Title: Electric Counterpoint: Movement III (1987)
1Electric Counterpoint Movement III (1987) Steve
Reich CONTEXT
2Minimalism context
- Throughout 20th century composers tried to push
music in new and exciting directions - Schoenberg pushed the boundaries of tonality by
abandoning keys and developing the style we now
know as expressionism. - Expressionism led into serialism
- Serialism is a tightly controlled way of writing
music tone rows very detailed - Every note would have a different dynamic and
articulation marking - Some composers felt restricted and went in the
opposite direction sometimes the performers
were like composers, as many of the scores used
symbols which were open to interpretation. - Experimental scores no detail staff notation
replaced by written direction (text-based) staff
notation replaced by symbols and pictures
(graphic scores)
3Minimalism context
- Minimalist composers La Monte Young and Terry
Riley fascinated with DRONES and REPETITION - Young based entire pieces on one very long
extended note, played loudly, with harmonics
added - Much of Youngs music did not contain many
different musical ideas and made use of minimal
resources led to minimalism. - Rileys most important piece which brought
minimalism to the forefront was In C, focuses
on short musical fragments Steve Reich played
in the ensemble. - Minimalist music used in film soundtracks and tv
programmes influenced many rock and electronic
pop music. - Minimalist music is always in constant state of
change but the process is organic rather than
dramatic.
4STEVE REICH
- Electric Counterpoint III (3rd Movement)
5Steve reich south bank show interview Part 1
6Steve reich south bank show interview Part 2
7Electric Counterpoint
- Electric Counterpoint last in a series of 3
pieces for soloists playing along with
pre-recorded tracks - Other 2 pieces are Vermont Counterpoint (1982)
and New York Counterpoint (1985) - Electric Counterpoint was commissioned for jazz
guitarist Pat Metheny to perform at Brooklyn
Academy of Musics Next Wave festival - Metheny recorded all instrumental parts (12
guitar and 2 bass) under Reich and would be used
as a stereo backing track he would play the
live part over this.
8Electric Counterpoint
- Not just a backing track an opportunity for the
performer to perform in an ensemble with himself. - Must be very precise.
- The piece is different to PHASING loops, but was
composed/recorded to sound like a loop that
develops. Multi-tracking the performer allows
NOTE ADDITION and other development techniques to
take place that otherwise would not be possible
with a fixed loop. - The sounds are all coming from one source the
guitarists fingers and guitar.
9PARTS LAYERS
Electric Counterpoint Movement III (1987) Steve
Reich
10Electric Counterpoint
- PARTS, LAYERS KEY FEATURES
- Like most minimalist music, Electric Counterpoint
is built up in layers - It is entirely diatonic at the start
- There are no chord progressions (STATIC HARMONY)
and little variety in instrumentation for the
first 24 bars - The movement is constructed in layers, starting
with a MONOPHONIC texture that builds up to a
four part canon (decorated by the live guitar) - Several of these layers feature NOTE ADDITION
11Electric Counterpoint
- PARTS, LAYERS KEY FEATURES
- Movement 3 has 7 pre-recorded electric guitar
parts and two bass guitars. The live guitar is
performed along with the recorded parts (show
video) - The piece is divided into two main sections and a
coda SECTION A, SECTION B and CODA. - Each of the main sections is subdivided into four
smaller sections, each of which is defined by a
change in key and texture.
12Electric Counterpoint
- PARTS, LAYERS KEY FEATURES
- The texture builds up gradually in section A with
the guitar parts entering as follows - GUITAR 1
- LIVE GUITAR
- GUITAR 2
- GUITAR 3
- GUITAR 4
- BASS GUITARS 1 and 2
- GUITAR 5
- GUITAR 6
- GUITAR 7
13Electric Counterpoint
- PARTS, LAYERS KEY FEATURES
- The speed is 192 crotchets a minute (roughly
three crotchets a second), which is a very fast
tempo. - The time signature is 3/2, 3 minims per bar,
which is a clear Triple Meter. However, Reich
splits each minim into 4 quavers so there are 12
quavers a bar, felt as 3 groups of 4 quavers. The
quavers a beamed in groups of 4 even when there
are rests. - Apart from dynamics and a pause sign on the last
note, there are no other performing directions. - Reich lets his performer interpret how the music
should be played (almost like Baroque composers). - Guitar and bass notation is written an octave
higher than it actually sounds, so the score
actually sounds an octave lower than written.
14Electric Counterpoint Movement III (1987) Steve
Reich SECTION A
15Electric Counterpoint
- SECTION A
- Part 1 - Bars 1-23
- The opening builds up in layers.
- Notes are all in the high register (tessitura) of
the guitar. - The piece begins with guitar 1 repeating a one
bar syncopated ostinato - This ostinato is HEXATONIC (G, A, B, D, E, F)
the missing pitch C does not appear until bar 24. - Live guitar starts with 3 notes of ostinato 1,
building up to full ostinato by bar 6 using NOTE
ADDITION. - Guitar 2 enters in bar 7 playing ostinato 1 but 1
crotchet later
16Electric Counterpoint
- Guitar 3 enters in bar 10, building up to
ostinato 1 using NOTE ADDITION but in a different
way to the live guitar. Guitar 3 ostinato
displaced by 5 and a half crotchets. - Guitar 4 enters in bar 16 playing ostinato 1,
displaced by 2 and a half crotchets. - Reich calls this a four-part guitar canon as
guitar 4 doubles the live guitar part. - When all parts have entered (bar 17) the live
guitar starts to play the RESULTANT MELODY
(pupils to spot doubled notes on score). - Each guitar part is playing the same ostinato but
starting at different parts of the bar this is
known as METRICAL DISPLACEMENT. - The key is hinting at E minor, but this is not
yet clear.
17Electric Counterpoint
- Part 2 - Bars 24-35
-
- Bass guitars enter, first playing in alternate
bars and then continuously. - A two bar bass guitar ostinato is introduced
gradually starting with the first bar and then
adding notes until we hear the full 2 bar
ostinato at bar 33. - E minor key becomes definite at bar 33.
-
- One bass is panned to the left speaker, the other
to the right speaker. - Live guitar continues to play the resultant
melody.
18Electric Counterpoint
- Part 3 - Bars 36-66
- Strummed live guitar chords appear, with falling
patterns that later become rising patterns. - This changes the texture dramatically as we now
have a percussive sound that cuts across the
other parts. - Guitar 5 chord sequence at bar 40 C, Bm, E5
- Guitar 6 chord sequence at bar 52 C, D, Em
- Guitar 7 chord sequence at bar 64 C, D, Bm
19Electric Counterpoint
- Guitars 5 and 7 play at the same time but because
the chords are played at different times in the
bar, there is a new and interesting rhythmic
counterpoint introduced. - Although the chords are heard on their own, they
also overlap one some beats to create more
complex chords. - The live guitar part continues to play chords in
this section, interweaving with chord rhythms of
guitars 5 and 7. - Part 4 - Bars 67-73
- Strummed guitar counterpoint completed and live
guitar part returns to playing melody this is
only obvious as they melody gets slightly louder.
20Electric Counterpoint Movement III (1987) Steve
Reich SECTION B
21(No Transcript)
22C Major
T
T
ST
T
ST
T
T
D Major
T
T
ST
T
ST
T
T
Dorian Mode
T
T
ST
T
T
ST
T
23Dorian Mode Starts on D (think D for Dorian)
and uses all the WHITE notes like C Major.
However, because it starts on D instead of C
the order of the intervals is different to C
Major. The order of the intervals in the Dorian
Mode is T-ST-T-T-T-ST-T
24(No Transcript)
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26Electric Counterpoint Movement III (1987) Steve
Reich