Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Electric counterpoint - Steve Reich
Music in the 20th Century
- Texture
- Contrapuntal
- Harmony + Tonality
- Mainly in G major
- Some sections
in Eb
- Hexatonic scales
- No cadences
- Dynamics
- Remains fairly
constant
- Background information
- Written for jazz guitarist Pat Metheny
- First performed electric
counterpoint in 1987
- Third movement
- Minimalist composing techniques
- Additive melody
- A note is added each
time the loop is repeated
- Subtractive melody
- A note is taken away each time
the loop is repeated
- Metamorphosis
- The notes of the
pattern change
over time
- Phase shifting
- Two or more patterns if different
length are played at the same time
making them go out of sync
- Layering
- a 4 beat loop and a 5
beat loop being played
at the same time.
- Resultant melody
- A melody is made up
from different
instruments playing
different selected notes
- Instrumentation
- 1 Live guitar
- Amplified
- 7 pre-recorded guitars
- 2 pre-recorded
bass guitars
- Structure
- Builds up in 3 layers:
- 1. Syncopated quaver motif
is introduced in the live
guitar and top 4 guitar parts,
one at a time
- 2. Syncopated quaver
motif introduced in bass
guitars
- 3. More sustained motif built
around 3 chords, begins in live
guitar, then transferred to
other parts
- Melody
- made up of a
one-bar motif
- Repeated
continuously to
form an ostinato
- Introduced by live
guitar and top 4
guitars at different
times, creating a
canon
- Melody built up
through additive melody
in some parts
- Resultant melody
can be heard at one
point
- Rhythm, meter + tempo
- Rhythm
- Repeating patterns
of quavers
- Frequent syncopation
- Meter
- Mainly 3/2
- Some
parts go
to 12/8
towards
the end
- Tempo
- 192
- Very
quick