Results for Sextet
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Album Review:

Sextet

  • Release Date: 1982
  • Genre: Rock
  • Label: Rev-Ola
  • Artist: A Certain Ratio
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Style: Post-Punk
  • Track Picks: "Crystal," "Gum," "Lucinda"

Review

Released the same year as their debut, Sextet upped the energy of A Certain Ratio's dour minimalist dance, with cursory nods to even soul and funk from vocalist Martha Tilson. For the most part, though, the electronics and rhythms are still curiously apart from song structure, making for an oddly distanced record. ~ Keith Farley, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track Title iTunes Composers Performers Time
Lucinda
...
A Certain Ratio A Certain Ratio (3:53)
Crystal
...
A Certain Ratio A Certain Ratio (2:52)
Gum
...
A Certain Ratio A Certain Ratio (2:57)
Knife Slits Water
...
A Certain Ratio A Certain Ratio (7:31)
Skipscada
...
A Certain Ratio A Certain Ratio (2:08)
Day One
...
A Certain Ratio A Certain Ratio (6:09)
Rub Down
...
A Certain Ratio A Certain Ratio (3:41)
Rialto
...
A Certain Ratio A Certain Ratio (3:43)
Below the Canal
...
A Certain Ratio A Certain Ratio (3:58)

Credits

A Certain Ratio (Main Performer), Jeremy Kerr (Bass), Martin Moscrop (Guitar), Peter Terrell (Guitar), Simon Topping (Vocals), Donald Johnson (Drums)
 
 
Wikipedia: Sextet (Reich)

Sextet is a composition by Steve Reich. It is written for an ensemble of four percussionists and two keyboardists, hence the title. The percussionists play (at various times) three marimbas, two vibraphones, two bass drums, crotales, sticks, and tam-tam. The keyboardists play both pianos and synthesizers set to an electric organ sound. The piece was composed in 1984–1985 and is about 28 minutes in duration.

The piece broken into five movements and, like many other Reich compositions, Sextet has an arch form: A-B-C-B-A. The paired movements share a tempo and a particular cycle of chords. These cycles use dominant chords with added tones to give it a darker, more chromatic sound, much like Reich's previous piece, The Desert Music.

Sextet plays with two aspects of music. First, it tries to overcome the natural acoustic limitations of percussion instruments. To overcome the note duration limitation (percussion instruments only produce notes of short duration), Reich employs bowed vibraphones, where the vibraphone is not struck with a mallet, but the bars are bowed with a bass bow. A similar limitation in the keyboard section is countered by the use of the synthesizers. To overcome the range limitation (mallet instruments don't have a true bass register family member), the bass drum is employed, with doubling from the pianos or synthesizers.

Second, the piece plays with ambiguity. In the third movement, a basic 12 beat pattern is ambiguous between a division into three and into four. In other parts of the piece, the line that was the melody becomes the accompaniment, even though the actual notes do not change.

The piece was premiered in 1985 and was recorded by Steve Reich's ensemble on Nonesuch Records in 1986.

References

  • Reich, Steve. Liner Notes. "Sextet/Six Marimbas." CD. Nonesuch Records, 1986.

External links


 
 

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Album Review. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sextet (Reich)" Read more

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