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Music for 18 Musicians
Music for 18 Musicians is a work of minimalist music by Steve Reich. The composition is organized in 11 sections, each based on a single chord. It was composed iteratively, developed in rehearsals with an ensemble, between 1974 and 1976. 18 Musicians premiered in New York City in 1976 and was first recorded in 1978 by Reich and his ensemble. Several subsequent recordings were released, beginning in 1997.
Music for 18 Musicians was composed between May 1974 and March 1976. Rehearsals began in early 1975. Instrumentation shifted throughout early rehearsals; eventually, Reich settled on "three marimbas, two xylophones, vibraphone, maracas, violin, cello, two clarinets doubling on bass clarinets, four women’s voices, and four pianos". The composition and performance process was iterative and collaborative. Performers developed cues for one another, sometimes relying on a particular sound and sometimes on a specific musician.
In his introduction to the score, Reich mentions that although the piece is named Music for 18 Musicians, it is not necessarily advisable to perform the piece with that few players due to the extensive need for musicians to perform on multiple instruments.
The piece is based on a cycle of eleven chords. The eleven chords are each presented in the first section of the piece and each provides a motif for the subsequent sections. Each section, which is approximately four minutes long, begins with one chord and then, at the end, evolves into the next chord—which then develops into another four-minute movement. The last section is an epilogue that echoes the first.
The overall structure takes the form ABCDCBA. Throughout, 18 Musicians is organized around an eighth-note pulse driven by the marimbas and pianos. The rhythm, structured around a 12-beat meter with variations, is based on a pattern played in atsiagbekor on the agogô or gankogui bell. Individual phrases are limited in duration by performers' breath.
In May 1975, 18 Musicians was performed as a work in progress at The Kitchen. It was billed as a work for 21 musicians, although only 18 performed. It premiered at The Town Hall on April 24, 1976.
Since the original 1978 version, the following recordings of 18 Musicians have been released. They are each approximately one hour long; some are a few minutes shorter and others slightly longer. The 1997 recording for Nonesuch Records won the Grammy Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance. Reich Remixed (also released on Nonesuch in 1997) includes a remix by the British duo Coldcut.
A 2001 survey of American art music describes 18 Musicians as "one of a handful of late 20th-century works that can rightly claim to have altered the course of Western music". K. Robert Schwarz, in his survey Minimalists (1996), calls 18 Musicians "perhaps Reich's greatest composition".
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Music for 18 Musicians
Music for 18 Musicians is a work of minimalist music by Steve Reich. The composition is organized in 11 sections, each based on a single chord. It was composed iteratively, developed in rehearsals with an ensemble, between 1974 and 1976. 18 Musicians premiered in New York City in 1976 and was first recorded in 1978 by Reich and his ensemble. Several subsequent recordings were released, beginning in 1997.
Music for 18 Musicians was composed between May 1974 and March 1976. Rehearsals began in early 1975. Instrumentation shifted throughout early rehearsals; eventually, Reich settled on "three marimbas, two xylophones, vibraphone, maracas, violin, cello, two clarinets doubling on bass clarinets, four women’s voices, and four pianos". The composition and performance process was iterative and collaborative. Performers developed cues for one another, sometimes relying on a particular sound and sometimes on a specific musician.
In his introduction to the score, Reich mentions that although the piece is named Music for 18 Musicians, it is not necessarily advisable to perform the piece with that few players due to the extensive need for musicians to perform on multiple instruments.
The piece is based on a cycle of eleven chords. The eleven chords are each presented in the first section of the piece and each provides a motif for the subsequent sections. Each section, which is approximately four minutes long, begins with one chord and then, at the end, evolves into the next chord—which then develops into another four-minute movement. The last section is an epilogue that echoes the first.
The overall structure takes the form ABCDCBA. Throughout, 18 Musicians is organized around an eighth-note pulse driven by the marimbas and pianos. The rhythm, structured around a 12-beat meter with variations, is based on a pattern played in atsiagbekor on the agogô or gankogui bell. Individual phrases are limited in duration by performers' breath.
In May 1975, 18 Musicians was performed as a work in progress at The Kitchen. It was billed as a work for 21 musicians, although only 18 performed. It premiered at The Town Hall on April 24, 1976.
Since the original 1978 version, the following recordings of 18 Musicians have been released. They are each approximately one hour long; some are a few minutes shorter and others slightly longer. The 1997 recording for Nonesuch Records won the Grammy Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance. Reich Remixed (also released on Nonesuch in 1997) includes a remix by the British duo Coldcut.
A 2001 survey of American art music describes 18 Musicians as "one of a handful of late 20th-century works that can rightly claim to have altered the course of Western music". K. Robert Schwarz, in his survey Minimalists (1996), calls 18 Musicians "perhaps Reich's greatest composition".