Triple Quartet / Electric Guitar Phase / Music for Large Ensemble

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STEVE REICH
Triple Quartet / Electric Guitar Phase / Music for Large Ensemble
Kronos Quartet

[ Nonesuch Records / CD ]

Release Date: Tuesday 19 March 2002

This item is only available to us via Special Order. We should be able to get it to you in 3 - 6 weeks from when you order it.

Editor's Choice - Gramophone Magazine (April 2002)

"Steve Reich moves brilliantly into uncharted territory on this compelling new recording. The Triple Quartet is Steve Reich's first work for Kronos since the haunting Different Trains of 1988. Employing two pre-recorded quartets, the three groups of four move together in a powerful meshing of melodic, rhythmic and textural variation. Martyn Harry suggests that the work is 'a string piece in all but name', but until Kronos relinquish it to a 12-person ensemble they are fine advocates of this potent piece. The couplings look back into Reich's musical past - to striking effect."
- Editor's Choice - Gramophone Magazine (April 2002)

In October 2001, Nonesuch released the World Premiere Recording of Steve Reich's Triple Quartet performed by Kronos Quartet, who commissioned the work and in whose honor it has been written. This disc, the first to include a new work by Reich since the 1996 release City Life, will also feature first recordings of Electric Guitar Phase and Tokyo/Vermont Counterpoint, as well as the first recording of a newly revised edition of Music for Large Ensemble.
Triple Quartet (1999) is a three-movement work written for three string quartets, and exists in three versions for performance: one for string quartet and pre-recorded tape, another for three string quartets (12 players) and the third for part of an orchestral string section of 36 players. On this recording Kronos pre-recorded quartets two and three and played the quartet one part along with the tape, as they do in live performance.

According to Reich, the initial inspiration for the piece came from the last movement of Bartók's Fourth Quartet. "Its energy was my starting point," he says. While working on the piece, he heard the music of Alfred Schnittke for the first time, specifically his string quartets, which deeply affected his writing, as did Michael Gordon's Yo Shakespeare. Reich says, "the piece became considerably more dissonant and expressionistic than expected," as a result of these influences.

Electric Guitar Phase (2001), performed by the young guitarist Dominc Frasca, is a new version of the 1967 work Violin Phase. It is written for four electric guitars, and on this recording Frasca performs all four parts, which are then overdubbed. The layers create a number of melodic patterns that develop from the combination of two or three electric guitars playing the same repeating pattern slightly out of phase with one another. Key melodic material is played softly at first and then at gradually increased volume, bringing it to the surface of the music and making the listener more aware of how the melodic pattern helps to create texture.

Alan Pierson, director of Alarm Will Sound and the Ossia ensemble from the Eastman School of Music, worked on reconstructing the original score of Reich's Music for Large Ensemble, adding two extra violins to the string ensemble and making the saxophone and voice parts optional. The work was originally written in 1977 and revised for its first recording in 1979. Another reworked version of an older piece is Tokyo/Vermont Counterpoint (2000) for MIDI marimbas (KAT controllers), a new version of Vermont Counterpoint (1981), originally scored for flutes, alto flutes and piccolos.
According to Reich it is not only a radically different version than the original, but is clearly "one with a sense of humor."

Tracks:

Triple Quartet
First Movement 7:10
Second Movement 4:05
Third Movement 3:28
Electric Guitar Phase 15:11
Music for Large Ensemble 14:51
Tokyo/Vermont Counterpoint 9:05