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Appreciations
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Notes on the Music
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Carnegie Hall - Steve Reich @ 70
Reich @ 70 - Notes: Music for 18 Musicians
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Although its steady pulse and rhythmic energy related to many of my earlier works,
the instrumentation, harmony, and structure of Music for 18 Musicians are new.
There is more harmonic movement in the first five minutes of Music for 18 Musicians than
in any other complete work of mine to date. Though the movement from chord to chord is
often just a re-voicing, inversion, or relative minor or major of a previous chord, usually
staying within the key signature of three sharps at all times, nevertheless, within these
limits harmonic movement plays a more important role in this piece than in any other I have
written.
Rhythmically there are two basically different kinds of time occurring simultaneously in
Music for 18 Musicians. The first is that of a regular rhythmic pulse in the pianos and
mallet instruments that continues throughout the piece. The second is the rhythm of the
human breath in the voices and wind instruments. The entire opening and closing sections
plus part of all sections in between contain pulses by the voices and winds. They take a
full breath and sing or play pulses of particular notes for as long as their breath will
comfortably sustain them. The breath is the measure of the duration of their pulsing. This
combination of one breath after another gradually washing up like waves against the constant
rhythm of the pianos and mallet instruments is something I have not heard before and would
like to investigate further.
The structure of Music for 18 Musicians is based on a cycle of 11 chords played at the very
beginning of the piece and repeated at the end. All the instruments and voices play or sing
pulsing notes within each chord. Instruments (like the strings) which do not have to breathe
nevertheless follow the rise and fall of the breath by following the breath patterns of the
bass clarinet. Each chord is held for the duration of two breaths, and the next chord is gradually
introduced, and so on, until all 11 are played and the ensemble returns to the first chord.
This first pulsing chord is then maintained by two pianos and two marimbas. While this pulsing
chord is held for about five minutes, a small piece is constructed on it. When this piece is
completed there is a sudden change to the second chord, and a second small piece or section
is constructed. This means that each chord that might have taken 15 or 20 seconds to play in
the opening section is then stretched out as the basic pulsing harmony for a five-minute piece
very much as a single note in a cantus firmus, or chant melody of 12th-century organum by
Perotin might be stretched out for several minutes as the harmonic center for a section of the
organum. The opening 11-chord cycle of Music for 18 Musicians is a kind of pulsing cantus for
the entire piece.
On each pulsing chord, one, or, on the third chord, two small pieces are built. These pieces or
sections are basically either in the form of an arch (A-B-C-D-C-B-A), or in the form of a musical
process, like that of substituting beats for rests, working itself out from beginning to end.
Elements appearing in one section will appear in another but surrounded by different harmony and
instrumentation. For instance the pulse in pianos and marimbas in sections I and II changes to
marimbas and xylophone in section IIIA, and to xylophones and maracas in sections VI and VII.
The low piano pulsing harmonies of section IIIA reappear in section VI supporting a different
melody played by different instruments. The process of building up a canon, or phase relation,
between two xylophones and two pianos, which first occurs in section II, occurs again in section
IX but building up to another overall pattern in different harmonic context. The relationship
between the different sections is thus best understood in terms of resemblances between members
of a family. Certain characteristics will be shared, but others will be unique.
One of the basic means of change or development in many sections of this piece is to be found
in the rhythmic relationship of harmony to melody. Specifically, a melodic pattern may be repeated
over and over again, but by introducing a two- or four-chord cadence underneath it, first beginning
on one beat of the pattern, and then beginning on a different beat, a sense of changing accent
in the melody will be heard. This play of changing harmonic rhythm against constant melodic pattern
is one of the basic techniques of this piece, and one I have never used before. Its effect, by
change of accent, is to vary that which is in fact unchanging.
Changes from one section to the next, as well as changes within each section, are cued by the
vibraphone, whose patterns are played once only to call for movements to the next bar, much as
in a Balinese Gamelan a drummer will audibly call for changes of pattern, or as the master
drummer will call for changes of pattern in West African music. This is in contrast to the
visual nods of the head used in earlier pieces of mine to call for changes and in contrast
also to the general Western practice of having a non-performing conductor for large ensembles.
Audible cues become part of the music and allow the musicians to keep listening.
—Steve Reich
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