Reich: Drumming

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Total Tracks: 4   Total Length: 74:04

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Anastasia Tsioulcas

eMusic Contributor

12.14.10
So Percussion, Reich: Drumming
Label: Cantaloupe Music

Steve Reich's milestone 1971 work "Drumming," written for nine percussionists, two vocalists and piccolo, accomplished two things: while elegantly distilling Reich's ideas about music — merging Western, European-focused classical music with exuberant, sophisticated "world music" traditions (in this case, drumming styles of Ghana), it also fathered a whole new repertory of works for percussion ensemble. On this recording, the four ebullient and masterfully precise musicians of the Brooklyn-based So Percussion ensemble are unmatched for precision and enthusiasm, overdubbing themselves as needed.

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So Percussion, Reich: Drumming

mckemper

Love the performance but the breaks between the tracks are disturbing as it is meant to be played continuously. I have remonstrated with eMusic. I even contacted a member of So Percussion about it, but the breaks between the tracks are still there. Best to get this music elsewhere.

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They Say All Music Guide

Steve Reich Drumming is the second release on Cantaloupe by Brooklyn-based percussion ensemble So Percussion. Reich’s minimalist master work doesn’t leave a lot of room for interpretation or error — you either play it well or you don’t, and if one person in the group is a little off it upsets the whole apple cart. So Percussion plays the work exactly as it goes, and are helped in this performance by Steve Reich veterans Rebecca Armstrong and Jay Clayton in providing the vocal parts. Erin Lesser plays the scant, but important, piccolo part. This is “Drumming” on a diet, as there are only four players used in the lineup of So Percussion that made this recording. Presumably, at least some of it is overdubbed, as the score calls for nine percussionists. It is also played at a significantly faster clip than in the famous 1974 Deutsche Grammophon first recording of the work, which topped out at 85 minutes, but it is not as fast as Reich’s 1987 recording for Nonesuch, barely over an hour-long. So Percussion’s overall tempo is chosen well, and brings the work in between the two poles of the composer’s timings at 70 minutes. This performance follows Reich’s score without being so much as a hair off, yet compared to Reich’s own, now rather quaint 1974 rendering, the So Percussion recording is somewhat lacking in terms of a distinctive character — it is like the smooth surface of a pond with exactly symmetrical ripples flowing towards the land. Yet “Drumming,” played up to speed with no mistakes doesn’t allow for a lot in the way of variation — properly played, it is sort of like a machine. Nonetheless, one will not find a better representation of “Drumming” on disc; it is almost like Pierre Boulez’ Deutsche Grammophon recording of Le Sacre du Printemps in that, were one to look at a particular spot in the score, together with So Percussion’s recording, what one hears is exactly what one sees. Cantaloupe’s engineering, too, is excellent. – Uncle Dave Lewis

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