna Rain, Pt. I (1965) (8:00)
5. It's Gonna Rain, Pt. II (1965) (9:56)
CD 02
1. Drumming: Pt. I (17:30)
2. Drumming: Pt. II (18:11)
3. Drumming: Pt. III (11:13)
4. Drumming: Pt. IV (9:50)
CD 03
1. Music for 18 Musicians: Pulses (5:26)
2. Music for 18 Musicians: Section I (3:59)
3. Music for 18 Musicians: Section II (5:13)
4. Music for 18 Musicians: Section IIIA (3:55)
5. Music for 18 Musicians: Section IIIB (3:49)
6. Music for 18 Musicians: Section IV (6:37)
7. Music for 18 Musicians: Section V (6:49)
8. Music for 18 Musicians: Section VI (4:54)
9. Music for 18 Musicians: Section VII (4:19)
10. Music for 18 Musicians: Section VIII (3:35)
11. Music for 18 Musicians: Section IX (5:24)
12. Music for 18 Musicians: Section X (1:51)
13. Music for 18 Musicians: Section XI (5:44)
14. Music for 18 Musicians: Pulses II (6:11)
CD 04
1. New York Counterpoint: I. Fast (5:03)
2. New York Counterpoint: II. Slow (2:44)
3. New York Counterpoint: III. Fast (3:40)
4. Eight Lines (Octet) (17:36)
5. Four Organs (15:53)
CD 05
1. Tehillim, Pt. I (Fast) (11:46)
2. Tehillim, Pt. II (Fast) (6:02)
3. Tehillim, Pt. III (Slow) (6:19)
4. Tehillim, Pt. IV (Fast) (6:24)
5. Three Movements: I. quarter note=176 (6:43)
6. Three Movements: II. quarter note=88 (3:41)
7. Three Movements: III. quarter note=176 (4:19)
CD 06
1. The Desert Music: First Movement (Fast) (7:54)
2. The Desert Music: Second Movement (Moderate) (6:59)
3. The Desert Music: Third Movement, Pt. 1 (Slow) (7:00)
4. The Desert Music: Third Movement, Pt. 2 (Moderate) (5:54)
5. The Desert Music: Third Movement, Pt. 3 (Slow) (5:55)
6. The Desert Music: Fourth Movement (Moderate) (3:35)
7. The Desert Music: Fifth Movement (Fast) (10:48)
CD 07
1. Sextet: 1st Movement (10:29)
2. Sextet: 2nd Movement (4:13)
3. Sextet: 3rd Movement (2:28)
4. Sextet: 4th Movement (3:14)
5. Sextet: 5th Movement (5:59)
6. Six Marimbas (16:19)
CD 08
1. Different Trains: America—Before the war (8:59)
2. Different Trains: Europe—During the war (7:31)
3. Different Trains: After the war (10:31)
4. Electric Counterpoint: I. Fast (6:51)
5. Electric Counterpoint: II. Slow (3:22)
6. Electric Counterpoint: III. Fast (4:30)
CD 09
1. The Four Sections: I. Strings (With Winds and Brass) (11:25)
2. The Four Sections: II. Percussion (2:30)
3. The Four Sections: III. Winds and Brass (With Strings) (5:54)
4. The Four Sections: IV. Full Orchestra (6:14)
5. Music for Mallet Instruments, Voices and Organ (16:59)
CD 10
1. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 1: Typing Music (Genesis XVI) (2:59)
2. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 2: Who Is Abraham? (1:33)
3. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 3: Genesis XII (2:19)
4. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 4: Who Is Sarah? (3:06)
5. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 5: Who Is Hagar? (2:38)
6. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 6: Typing Music Repeat (1:14)
7. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 7: Who Is Ishmael? (4:42)
8. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 8: Genesis XVIII (2:33)
9. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 9: Who Is Isaac? (4:57)
10. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 10: Genesis XXI (2:37)
11. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 11: The Casting out of Ishmael and Hagar (5:26)
12. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 12: Machpelah Commentary (3:28)
13. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 13: Genesis XXV (1:21)
14. The Cave, Act 1 Scene 14: Interior of the Cave (4:30)
15. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 1: Surah 3 (4:41)
CD 11
1. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 2: Who Is Ibrahim? (4:27)
2. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 3: Who Is Hajar? (3:55)
3. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 4: The Near Sacrifice (5:05)
4. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 5: El Khalil Commentary (5:20)
5. The Cave, Act 2 Scene 6: Interior of the Cave (3:47)
6. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 1: Who Is Abraham? (6:30)
7. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 2: Who Is Sarah? (4:23)
8. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 3: Who Is Hagar? (4:40)
9. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 4: Who Is Ishmael? (4:05)
10. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 5: The Binding of Isaac (4:28)
11. The Cave, Act 3 Scene 6: The Cave of Machpelah (8:42)
CD 12
1. Proverb (14:09)
2. Nagoya Marimba (4:36)
3. City Life: I. Check it out (5:51)
4. City Life: II. Pile driver / alarms (3:54)
5. City Life: III. It's been a honeymoon—Can't take no mo (4:47)
6. City Life: IV. Heartbeats / boats & buoys (3:59)
7. City Life: V. Heavy smoke (4:43)
CD 13
1. Triple Quartet: First Movement (7:11)
2. Triple Quartet: Second Movement (4:05)
3. Triple Quartet: Third Movement (3:28)
4. Electric Guitar Phase (15:11)
5. Music for a Large Ensemble (14:51)
6. Tokyo / Vermont Counterpoint (9:05)
CD 14
1. Three Tales, Act 1 - Hindenburg: Nibelung Zeppelin (3:19)
2. Three Tales, Act 1 - Hindenburg: A Very Impressive Thing to See (2:35)
3. Three Tales, Act 1 - Hindenburg: I Couldn't Understand It (5:15)
4. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: In the Air - 1 (1:24)
5. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: The Atoll - 1 (1:46)
6. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: On the Ships - 1 (2:46)
7. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: In the Air - 2 (1:54)
8. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: The Atoll - 2 (2:28)
9. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: On the Ships - 2 (2:44)
10. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: In the Air - 3 (1:58)
11. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: The Atoll - 3 (2:48)
12. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: On the Ships - 3 (2:16)
13. Three Tales, Act 2 - Bikini: Coda (2:17)
14. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Cloning (2:45)
15. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Dolly (1:53)
16. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Human Body Machine (6:13)
17. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Darwin (4:04)
18. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Interlude (0:31)
19. Three Tales, Act 3 - Dolly: Robot / Cyborgs / Immortality (10:37)
CD 15
1. You Are (Variations): I. You are wherever your thoughts are (13:14)
2. You Are (Variations): II. Shiviti Hashem l'negdi (I place the Eternal before me) (4:15)
3. You Are (Variations): III. Explanations come to an end somewhere (5:24)
4. You Are (Variations): IV. Ehmor m’aht, v’ahsay harbay (Say little and do much) (4:04)
5. Cello Counterpoint (11:29)
CD 16
1. Daniel Variations: I. I saw a dream (6:24)
2. Daniel Variations: II. My name is Daniel Pearl (I'm a Jewish American from Encino, California) (8:23)
3. Daniel Variations: III. Let the dream fall back on the dreaded (4:43)
4. Daniel Variations: IV. I sure hope Gabriel likes my music, when the day is done (10:08)
5. Variations for Vibes, Pianos, and Strings: I. Fast (11:35)
6. Variations for Vibes, Pianos, and Strings: II. Slow (6:52)
7. Variations for Vibes, Pianos, and Strings: III. Fast (3:34)
CD 17
1. Double Sextet: I. Fast (8:39)
2. Double Sextet: II. Slow (6:43)
3. Double Sextet: III. Fast (6:53)
4. 2x5: I. Fast (10:12)
5. 2x5: II. Slow (3:12)
6. 2x5: III. Fast (7:08)
CD 18
1. WTC 9/11: I. 9/11 (3:40)
2. WTC 9/11: II. 2010 (7:27)
3. WTC 9/11: III. WTC (4:37)
4. Mallet Quartet: I. Fast (6:47)
5. Mallet Quartet: II. Slow (3:10)
6. Mallet Quartet: III. Fast (4:43)
7. Dance Patterns (6:10)
CD 19
1. Electric Counterpoint: I. Fast (6:51)
2. Electric Counterpoint: II. Slow (3:22)
3. Electric Counterpoint: III. Fast (4:26)
4. Piano Counterpoint (13:43)
5. Radio Rewrite: I. Fast (3:52)
6. Radio Rewrite: II. Slow (3:23)
7. Radio Rewrite: III. Fast (3:21)
8. Radio Rewrite: IV. Slow (3:53)
9. Radio Rewrite: V. Fast (2:59)
CD 20
1. Pulse (14:22)
2. Quartet: I. Fast (6:46)
3. Quartet: II. Slow (3:59)
4. Quartet: III. Fast (5:54)
CD 21
1. Runner: I. Sixteenths (4:30)
2. Runner: II. Eighths (1:27)
3. Runner: III. Quarters (2:10)
4. Runner: IV. Eighths (2:33)
5. Runner: V. Sixteenths (5:00)
6. Music for Ensemble and Orchestra: I. Sixteenths (4:59)
7. Music for Ensemble and Orchestra: II. Eighths (3:13)
8. Music for Ensemble and Orchestra: III. Quarters (2:24)
9. Music for Ensemble and Orchestra: IV. Eighths (3:46)
10. Music for Ensemble and Orchestra: V. Sixteenths (5:23)
CD 22
1. Reich/Richter: Opening (9:08)
2. Reich/Richter: Patterns & scales (10:03)
3. Reich/Richter: Cross fades (12:53)
4. Reich/Richter: Ending (4:35)
CD 23
1. Jacob's Ladder: I. Genesis (4:06)
2. Jacob's Ladder: II. Vayachalom (And he dreamed) (2:27)
3. Jacob's Ladder: III. V'hinei, sulam mutzav artza (And behold, a ladder set up on the Earth) (3:20)
4. Jacob's Ladder: IV. V'rosho magia hashamayima (And its top reached heaven) (3:41)
5. Jacob's Ladder: V. V'hinei, malachei Elokim olim v’yordim bo (And behold, messengers of G-d ascending and descending on it) (5:35)
6. Traveler's Prayer (12:32)
Nonesuch Records releases Steve Reich Collected Works, a 23-disc box set featuring music recorded during his 40 years on the label. The collection represents six decades of Reich’s compositions, ranging from It’s Gonna Rain (1965) to first recordings of his two latest works: Jacob’s Ladder (2023) and Traveler’s Prayer (2020). Two extensive booklets contain new essays by longtime Nonesuch President Robert Hurwitz, conductor Michael Tilson Thomas, Steve Reich and Musicians percussionist Russell Hartenberger, producer Judith Sherman, and composer Nico Muhly, as well as a comprehensive listener’s guide by pianist and composer Timo Andres.
Nonesuch made its first record with Steve Reich in 1985. He was signed exclusively to the label that year, and since then the company has released 22 all-Reich albums, two retrospectives, and two remix releases. Among his many honours, two of Reich’s Nonesuch records, Different Trains and Music for 18 Musicians, won Grammy Awards and his Double Sextet recording for the label won a Pulitzer Prize.
“I first heard Music for 18 Musicians when I was in my mid-twenties, at a moment when I was still in the process of figuring out my own taste in contemporary music. I wasn’t yet certain what modern classical music really meant, nor was I sure how it stacked up against work from the past.” Hurwitz says in his liner note. “Music for 18 Musicians was an event of such immense importance that it changed how I felt not only about Steve, but about minimalism, modernism and, in some respects, classical music. Music for 18 was a piece that could sweep listeners up with its non-stop kinetic activity, its opulent sound, its rhythmic invention, its stunning architecture. But only years later did I recognize what drew me in to such an intense degree: it was harmony.
“Here were the kinds of colors and voicings I loved in the earlier twentieth-century music of Stravinsky and Bartók and others, but had found missing in practically all of the new music I had been hearing for years. It was the key that unlocked the music of modern times for me,” Hurwitz continues. “It now seemed possible to love contemporary music. With Music for 18 Musicians, Steve suddenly flung open a door to the possibilities of what a modern composer could be in our time.”
Reich also has become a significant mentor of the younger generation of American composers. “This music is as part of my artistic ecosystem as air is to my respiratory system, and I can’t imagine saying anything about it which wouldn’t somehow get its importance wrong,” composer Nico Muhly says in his liner note. “Steve once told me that the trick is to ‘find your band’, the group of instruments that form the core of your musical language, and this is advice I pass on to all younger composers who cross my path.”
Composer and pianist Timo Andres adds, “It is Steve Reich, perhaps more than any other musician, who prefigured our ideas of a twenty-first- century composer... For audiences, too, Reich has proven that contemporary music can thrive outside the insular world of its own practitioners.
“On initial approach, Reich’s music appears both friendly and a little forbidding, its surfaces immaculate, polished, yet also playful and viscerally beautiful... It exudes a specific kind of energy in live performance as well,” he continues. “Watching an ensemble play Music for 18 Musicians, for example, one has the sense of observing a utopian society in miniature, a mass of people working towards a common goal with no apparent leader.”
Steve Reich has been called ‘the most original musical thinker of our time’ (New Yorker) and ‘among the great composers of the century’ (New York Times). Starting in the 1960s, his pieces It’s Gonna Rain, Drumming, Music for 18 Musicians, Tehillim, Different Trains, and many others helped shift the aesthetic center of musical composition worldwide away from extreme complexity and towards rethinking pulsation and tonal attraction in new ways. He continues to influence younger generations of composers and mainstream musicians and artists all over the world.
In addition to his Grammy Awards and Pulitzer Prize, Reich received the Praemium Imperiale in Tokyo, the Polar Music Prize in Stockholm, the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale, the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge award in Madrid, the Debs Composer’s Chair at Carnegie Hall, and the Gold Medal in Music from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He has been named Commandeur de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in France, and awarded honorary doctorates by the Royal College of Music in London, the Juilliard School in New York, and the Liszt Academy in Budapest, among others.
One of the most frequently choreographed composers, several noted choreographers have created dances to his music, including Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker, Jirí Kylián, Jerome Robbins, Justin Peck, Wayne McGregor, Benjamin Millepied, and Christopher Wheeldon.
Reich’s documentary video opera works – The Cave and Three Tales, done in collaboration with video artist Beryl Korot – opened new directions for music theater and have been performed on four continents. His work Quartet, for percussionist Colin Currie, sold out two consecutive concerts at Queen Elizabeth Hall in London shortly after tens of thousands at the Glastonbury Festival heard Jonny Greenwood (of Radiohead) perform Electric Counterpoint, followed by the London Sinfonietta performing his Music for 18 Musicians.
Nonesuch made its first record with Steve Reich in 1985. He was signed exclusively to the label that year, and since then the company has released 22 all-Reich albums, two retrospectives, and two remix releases. Among his many honours, two of Reich’s Nonesuch records, Different Trains and Music for 18 Musicians, won Grammy Awards and his Double Sextet recording for the label won a Pulitzer Prize.
“I first heard Music for 18 Musicians when I was in my mid-twenties, at a moment when I was still in the process of figuring out my own taste in contemporary music. I wasn’t yet certain what modern classical music really meant, nor was I sure how it stacked up against work from the past.” Hurwitz says in his liner note. “Music for 18 Musicians was an event of such immense importance that it changed how I felt not only about Steve, but about minimalism, modernism and, in some respects, classical music. Music for 18 was a piece that could sweep listeners up with its non-stop kinetic activity, its opulent sound, its rhythmic invention, its stunning architecture. But only years later did I recognize what drew me in to such an intense degree: it was harmony.
“Here were the kinds of colors and voicings I loved in the earlier twentieth-century music of Stravinsky and Bartók and others, but had found missing in practically all of the new music I had been hearing for years. It was the key that unlocked the music of modern times for me,” Hurwitz continues. “It now seemed possible to love contemporary music. With Music for 18 Musicians, Steve suddenly flung open a door to the possibilities of what a modern composer could be in our time.”
Reich also has become a significant mentor of the younger generation of American composers. “This music is as part of my artistic ecosystem as air is to my respiratory system, and I can’t imagine saying anything about it which wouldn’t somehow get its importance wrong,” composer Nico Muhly says in his liner note. “Steve once told me that the trick is to ‘find your band’, the group of instruments that form the core of your musical language, and this is advice I pass on to all younger composers who cross my path.”
Composer and pianist Timo Andres adds, “It is Steve Reich, perhaps more than any other musician, who prefigured our ideas of a twenty-first- century composer... For audiences, too, Reich has proven that contemporary music can thrive outside the insular world of its own practitioners.
“On initial approach, Reich’s music appears both friendly and a little forbidding, its surfaces immaculate, polished, yet also playful and viscerally beautiful... It exudes a specific kind of energy in live performance as well,” he continues. “Watching an ensemble play Music for 18 Musicians, for example, one has the sense of observing a utopian society in miniature, a mass of people working towards a common goal with no apparent leader.”
Steve Reich has been called ‘the most original musical thinker of our time’ (New Yorker) and ‘among the great composers of the century’ (New York Times). Starting in the 1960s, his pieces It’s Gonna Rain, Drumming, Music for 18 Musicians, Tehillim, Different Trains, and many others helped shift the aesthetic center of musical composition worldwide away from extreme complexity and towards rethinking pulsation and tonal attraction in new ways. He continues to influence younger generations of composers and mainstream musicians and artists all over the world.
In addition to his Grammy Awards and Pulitzer Prize, Reich received the Praemium Imperiale in Tokyo, the Polar Music Prize in Stockholm, the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale, the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge award in Madrid, the Debs Composer’s Chair at Carnegie Hall, and the Gold Medal in Music from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He has been named Commandeur de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in France, and awarded honorary doctorates by the Royal College of Music in London, the Juilliard School in New York, and the Liszt Academy in Budapest, among others.
One of the most frequently choreographed composers, several noted choreographers have created dances to his music, including Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker, Jirí Kylián, Jerome Robbins, Justin Peck, Wayne McGregor, Benjamin Millepied, and Christopher Wheeldon.
Reich’s documentary video opera works – The Cave and Three Tales, done in collaboration with video artist Beryl Korot – opened new directions for music theater and have been performed on four continents. His work Quartet, for percussionist Colin Currie, sold out two consecutive concerts at Queen Elizabeth Hall in London shortly after tens of thousands at the Glastonbury Festival heard Jonny Greenwood (of Radiohead) perform Electric Counterpoint, followed by the London Sinfonietta performing his Music for 18 Musicians.
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Steve Reich - Collected Works FLAC.rar - 4.7 GB
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