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Shaker Loops

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (59 ratings)
Shaker Loops album cover
01
Shaker Loops
28:46
02
Light Over Water: Part I
12:20
03
Light Over Water: Part II
11:13
04
Light Over Water: Part III
18:06
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 4   Total Length: 70:25

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eMusic Review 0

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Justin Davidson

eMusic Contributor

Justin Davidson has been the classical music and architecture critic at New York magazine since 2007. Before that, he was classical music critic at Newsday, whe...more »

06.30.11
Early works that announced the arrival of a major new voice in American music
1987 | Label: New Albion Records / The Orchard

Pulitzer Prize-winning composer John Adams’s hugely successful stage works — Nixon In China, The Death of Klinghoffer and Doctor Atomic among them — have changed the operatic landscape, but there was a time when he was a little-known figure working on the margins of San Francisco’s new music scene. This recording, released in 1987, revisits two early works that announced the arrival of a major new voice on the American music scene.

“Shaker Loops,” for seven strings, a work from 1978, is Adams’s first masterpiece. Inspired by the ecstatic rituals of the American religious sect known as Shakers, and the repetitive/modular music of Steve Reich and Philip Glass, “Shaker Loops” builds to a frenzied climax through a steady accumulation of minimalist patterns. In 1983, Adams produced “Available Light,” a three-way collaboration with choreographer Lucinda Childs and architect Frank Gehry. The original dance score was built around the rapidly evolving sound of the synthesizer, but once into the recording studio, Adams added a brass ensemble — often used so subtly that it is not even heard, but simply adds an organic sheen to the electronic sound. He called this version “Light Over Water,” a three-movement symphony that also uses… read more »

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Excellent

LaoDu

Good introduction to John Adams mustic. Essential to anyone interested in modern American music. Wish e-music had more Adams

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My favorite piece of music

SaltnPepper

I'm not very verbal, so it's hard to put into words, but I just love Shaker Loops. I have three versions in my collection, and I have been lucky enough to hear it live twice. For the price of one download, this is the best bargain around.

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Get this one!

Conticreative

Shaker Loops is an album that should be in all serious music lover's collection, even if they are not big fans of "modern" classical. This recording does justice to the piece.

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Post-minimalist classic

mark428

There's a reason that John Adams is so popular: he's brilliant, a visionary. Featured on this cd are some early works: first the piece for strings 'Shaker Loops.' It's played here by a smaller ensemble, reminiscent almost of the original version entitled 'Wavemaker,' since withdrawn. After hearing several recordings of 'Loops' with full orchestra, it's interesting to hear it here with a smaller ensemble. The other piece on this album is 'Light Over Water,' a rarely-heard piece for tape; it doesn't manipulate existing sounds like musique concrete, but rather uses the prerecorded brass ensemble to its greatest advantage, and runs the gamut here. A must-download.

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Shaker Loops is a must-have

bklynd

Shaker Loops is a must-have composition, a pivotal minimalist classic up there with "In C," "Einstein on the Beach," or "Music for 18 Musicians." This is a great recording of it. Light over Water is kind of meh.

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Icon: John Adams

By Seth Colter Walls, eMusic Contributor

Whenever a new composer "arrives," a portion of the ensuing excitement comes from the fact that their future remains unwritten. Anything can still happen, and it's precisely that lack of baggage that makes the early works so thrilling. Before long, though, the academics pounce and attempt to categorize everything; the allure of compartmentalizing becomes too difficult to resist. So it can feel sometimes with John Adams, one of the most performed and beloved (and discussed) of… more »