today
8:30 a.m. Audubon Field Trip to the Arcata Marsh Klopp Lake, foot of I St.
read >9 a.m. Arcata Farmers' Market Arcata Plaza
read >9 a.m. Tai Chi for Everyone Arcata Plaza
read >10 a.m. The Dialogue Project The Gazebo
read >10 a.m. Willow Creek/China Flat Museum Old Fashioned Ice Cream Social Willow Creek China-Flat Museum
read >10:30 a.m. Ferndale Farmers' Market Downtown Ferndale
read >10:30 a.m. Blues By the Bay Halvorsen Park
read >noon Redwood Art Association Summer Exhibition Redwood Art Association Gallery
read >1 p.m. Humboldt Wild Humboldt Redwoods State Park Visitors Center
read >1 p.m. Taste of the Cove Mal Coombs Park
read >1 p.m. Beer Tasting Festival Muddy's Hot Cup
read >2 p.m. Surf 4 Peace Volunteer Party See Event Description
read >2 p.m. Friends of the Marsh Aug. 30 Tour Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Interpretive Center
read >3 p.m. Wildrivers 101 Film Festival Various Locations
read >5 p.m. Acoustic and Open Mic Has Beans
read >5 p.m. Humboldt Wild Photography Book Signings Various Locations
read >5 p.m. The Collector’s Excavation Auction Ink People Center for the Arts
read >6 p.m. Matthew Cook Cher-Ae-Heights Casino
read >6 p.m. The Tumbleweeds Chapala Cafe
read >6 p.m. Weather Machine at Larrupin Larrupin Cafe
read >6 p.m. Ali & Baron Libation
read >7 p.m. Benbow Summer Jazz Series: Akira Tana Group Benbow Inn
read >7 p.m. Saturday Evening Dinners for Singles Private House in Arcata
read >8 p.m. Godspell Ferndale Repertory Theater
read >8 p.m. Strix Vega with Chris Parreira Mosgo's
read >8 p.m. Hot August Fights Blue Lake Casino
read >8 p.m. Billy Allen & the Roadhouse Rockets Gilded Rose
read >8 p.m. Red Fox 2nd Anniversary BASH! Bonus Entertainmen Presents: Sister Carol The Red Fox Tavern
read >9 p.m. Karaoke w/Chris Clay The Boiler Room
read >9 p.m. Jimmy James Bear River Casino
read >9 p.m. Moo-Got-2 Jambalaya
read >9 p.m. The Rubberneckers, Svelte Velvet Humboldt Brews
read >9 p.m. St. John & the Sinners Six Rivers Brewery
read >9 p.m. Soldiers of Shangri-la WAVE @ blue lake casino
read >9:30 p.m. Live DJ Ragg's Rack Room
read >10 p.m. DJ Blancatron Aunty Mo's Lounge
read >10 p.m. DJ Itchie Fingaz Sidelines
read >10 p.m. DJ MusiqLement Pearl Lounge
read >11:15 p.m. 33 1/3, Tragic Mess The Alibi Lounge and Restaurant
read >previous columns
May 1, 2008
The Feel Good Record of the Year
Album by No Use for a Name. Fat Wreck Chords. ...
read >April 24, 2008
Pure Abstractions
Spring dance concert April 17 at HSU's Van Duzer Theater ...
read >April 17, 2008
Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!
By Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds Anti-/Mute Dig, Lazarus, ...
read >Photos
Daniel Variations
By Spencer Doran
Album by Steve Reich.
Nonesuch.
Steve Reich's work stands today as one of the pillars of modern music. Along with his contemporaries Philip Glass and Terry Riley, his exploration of the potential emotional weight of the cyclical repetition of music phrases in the 1960s and '70s was not only one of the last great movements in Western art music, but also the conceptual blueprint for modern day loop-based music genres like hip hop, techno and much of the experimental underground, not to mention most modern classical music that followed. Unlike his other minimalist brethren (with the exception of La Monte Young) Reich has remained relevant through the years, with innovations that still revolve around his signature use of melodic fragments with interlocking rhythmic repetition.
Reich has not shied away from dealing with overtly political topics in his music, and his new release, Daniel Variations, is no exception. Initially premiered in 2006 as part of Reich's 70th birthday celebration, Variations was composed in remembrance of American journalist Daniel Pearl, who was famously kidnapped and executed in 2002 by Pakistani militants while on assignment in the Middle East. With female soprano vocalists, Reich takes Pearl's last recorded words, "My name is Daniel Pearl. I am a Jewish American from Encino, California," (which appeared on a videotape filmed by his captors, along with his subsequent beheading), and casts them against his trademark marimba/vibraphone pulse with violin lines weaving in and out and heavy, chiming piano lines thundering beneath. Through the different movements, Reich parallels Pearl's final words with experts from the biblical Book of Daniel, drawing a connection between the post-911 world of "terror" and the book's apocalyptic predictions. Appropriately enough, Variations is Reich's darkest piece to date. Cast in a grim minor key with a somber tone overall that is highly unusual for Reich, it's darkness surpasses even his 1988 work Different Trains with its juxtaposition of Reich's childhood memories of train travels with audio fragments from interviews with Holocaust survivors. While his pieces usually have a transfixing quality that evokes the busy and complex nature of human life, Variations evokes quite the opposite, with intense maximalism in place of his omnipresent slow shifting minimalism, depicting a world coming to terms with the brutal realities of war, death and terror.
It's a particularly heavy topic to tackle, and what Reich is attempting to capture may be beyond the scope of a piece of music, at least in his style. Unfortunately it's tough to look past the overwrought nature of the piece, and its lofty emotional goals make it hard to connect with on a base level. Much like Glass's later pieces, an inescapable air of pretension clouds the work, and while it is largely devoid of the thick layer of schmaltz that cakes Glass' recent film scores, Reich still aims a bit too high and ends up sounding more bloated and operatic than dignified.
While Reich's best work seems to exist outside of the modern classical lineage, in territory less daunting and more universal, the overall feel of Variations relies heavily on the same traditions that his work once eclipsed. It seems that Reich has fallen into the same stale pretension of the concert hall that the post-Cage-ian "new music" linage that his minimalism is rooted in sought to break down. In Reich's defense, the unavoidably serious nature of the subject matter might warrant this. And it's not as if Reich chose the topic: Pearl's father approached Reich to commission the piece as an artistic memorial for his son, and with that in mind it seems that Reich may have done his best to tackle the subject. The CD also includes the less noteworthy "Variations for Vibes, Pianos & Strings," a work from 2005, which comes off as a stale arrangement of Reich's musical trademarks and fails to construct anything new with them, almost like a Reich paint-by-numbers. Though the effort is still there, it seems as if Reich's work may have finally lost the spark that he kept alive for so long.

















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