Steve Reich
Steve Reich was recently called "America's greatest living
composer" in the
Village Voice. From his early taped
speeches,
It's Gonna Rain (1965) and
Come Out
(1966) to his and video artist Beryl Korot's digital video opera
Three Tales (2002), Reich's work has embraced not only
aspects of western classical music, but the structures, harmonies,
and rhythms of non-Western and American vernacular music, particularly
jazz. " There's just a handful of living composers who can legitimately
claim to have altered the direction of musical history and Steve
Reich is one of them," states
The Guardian. Born in New
York and raised there and in California, Reich graduated with
honors in philosophy from Cornell University in 1957. For the
next two years, he studied composition with Hall Overton, and
from 1958 to 1961 he studied at The Juilliard School with William
Bergsma and Vincent Persichetti. Reich received his M.A. in Music
from Mills College in 1963, where he worked with Luciano Berio
and Darius Milhaud. During the summer of 1970, with the help of
a grant from the Institute for International Education, Reich
studied drumming at the Institute for African Studies at the University
of Ghana in Accra. In 1973 and 1974, he studied Balinese Gamelan
Semar Pegulingan and Gamelan Gambang at the American Society for
Eastern Arts in Seattle and Berkeley. From 1976 to 1977 he studied
the traditional forms of cantillation (chanting) of the Hebrew
scriptures in New York and Jerusalem. In 1966, Steve Reich founded
his own ensemble of three musicians, which rapidly grew to 18
members or more. Since 1971, Steve Reich and Musicians have frequently
toured the world, and have the distinction of performing to sold-out
houses at venues as diverse as Carnegie Hall and the Bottom Line
Cabaret.
In June 1997, in celebration of Reich's 60th birthday, Nonesuch
released a ten CD retrospective box set of Reich's compositions,
featuring several newly recorded and re-mastered works. He also
won a Grammy award in 1999 for Best Small Ensemble for his piece
Music for 18 Musicians, also on the Nonesuch label. In July 1999,
a major retrospective of Reich's work was presented by the Lincoln
Center Festival. Earlier, in 1988, the South Bank Centre in London,
mounted a similar series of retrospective concerts. In 2000, he
was awarded the Schuman Prize from Columbia University, the Montgomery
Fellowship from Dartmouth College, the Regent's Lectureship at
the University of California at Berkeley, an honorary doctorate
from the California Institute of the Arts, and was named Composer
of the Year by Musical America magazine. Reich's 1988 piece,
Different
Trains, marked a new compositional method, rooted in
It's
Gonna Rain and
Come Out, in which speech recordings
generate the musical material for musical instruments. The New
York Times hailed
Different Trains as "a work of such
astonishing originality that breakthrough seems the only possible
description...possesses an absolutely harrowing emotional impact."
In 1990, Reich received a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Composition
for
Different Trains as recorded by the Kronos Quartet
on Nonesuch.
The Cave, Steve Reich and Beryl Korot's
music theater video piece exploring the Biblical story of Abraham,
Sarah, Hagar, Ishmael, and Isaac was hailed by
Time Magazine
as "a fascinating glimpse of what opera might be like in the 21st
century." Of the Chicago premiere, John von Rhein of the
Chicago
Tribune wrote, "The techniques embraced by this work have
the potential to enrich opera as living art a thousandfold...
The Cave impresses, ultimately, as a powerful and imaginative
work of high-tech music theater that brings the troubled present
into resonant dialogue with the ancient past, and invites all
of us to consider anew our shared cultural heritage." Over the
years, Steve Reich has received commissions from the Barbican
Centre London, the Holland Festival; San Francisco Symphony; the
Rothko Chapel; Vienna Festival; Hebbel Theater, Berlin; BAM (for
guitarist Pat Metheny); Spoleto Festival USA; West German Radio,
Köln; Settembre Musica, Torino; the Fromm Music Foundation for
clarinetist Richard Stoltzman; St. Louis Symphony Orchestra; Betty
Freeman for the Kronos Quartet; and the Festival d'Automne, Paris,
for the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution. In 1994, Reich
was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters, to the
Bavarian Academy of Fine Arts in 1995, and, in 1999, was awarded
Commandeur de l'ordre des Arts et Lettres.