The January/February 2019 edition of Limelight Magazine is now available
We reveal our 2018 Artists of the Year. Other features include The Magic Flute, Meryl Tankard's Two Feet and Australian Brandenburg Orchestra at 30.
We reveal our 2018 Artists of the Year. Other features include The Magic Flute, Meryl Tankard's Two Feet and Australian Brandenburg Orchestra at 30.
A ballet based on Alice in Wonderland and a new Wayne McGregor work with a Steve Reich score are the new season highlights.
The new game-based educational app helps develop the rhythmic skills of users using Reich’s minimalist masterpiece.
Effortless virtuoso in complete command of this (quite literally) electrifying modern repertoire.
One of minimalism’s elder statesmen tells Clive Paget why he’s rewriting Radiohead Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $3 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
The experimental rocker went from discovering classical albums in a dumpster to playing Carnegie Hall.
Five American composers respond to the tragedy of 9/11 in different ways.
Steve Reich’s highly anticipated September 11 lament comes ten years after the terrorist attacks and the release itself was not without controversy (note the revised album artwork). His account is everything we have come to expect from America’s greatest minimalist, and therein lies the problem. WTC 9/11 serves as a bookend to the Kronos Quartet’s 1988 collaboration with the composer, Different Trains: a profound work in which the strings echo the sampled speech of Holocaust survivors. Reich has rehashed the technique, this time with the voices of air traffic controllers and firemen who were among the first to grasp the magnitude of the American tragedy. What fails to move me is the mimicry, so poignant in Different Trains but cumbersome and almost tasteless here. Redeeming melodic interest comes in a reflective section of Hebrew Psalms, sung by Jews who prayed for the dead on the scene. Just shy of 16 minutes long, WTC 9/11 is as immediately terse and engaging as, say, Penderecki’s Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima. Reich’s structure and economy of means are masterful, but with the entire disc running to only 36 minutes I feel short-changed, despite the inclusion of a DVD. Even in fine readings…
Brisbane-born flautist Tim Munro is on the new music adventure of a lifetime with this quirky Chicago sextet. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $3 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Ten years after the September 11 attacks, Reich makes sense of the tragedy in a haunting new work.