"The Mind is Listening": Listening forMeaning in Steve Reich's 'The Desert Music'
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Authors Fisher, Sarah Lynn
Publisher The University of Arizona.
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“THE MIND IS LISTENING” LISTENING FOR MEANING IN STEVE REICH’S THE DESERT MUSIC
by
Sarah Lynn Fisher
A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of
MASTER OF MUSIC
In the Graduate College
THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA
2007
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STATEMENT BY AUTHOR
This thesis has been submitted in partial fulfillment of requirements for an advanced degree at The University of Arizona and is deposited in the University Library to be made available to borrowers under rules of the Library. Brief quotations from this thesis are allowable without special permission, provided that accurate acknowledgment of source is made. Requests for permission for extended quotation from or reproduction of this manuscript in whole or in part may be granted by the head of the major department or the Dean of the Graduate College when in his or her judgment the proposed use of the material is in the interests of scholarship. In all other instances, however, permission must be obtained from the author.
SIGNED: Sarah Lynn Fisher
APPROVAL BY THESIS DIRECTOR This thesis has been approved on the date shown below: ______________________________ November 20, 2007 Janet L. Sturman Date Associate Professor of Music
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I am especially grateful to my advisor, Dr. Janet Sturman, for her patience and encouragement throughout these last two years of research and writing. Her enthusiasm for my ideas and confidence in my abilities were crucial in times when my own confidence wavered. She has introduced me to works of music criticism that have forever changed (for the better) the way I think about music and has inspired an interest in ethnographic research that I hope to pursue in the future. Our conversations helped to both improve and clarify many of the ideas presented in this document and for this I am most obliged. I also wish to thank the other two members of my graduate committee, Dr. John Brobeck and Dr. Jay Rosenblatt, for kindly offering helpful criticism and for providing examples of the level of scholarship to which I aspire. My immediate family has been unfailingly supportive during this challenging period of my life, and their love means more to me than anything. I wish to acknowledge the loving support of family and friends, including Annette, April, and Autumn McMurrian; Rachelle Mechenbier; my OMA partners and friends Kathryn Mueller and Nathan Kruger; Andrew Diggs; Dan, Kelsey, and Levi Bowman; the staff of Radiocarbon and Meteoritics and Planetary Science; Anishka Lee-Skorepa; Laura Weirich; and Peanut (in memoriam). Alan McMurrian kindly helped to edit and revise several versions of this thesis and has always been available to discuses my ideas and concerns throughout the entire process. This journey has very much been one that we have taken together, and I owe the successful completion of this project to his steadfast encouragement. Finally, I would like to thank my undergraduate professor, Daniel Dominick, for first introducing me to Steve Reich and for playing the Brooklyn Philharmonic recording of The Desert Music for our 20th-Century Music class one Friday afternoon.
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DEDICATION
For my musical patriarch
Ronald G. Clark
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
LIST OF TABLES……………………………………………………………………... 6
ABSTRACT………………………………………………………………..................... 7 EPIGRAPH…………………………………………………………………………….. 8 INTRODUCTION - “Is there a sound / addressed / not wholly to the ear?”………… 9 CHAPTER ONE - “Begin, my Friend”: The Genesis and Composition of The Desert Music………………………………………………………………………… 15 CHAPTER TWO - “Well, shall we / think or listen?”: Selected Literature Review…. 29 CHAPTER THREE - “The / theme is difficult / but no more difficult / than the facts to be / resolved.”…………………………………………………………………….. 38 I. Musical Meaning: Definition and Theory………………………………………… 38 II. The Listening Analysis……………………………………………………………47 III. Locating the Desert……………………………………………………………… 53 CONCLUSION - “who most shall advance the light – call it what you may!”……….. 68 APPENDIX: LISTENING TABLES………………………………………………....... 72 REFERENCES………………………………………………………………………… 104
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LIST OF TABLES1
Table 1: Movement I – Fast……………………………………………………………. 72 Table 2: Movement II – Moderate……………………………………………………... 76 Table 3.1: Movement IIIA – Slow……………………………………………………... 81 Table 3.2: Movement IIIB – Moderate………………………………………………… 86 Table 3.3: Movement IIIC – Slow……………………………………………………... 90 Table 4: Movement IV – Moderate……………………………………………………. 95 Table 5: Movement V – Fast…………………………………………………………... 98
1All tables document my listening analysis and appear in the Appendix. Page numbers denote the
first page of each table.
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ABSTRACT
This thesis examines The Desert Music by Steve Reich in the context of the
composer’s artistic perspective and advocates studying the subjective listening
experience as a tool for musical analysis. Challenging conventional approaches in
musicology and music theory, this work examines how a specific analytical approach in
turn shapes the values assigned to that work. Systematic documentation of the author's
listening experience is presented as an application of this premise and as a template to use
in subsequent investigations of how other listeners respond to the work. The author
concludes, mirroring the ideas implied in The Desert Music itself, that instead of
suppressing individual responses as opinions too myriad and divergent to be relevant, we
should recognize that these reactions are products of shared cultural experience and that
discussing them collectively may lead to powerful revelations about artistic meaning that
may not emerge any other way.
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Leaving California to return east, the fertile desert, (were it to get water) surrounded us, a music of survival, subdued, distant, half heard…
William Carlos Williams “The Desert Music”
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Introduction “Is there a sound addressed / not wholly to the ear?”
In the early 1960s, while studying composition at Mills College in San Francisco,
California, Steve Reich spent many hours at jazz venues listening to performances by
John Coltrane:
When I was at Mills College from 1961 to ’63, most of the graduate students were writing pieces which they didn’t play, which one could doubt whether they heard in their heads, and which were so enormously complex that they made the page virtually black, but you wondered if they’d ever be performed.
And at night I went to hear John Coltrane, who picks up his saxophone and plays and the music comes out. It was almost a moral dilemma. It would’ve been almost immoral not to follow in Coltrane’s direction because of the musical honesty and authenticity involved.2
Reich recognized that he valued the affective experience of music too highly to continue
composing serial music; this calculated, intellectual style, while an appropriate response
to World War II in Europe, was “a musical lie” coming from a composer so keenly aware
of the American social and musical environment during the 1960s.3 Returning to New
York a few years later, Reich began composing in a new style, and his first mature
compositions, It’s Gonna Rain (1965) and Come Out (1966), achieve their emotional
weight from their musical processes as well as their subject matter.
These aspects of Reich’s biography illuminate an important artistic position that
has guided his compositional career from the 1960s to the present. Reich’s style
mentioned above (labeled minimalism by critics) not only grew out of his desire for
musical integrity, but it also clarified his intended audience, i.e., who he was writing for
2Steve Reich, “Steve Reich,” interview by Edward Strickland (January 1987), in American Composers: Dialogues on Contemporary Music (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1991), 38.
3Ibid., 46.
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and how he envisioned his compositions would be heard. While his colleagues at Mills
College wrote for music academics at universities, Reich was more at home in the art
galleries of downtown New York City, where artists of several disciplines gathered to
share their works with a perhaps less critical, but still enthusiastic, crowd.4 By his own
admission Reich requires an engaged listener, not necessarily an educated one.5 Aside
from his early tape pieces, he also has been careful never to remove completely the
human element of live performance from his works, following his interest in the
communal performance practices of West African drumming and Balinese gamelan
ensembles. While the individualized experience of his compositions remains important,
it is clear that Reich also recognizes the affective power of live performance.
Given Reich’s musical values, it is puzzling that critical discussions of his works
continue to emanate almost exclusively from methods of analysis traditionally applied to
Western art music. These methods, which focus on the absolute musical elements of
harmony and structure, presuppose that the goal of analysis is to uncover the composer’s
compositional process and that the critic should have unlimited access to the musical
score, which is primarily a guide for the performer. The consensus of a work’s meaning
that emerges from these discussions may not be entirely consistent with Reich’s
intentions. For Reich musical processes are not ends in themselves but are instead a way
to guide the affective experience of the listener. Thus what is often missing from critical
4It is only more recently that works by Reich have premiered in concert halls in Europe and the
United States. However, his core audience remains those who attend performances by his ensemble, Steve Reich and Musicians, often in venues not traditionally associated with classical music.
5In his essay “Music as a Gradual Process” (1968), Reich explains how the gradually changing musical elements of his compositions that have defined his style were developed to “facilitate closely detailed listening.” In Writings on Music: 1965-2000, edited with an introduction by Paul Hillier (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002), 34.
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discussions of Reich’s works is consideration of the subjective listening experience.
Studying how a listener evaluates meaning as it unfolds in time, just as it would in
performance, could deepen critical understanding of Reich’s compositions by explaining
how and why they are effective for the listener.
Such an approach may also be able to draw attention to works by Reich that have
been unduly neglected by critics and performing ensembles by providing a new context
in which to interpret them. Stylistically, The Desert Music, a five-movement work for
chorus and orchestra with text excerpted and arranged by Reich from poetry by William
Carlos Williams, is not particularly innovative in the context of Reich’s works in the
1970s and 1980s; its expanded musical forces, multiple concurrent textures, and more
complex harmonic language amplify musical ideas first presented in Music for Eighteen
Musicians (1976).6 Perhaps this is why few critics consider The Desert Music to be one
of Reich’s major works. It is not often mentioned in textbooks, included in historical
anthologies, or discussed in detail in books about Reich and his minimalist colleagues.
Furthermore, focus on the structure and harmony of The Desert Music has diverted
critical attention from the conceptual trends it exemplifies. The Desert Music is Reich’s
first conventional text setting in English, and it also marks his return to the incorporation
of social and political subject matter into his compositions, a feature first included in his
early tape pieces of the 1960s. Both aspects, the use of speech or text and references to
current events, have appeared in most of Reich’s compositions since The Desert Music.
6Reich, hoping to make the piece accessible to ensembles that regularly perform his works,
composed a revised chamber version of The Desert Music in 1986. A recording of this version (Alarm Will Sound and Ossia, Steve Reich: Tehillim and The Desert Music, Cantaloupe B00006H6B5, 2002) is used for the listening analysis in Chapter 3.
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These elements play an important role in guiding the listening experience. The
title and text indicate that The Desert Music is about something other than the music
itself, i.e., there is some kind of extramusical idea that Reich intends for the audience to
perceive. It is therefore an appropriate mental occupation on the part of the listener to
think about the external references suggested by The Desert Music. And it can be argued
that, as they are more likely considering the work as a whole, listeners who are attending
a performance of the work or simulating this experience using a recording may be better
equipped to discuss this level of meaning. Critics with access to the score may be
distracted by specific musical details. While historically ignored by critics, the meaning
of The Desert Music created in the intersection of music and text is a significant aspect of
the piece.
While listening it is easy to recognize that The Desert Music is about
something, but the exact subject is initially mysterious. Reich has chosen textual excerpts
from several different poems by Williams with varying subjects, and none of the lines
Reich has chosen specifically refers to a desert.7 The text of The Desert Music suggests
that a conversation is occurring (“Begin, my friend,” “Well, shall we / think or listen?,”
“Say to them:”) about an important problem (“The / theme is difficult / but no more
difficult / than the facts to be / resolved.”) with dire consequences (“Now that he can
realize / them, he must either change them or perish.”).8 Additionally, the text equates the
7Reich has also not chosen to set any lines from Williams’ long poem of the same title. 8Reich knew when he selected the textual excerpts for The Desert Music that Williams was
concerned about atomic warfare: “Dr. Williams was acutely aware of the bomb, and his words about it, in a poem entitled The Orchestra, struck me as to the point.” Reich, “The Desert Music – Notes by the Composer,” in Writings on Music 1965-2000, 124. However, due to the oblique nature of the textual
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difficulties of communication with the difficulties of musical composition, performance,
and interpretation (“it is a principle of music / to repeat the theme,” “it is the relation of /
of a flute note / to a drum”). The harmonic and lyrical ambiguities of the music echo the
uncertainty implied in the text. Repetition in the form of canons, ostinato harmonic
progressions, and a cyclic form, all of which are clearly audible, reinforce the theme in
the text that the problem is being continually discussed.
Reich has said that he does not compose works with references to current
events in order to change the world through music. In an essay published in the New
York Times after Reich completed The Cave (1993), a work that explores the varied
religious significances of Abraham’s cave and, by association, the contemporary conflict
in the Middle East, Reich and his collaborator Beryl Korot write:
We do not think that The Cave or any other artwork can directly affect peace in the Middle East. Pablo Picasso’s Guernica had no effect on the aerial bombing of civilians, nor did the works of Kurt Weill, Bertolt Brecht, and many other artists stop the rise of Hitler. These works live because of their quality as works of art. Their message survives through the quality of their artistry, and some individuals who see or hear them can be changed by the experience, as if a fire in the mind of one lighted a fire in the mind of another.9
Thus, like the two tape pieces that began his search for an authentic compositional
perspective (It’s Gonna Rain and Come Out), Reich uses language and its meanings in
The Desert Music not as a cogent argument for social change but instead as a meditation
excerpts Reich selected, the message of the text could be applied to a wider range of social problems, such as globalization or environmental destruction.
9Steve Reich and Beryl Korot, “Thoughts About the Madness in Abraham’s Cave (1994),” Reprinted in Writings on Music 1965-2000, 180. Interestingly, a quote by Williams concludes the paragraph quoted above: “Williams Carlos Williams wrote in Patterson, Book V, ‘through this hole / at the bottom of the cavern / of death, the imagination / escapes intact.’ ”
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on, in Williams’ words, “the facts to be / resolved.”10 Through performance The Desert
Music becomes a metaphor for the discussion of contentious social issues, as well as the
difficulties of communicating meaning through music.
This thesis uses the subjective listening experience, made more objective through
detailed explanation of the thought processes that inspired it, as an analytical tool. As the
discussion of meaning and musical communication in Chapter 3 will suggest, a particular
determination of meaning in music is always dependent on the context in which it arises.
My goal is to discuss the meaning of The Desert Music in the context of Reich’s artistic
perspective and to advocate the value of studying the subjective listening experience in
critical discussions of musical works. We all have emotional reactions to music, and
instead of suppressing them in critical discussions as opinions too myriad and divergent
to be relevant, we should recognize that these reactions are products of shared cultural
experience and that discussing them collectively may lead to powerful revelations about
artistic meaning that may not emerge any other way.
10William Carlos Williams, “The Orchestra,” in The Desert Music and Other Poems (New York:
Random House, 1954), 63-4.
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Chapter One “Begin, my friend”
The Genesis and Composition of The Desert Music
As a composer, Steve Reich admits he walks a fine line between continuing the
traditions of Western art music and subverting the genre’s expectations: “my persistent
interest is to continue to make a literature which is basically new, and which has roots in
the radical as well as in the traditional.”11 In a conversation with journalist Mark Dery,
conducted at the time of the American premiere of The Desert Music (October 1984),
Reich remarks that while The Desert Music was well received by audiences,12 “there are
many techniques [in The Desert Music] that have been in my work since the late ’60s,” a
decade when critics considered Reich to be a member of the musical avant-garde.13
Indeed the genesis of The Desert Music can be traced through several aspects of Reich’s
early musical education and compositions: the influence of musical traditions other than
Western art music, his interest in speech and text setting, and his desire to create works
with social and cultural relevance.
11Quoted in Robert K. Schwarz, Minimalists (London: Phaidon Press Ltd., 1996), 92. Reich
outlines his “traditional” influences, including J.S. Bach, Josquin, and Stravinsky, in his interview with Edward Strickland. See “Steve Reich,” in American Composers: Dialogues on Contemporary Music, 33-50.
12At the Brooklyn Academy of Music premiere, The Desert Music “played to three full houses.” See Andrew Porter, “Desert Song,” New Yorker, 19 Nov. 1984, 178. Reich’s former teacher William Austin notes that The Desert Music is the first of Reich’s works to be published in full score and released as a professional recording shortly after the world and American premieres. “Review of Score of The Desert Music,” Notes 43 (1987): 914. This recording, released on the Nonesuch label in 1985, immediately entered the US Billboard charts. Reich, “Steve Reich,” in American Originals: Interviews with 25 Contemporary Composers, ed. Geoff Smith and Nicola Walker Smith (London and Boston: Faber and Faber, 1994), 211.
13Reich, “As If I Were Writing Directly Before God,” interview by Mark Dery, High Performance 7, no. 4 (1984): 95.
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When Steve Reich (b. 1936) entered Cornell University at the age of 16, he felt
that he was too old to begin studies in composition, considering Mozart and Mendelssohn
had already written operas by their sixteenth birthdays. Instead, he declared a philosophy
major. Reich had studied piano and later percussion as a child growing up in New York
and Los Angeles. While he was aware of what he calls “middle-class favorites,” such as
the works of Beethoven and Schubert, it was the music of J.S. Bach, Stravinsky, and jazz
musicians such as John Coltrane that held his rapt attention.14 Fortunately, Reich
received encouragement from his music history professor, William Austin, and after
graduation from Cornell began composition studies at Juilliard and later Mills College in
San Francisco.
When Reich returned to New York in 1965, he was frustrated with what he felt
were the two schools of American composition at the time: followers of John Cage’s
aleatoric musical “happenings” and composers devoted to Arnold Schoenberg’s legacy of
serialism, such as Luciano Berio, his teacher at Mills College. Reich did not feel a close
affinity with either tradition. As discussed in the introduction, Coltrane’s radical and
spiritual improvisations fascinated Reich during his tenure at Mills College. He longed to
write music that echoed the organic humanity that Coltrane achieved in works such as
Africa/Brass (1961) and A Love Supreme (1964), rather than the cold impersonality of
serialism or the irreverence embraced by Cage and his followers.15 Luckily Reich’s
14Keith Potter, Four Musical Minimalists: La Monte Young, Terry Riley, Steve Reich, Philip Glass
(New York: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 154. 15Reich tells Geoff Smith and Nicola Walker: “At the time I was studying with Berio I used to
spend my evenings going to the jazz workshop and hearing John Coltrane play. … Coltrane’s model seemed very persuasive, and was nearly diametrically opposed.” With respect to Cage, Reich remarks: “A
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experimentation with tape technology and his discovery of phasing provided an
alternative musical direction. Collages of recorded speech and sounds, such as The
Plastic Haircut (1963) and Livelihood (1964), gave way to tape constructions in which
Reich created melodic and rhythmic content from slowly oscillating desynchronizations
of identical tape loops, a technique he calls “phasing.”16 His compositions It’s Gonna
Rain (1965) and Come Out (1966) prefigure The Desert Music’s moral overtones, as they
use samples of speech from a participant in the Civil Rights Movement (Come Out) and a
street preacher comparing the Flood to a nuclear holocaust (It’s Gonna Rain).17
Soon after Reich discovered the “perceptible process” of phasing in these early
tape pieces,18 he was able to envision how such a technique could be executed live using
multiples of the same acoustic instrument or with any combination of live performers and
prerecorded tapes. The results are some of Reich’s best-known compositions, including
Piano Phase/Marimba Phase (1967) and Violin Phase (1967). The composition of these
works coincides with the formation of Reich’s ensemble, Steve Reich and Musicians, a
group that has continued to play a primary role in the performance of Reich’s
compositions. Live performance of his works, even when aided by technology, is very
important to Reich. In fact, he initially feared the process of phasing to be merely an lot of people at Mills College in the 1960s were either interested in Boulez, Stockhausen and Berio, or very interested in John Cage. To tell you the truth, I was interested in neither.” Reich, American Originals, 214.
16Reich, “Early Works,” in Writings on Music: 1965-2000, 20. 17In fact, Reich has explicitly referred to the connection between these works and The Desert
Music: “the early tape pieces ‘It’s Gonna Rain’ and ‘Come Out’ were done knowing that I couldn’t set [William Carlos] Williams.” He continues: “And really, for a long period, up until 1984 or 85, when I actually began work on the ‘Desert Music’ [sic], I felt that that was the only way I could apply Williams’ thinking.” “Steve Reich in Conversation (Stuttgart, 26.2.1986),” interview by Henning Lohner, Interface: Journal of New Music Research 17 (1988): 115.
18Reich’s often-quoted essay “Music as a Gradual Process” (1968) serves as an early artistic statement detailing his interest in compositional techniques that create clearly audible musical transitions, what he calls “perceptible processes.” In Writings on Music, 34-6.
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electronic “gimmick” until he discovered it was possible to apply the technique to
acoustic instruments.19 Reich continued to compose works based on the process of
phasing in the 1960s and early 1970s for a variety of instruments, including the
saxophone (Reed Phase [1966]) and electric organ (Four Organs [1971]).
Reich describes the method of performing his early works as “a very interesting
way of performing because it wasn’t improvising and yet it wasn’t really reading
either.”20 This statement also could be applied to the musical traditions Reich has studied
and admired that employ a ritualistic, communal performance practice that is quite
different from the Western model. Reich studied West African drumming in Ghana in
1970 and explored Balinese gamelan ensemble performance in 1973 and 1974 at the
University of Washington at Seattle and the Center for World Music in Berkley,
respectively. Reich biographer K. Robert Schwarz describes the connections Reich
confirmed between his personal musical style and West African drumming during his
study in Ghana:
What Reich discovered was that the structure of West African music was not that different from his own. His music, too, was polyrhythmic, for the phasing process results in the layering of rhythmic patterns with different downbeats. His music, too, focused on rhythm rather than on melody or harmony. His music, too, used unrelenting repetition as a structural device. His music, too, favoured a percussive severity of timbre. And his music, too, was a ritualistic activity that subjugated personal expression to communal process.21
In West African drumming the line between group musical activity and performance is
blurred. The musical performance typically extends beyond the musicians in the
19Reich, “Steve Reich,” interview by William Duckworth, in Talking Music: Conversations with John Cage, Philip Glass, Laurie Anderson, and Five Generations of American Experimental Composers (New York: Schirmer Books, 1995), 298.
20Ibid. 21Schwarz, Minimalists, 72.
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ensemble, as listeners often participate through movement or spontaneous vocal and
rhythmic accompaniment. Audience participation, however, is unusual in performances
of Western art music, and thus the requirement of audience participation in the communal
musical process in Reich’s works is met through careful listening and interpretation, as is
true with most Western art music. Reich’s style has extended beyond the explicit
connections described above since 1970 (melody and harmony have become increasingly
important), but the rhythmic core of his music, evoking a visceral communication
between performer and audience, remains.
This connection partly explains how The Desert Music, as well as Reich’s other
compositions, involves the listener and why the listener’s perspective is important to
discussion of Reich’s works. As stated above, listening is the audience’s method of
participation in the musical performance in the Western model. Reich’s musical style can
be described as primarily listener oriented because he composes in a way that encourages
listeners to follow a developing musical process (discussed below), while being aware of
a steady rhythmic foundation. Through the compositional techniques that have defined
his style as “minimalist”22 (a single tempo, repetition of limited musical material, slow or
static harmonic movement, and consistency of timbre), Reich creates an underlying
musical fabric listeners may use as a contrasting reference point for new musical events.
22The English composer and critic Michael Nyman coined the term “minimalism” in 1971 to
describe the musical style of Reich, as well as La Monte Young, Terry Riley, and Philip Glass, in his book Experimental Music: Cage and Beyond. While Reich understands the term as a means of categorization, he does not accept it as a description of his work, especially for his works post-1973. He explains, “My job is composing the next piece and not putting myself in some kind of theoretical box.” Reich, Talking Music, 293.
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Making the development and premise of his compositions “perceptible” has been
Reich’s intention since he began working with the single sound fragment of It’s Gonna
Rain. In 1968 Reich wrote in an artistic statement entitled “Music as a Gradual Process,”
which was first presented in conjunction with an exhibition at the Whitney Museum:
I am interested in perceptible processes. I want to be able to hear the process happening throughout the sounding music. To facilitate closely detailed listening a musical process should happen extremely gradually.23
Here Reich identifies close listening as the primary goal of his work as a composer and
therefore the most important occupation his audience can engage in while attending a
performance of his compositions. He also rejects “the use of hidden structural devices in
music,” i.e., inaudible compositional tools such as twelve-tone rows.24 Distinguishing his
work from serial and chance methods of composition, Reich shifts his artistic focus from
the past tense of composition to the present tense of musical performance.
The austerity of Reich’s minimal style does not necessarily indicate that his
compositions are one-dimensional. On the contrary, there is still the possibility of a
personalized listening experience. In “Music as a Gradual Process” Reich explains:
Even when all the cards are on the table and everyone hears what is gradually happening in a musical process, there are still enough mysteries to satisfy us all. These mysteries are the impersonal, unintended, psychoacoustic by-products of the intended process. These might include submelodies heard within repeated melodic patterns, stereophonic effects due to listener location, slight irregularities in performance, difference tones, and so on.25
23Reich, Writings on Music, 34. 24Ibid., 35. 25Ibid.
21
Reich thus rejects the idea of a musical work as a static artifact that, once composed,
never deviates from a single authoritative form. Instead the musical work is a “process”
that can vary based on the conditions of the performance and the perspective of the
listener, much like a kinetic sculpture that changes with the conditions of its environment
and the position of the observer.
But while the listening experience may be personalized, Reich discourages
personal expression by performers in favor of a type of playing that mirrors the collective
experience of the non-Western performance traditions that interested him. This style
encourages performers to listen closely to the development of the piece instead of
focusing on interpretation. Thus Reich developed a method of composition that was
“completely worked out beforehand and yet which did not require … any … performer to
read the score while playing, thus allowing one to become totally involved with listening
while one played.”26 Reich refers to this experience in “Music as a Gradual Process” as
“a particular liberating and impersonal kind of ritual … [that] makes possible the shift of
attention away from he and she and you and me outward toward it.”27 This Zen-like
concentration while listening not only allows performer and audience to be acutely aware
of the musical moment, it frees the listener to contemplate the social concerns Reich
would later incorporate into his compositions.
Reich considers the pieces he composed prior to his trip to Ghana to be “études in
the best sense of the word” as each is a “mechanical, single-minded investigation of one
26Quoted in Michael Nyman, Experimental Music: Cage and Beyond, 2d ed. (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1999), 153. 27Reich, Writings on Music, 36.
22
technique.”28 He returned from Ghana in 1970 with the confidence to expand upon these
foundations and compose works of greater complexity that are still informed by the
process of phasing. Drumming (1971), the first example of these works, is a sectional
piece for a wide variety of percussion instruments that explores rhythmic patterns similar
to those resulting from the phasing process. Without the structure of phasing, Reich had
to rely on his own musical judgment to make compositional decisions. With the help of
his ensemble, in the 1970s (from Drumming to Music for 18 Musicians) Reich listened to
his works as he composed them in order to determine the orchestration and to consider
the “conceptual questions” presented by each piece.29 Listening and intuition are an
important part of his compositional process. Reich has said: “I don’t have any theory that
will override my ear in a particular case. The final arbiter to me is what sounds right;
what makes good musical sense in my ear and in the ears of others.”30 As Reich explored
this new way of composing, he expanded the length, instrumentation, and timbral variety
of each successive composition.
Listening to Drumming during rehearsals suggested an addition in orchestration to
Reich that would allow him to incorporate an instrument that captivated him in It’s
Gonna Rain and Come Out. He added the human voice to Drumming; Music for Mallet
Instruments, Voices, and Organ (1973); Music for 18 Musicians; and Music for a Large
Ensemble (1978). Each includes parts for female voices doubling instrumental lines
using wordless syllables, or “vocalise.” Reich notes that in these works “the singers
28Reich, Talking Music, 303. 29Ibid., 306. 30Reich, “Steve Reich,” interview by Cole Gagne and Tracy Caras (April 13, 1980), in
Soundpieces: Interviews with American Composers, with an introduction and essays by Nicolas Slonimsky and Gilbert Chase (Metuchen, N.J. and London: The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 1982), 307.
23
become another ‘instrumental’ sound in the ensemble,” thus achieving the unity of timbre
that he desired in a traditional text setting.31 Indeed, the presence of vocal lines in these
pieces foreshadows Reich’s first text-setting, Tehillim (1981), a setting of four Psalms in
Hebrew composed after Reich’s intensive study of Hebrew cantillation in the late 1970s.
As discussed below, Reich’s interest in text-settings predates his early tape pieces, but he
found that his early attempts sacrificed too much of the natural rhythms of speech. Only
after solidifying his own musical style, incorporating elements of all the musical
traditions he explored along the way, did Reich discover the compositional tools needed
to realize the unity of music and text he had initially envisioned.
Since the 1980s, and the composition of Tehillim and The Desert Music, speech
and text have figured prominently into Reich’s compositions. Different Trains (1988)
uses tape recordings of Reich’s childhood governess, a retired Pullman porter, and three
Holocaust survivors to connect Reich’s personal experience of traveling by train between
his divorced parents in New York and Los Angeles during World War II to the
experience of Jews in Europe traveling by train to Nazi concentration camps. The
musical material for the string quartet that accompanies the tape recorded speech is
derived from what Reich calls the speech melody of the spoken dialogue, that is, the
natural melodic content suggested by spoken phrases. Reich also used this compositional
technique in The Cave (1993). Combining live music; settings of biblical texts; and
video interviews of Israelis, Palestinians, and Americans; The Cave is a unique musical
31Reich, “Music and Language,” based on an interview by Barbara Basting, in Writings on Music,
198. This style of singing is also found in The Desert Music, and, in fact, the tension between wordless syllables and the complete words of the text underscores the theme of the difficulties of communication in that work.
24
theater experience that explores the roots of religious conflict in the Middle East.
Different Trains and The Cave both realize the documentary and musical implications of
recorded speech first suggested by It’s Gonna Rain and Come Out. 32
These two important works not only reflect Reich’s early desire to incorporate
text and speech into his compositions, they also foreshadow the socially conscious
subject matter of Reich’s compositions with text. Three Tales (2001), like Different
Trains and The Cave, comments on an ethical situation and focuses on creating
awareness rather than delivering a message. Reich imparts this position in his carefully
worded description of this three-part music and video documentary performance piece
(another collaboration with Beryl Korot). Instead of warning the audience about the
potentially disastrous consequences of technology, Reich writes that the work “reflects on
the growth and implications of technology during the twentieth century,” posing
questions rather than providing answers.33 The three sections, or “tales,” Hindenberg,
Bikini, and Dolly, chronologically discuss the development of war technology, atomic
testing, and animal cloning using documentary interviews and sung texts derived from
historical documents. Reich also writes that the arch structure of the middle section
creates “a kind of cyclical meditation on the documentary events,” thus further framing
32Other recent compositions with text or tape include Proverb (1995), Know what is above you (1999), Three Tales (2001), You Are (Variations) (2004), and Daniel Variations (2006). Proverb is a setting of a single sentence by philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein (“How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life!”) for three sopranos and two tenors, accompanied by two vibraphones and two electric organs. Wittgenstein was the subject of Reich’s senior thesis at Cornell. Reich was interested in Wittgenstein’s “idea that philosophical problems could be understood by looking at how we normally use language.” Reich, “Proverb (1995),” in Writings on Music, 193. It seems Reich’s affinity with Wittgenstein has continued throughout his career as he has attempted to address philosophical questions while simultaneously exploring the musical implications of unconscious speech melody. The texts of Know what is above you and You Are (Variations) consist of similarly philosophical aphorisms in Hebrew and English. Three Tales and Daniel Variations are discussed below.
33Reich, “Three Tales (1998-2002),” in Writings on Music, 204.
25
his artistic position.34 More recently, Daniel Variations (2006) memorializes Daniel
Pearl, an American journalist murdered by Islamic militants in Pakistan, using texts from
Pearl’s own writings as well as quotations from the Book of Daniel.
Thus The Desert Music is an early example of a type of composition that has
occupied Reich in more recent decades as it incorporates both text and socially conscious
subject matter. While the impetus for composition was a commission for an evening-
length choral work from the West German Radio, Cologne, the subject and text were of
Reich’s own choosing. Reich first set out to compose a work that addressed the subject
of atomic warfare from a documentary perspective. He considered using a recording of
President Truman’s speech after the dropping of the atomic bomb in WWII or a recording
of Adolf Hitler. But after reading “The Orchestra” by William Carlos Williams, Reich
realized he could address this subject more obliquely by setting excerpts of this and two
other poems by Williams.35 The poetic selections he chose were those that moved him
personally.36 Reich had for a long time been interested in Dr. Williams (1883-1963), a
poet who abandoned traditional poetic meters in order to more accurately represent the
rhythms of natural American speech:37
My interest in using spoken language as a basis for music began as the indirect result of reading the poetry of William Carlos Williams in the 1950s. I tried to set his poetry to music and found I only “froze” its flexible American speech-derived
34Ibid. 35Reich, American Composers, 47-8. 36Reich tells Edward Strickland that “the criterion … for selecting the fragments was ‘Can I say
this wholeheartedly? Whenever I feel myself drifting off, I’m just going to drop it.’ ” Ibid., 48. 37Reich reveals the origins of his interest in Williams in his notes on The Desert Music: “I have
loved Dr. Williams’s poetry since I was 16 years old, and I picked up a copy of his long poem, Paterson, just because I was fascinated by the symmetry of his name.” Reich, “The Desert Music – Notes by the Composer,” in Writings on Music, 124. The arch form of The Desert Music is another example of Reich’s interest in symmetry.
26
rhythms. Later, in the early 1960s, it occurred to me that using actual tape recordings of Americans speaking might serve as a basis for a musical piece that would utilize the same sources as Williams’s poetry.38
These pieces based on tape recordings led to Reich’s interest in phasing and thus all of
the instrumental compositions of his career prior to The Desert Music. The Desert Music
is therefore an important milestone in Reich’s career, as he was finally able to compose a
work he visualized as a very young composer, one that was motivated by a personal
emotional reaction to art.
The solution to what Reich viewed as rigidly unnatural text setting was constant
meter change.39 This technique allowed him to shift between rhythmic groupings of twos
and threes as dictated by the text.40 In many ways, the music of The Desert Music grew
out of the text. Reich selected and arranged the poetic excerpts before he composed any
music, and that arrangement determined the overall musical form of the work: ABCBA,
with the third “C” movement also divided into three distinct sections, the first and third
sharing the same text. Similarly, the two “B” movements share the same text; only the
bookend “A” movements deviate from this trend. The “A” and “B” movements are also
unified through tempo, musical material, and a common harmonic cycle, as are the first
and third sections of movement “C.” One musical element common to all movements is
a percussive pulse. While the pulse may serve different musical and metaphorical
38Reich, “Music and Language,” Writings on Music, 198. 39Ibid. 40While Reich first used constant meter change to set the Hebrew of the psalms in Tehillim, he
borrowed the idea of metrical ambiguity from African music for earlier compositions. Reich first saw transcriptions of African music in 12/8 in the early 1960s in A.M. Jones’ book Studies in African Music. Reich, Talking Music, 294. This meter, which he used in both Drumming and Music for 18 Musicians, can be divided into groups of 3 or 4, allowing for the juxtaposition of rhythmic patterns of either grouping. The Desert Music, while a new compositional direction for Reich, uses many of the compositional trademarks found in these earlier compositions.
27
functions in each of the movements, the pulse is a distinct compositional trademark
connecting this work to many of Reich’s earlier compositions.
The poetic lines in all of the movements except the outer two are taken from “The
Orchestra,” a poem in which music, as both a destructive and unifying force, is the
central metaphor. Appropriately, The Desert Music was originally scored for a full
orchestra, including two pianos and seven types of percussion instruments comprising 89
members in all. A chorus of 27, with three voices on each part, completes the
ensemble.41 The scope of these performing forces prompted critic Mark Dery to remark
at the time of the premiere: “The Desert Music should put coffin nails in any further
quibblings about whether or not Reich’s work has escaped the ‘minimal’ pigeonhole.”42
But to be solely a minimalist was never Reich’s intention, as the so-called “minimalist”
approach resulted from Reich following his own intuition as a composer. He tells
Henning Lohner: “I write for myself, hoping that if it interests me it will interest you.”43
As this study aims to illustrate, The Desert Music is both a personal work and one
that achieves a sense of universality. Reich uses his own artistic influences and musical
style to address a common social problem, bringing in the outside world through the text.
Reich does not neglect his personal compositional goals, and he still invites varied
individual responses to the work by rejecting a definitive narrative. It is appropriate then
that The Desert Music should be the subject of a study about integrating the personal
listening experience into a critical discussion of meaning. In The Desert Music Reich
41Reich arranged a more modest chamber version for 10 voices and 20 instruments in 1986. 42Reich, “As if I Were Writing Directly Before God,” 53. 43Reich, “Steve Reich in Conversation with Henning Lohner,” 119.
28
employs an ensemble of unprecedented diversity to integrate his own personal
compositional goals with an invitation to experience community. By choosing to open
the work with the words “Begin, my friend,” Reich initiates a conversation between the
listener and himself.
29
Chapter Two “Well, shall we / think or listen?”
Selected Literature Review
There is a marked absence of published critical studies on The Desert Music given
the work’s length and complexity and Reich’s current popularity.44 Excluding more
general descriptions of the work in books on the composer, those reviewed here (three
excerpts from two books and a dissertation, one “detailed analysis” in a dissertation, and
one article from a journal devoted to interdisciplinary studies) are the most
comprehensive extant studies. The lack of critical discussion of the work may of course
be attributable to its relatively recent composition and also, due to the large ensemble
required for performance, to its relatively infrequent performance.45 Yet it may also be
possible that the work’s popularity has been affected by the lack of critical attention. The
studies discussed here reveal how varying approaches to The Desert Music result in
different assessments of what is important about the piece and also how much of the
work has yet to be adequately explored in music criticism.
Two short articles published over ten years ago briefly consider the relationship
between the text and Reich’s musical setting. Composer and critic Joseph Coroniti
devotes a chapter to The Desert Music in his 1992 book Poetry as Text in Twentieth-
Century Vocal Music: From Stravinsky to Reich. The chapter, entitled “Scoring the
‘Absolute Rhythm’ of William Carlos Williams: Steve Reich’s The Desert Music,” aims
442006, the year of Reich’s 70th birthday, saw tribute concerts in several countries and coverage of
these events in major media outlets, including the New Yorker and National Public Radio. 45Reich’s professional website (www.stevereich.com) lists five performances of versions of The
Desert Music in 2006-7. By comparison, there are 34 listed previous and upcoming performances of Music for 18 Musicians during these two years and 67 performances of all or Parts One or Two of Drumming.
30
to support Coroniti’s assertion that the composer “realizes in his score the primacy of
what Ezra Pound calls the poem’s ‘absolute rhythm’ ” in his settings of poetic excerpts
by Williams.46 Absolute rhythm, a rather abstract poetic theory also recognized by T.S.
Elliot, is related to the musical rhythm of a line or passage of poetry. This characteristic
can be differentiated from poetic meter in that it contributes another dimension of
meaning to the words of the poem, communicated through the musical rhythm of the
words as they are spoken, beyond their linguistic meaning. According to the T.S. Elliot
quotation provided by Coroniti, absolute rhythm can be perceived by the poet prior to the
composition of the poem and in this way will “bring to birth” the poetic image.47
Coroniti praises Reich’s attention to absolute rhythm because this poetic
characteristic “offers the composer a way of communicating poetic meaning without
resorting to excessive imitation” of “external, or illustrative,” poetic references, such as a
musical representation of gunfire in a setting of a poem about war.48 Instead Reich is free
to realize more subtle internal correspondences that serve the composer’s own expressive
goals. Coroniti argues, for example, that in Movements II and IV Reich uses the vocalise
syllable “De” to musically represent both the absolute rhythm and the image of the poetic
lines that precedes these vocalise passages: “The mind / is listening.” Reich “skillfully
expresses an abstract poetic idea that is beyond conventional imitation”49 and thus is able
46Joseph Coroniti, “Scoring the ‘Absolute Rhythm’ of William Carlos Williams: Steve Reich’s
The Desert Music,” in Poetry as Text in Twentieth-Century Vocal Music: From Stravinsky to Reich. Studies in the History and Interpretation of Music, no. 35 (Lewiston, N.Y.: The Edwin Mellen Press, 1992), 19.
47Ibid. 48Ibid., 19-20. 49Ibid., 29.
31
to “penetrate the ‘inmost heart’ of the poem.”50 Because, Coroniti argues, Reich is
motivated by his personal “conceptual” response to William’s poems, he creates “an
innovative and meaningful” composition instead of a musical setting that is “trying to
become the poem.”51 While Coroniti accomplishes his clearly stated goal of
demonstrating the subtlety and perceptiveness of Reich’s setting, he does not discuss
what The Desert Music means as a separate artistic work. But by recognizing that The
Desert Music communicates ideas beyond Reich’s minimalist compositional techniques
and acknowledging that “music with a text cannot be absolute,” he provides a foundation
upon which future critics may assess the work’s significance.52
Both Coroniti and Kathy Rugoff (in her 1992 article “Readings of William Carlos
Williams by Contemporary American Composers” published in the Yearbook of
Interdisciplinary Studies in the Fine Arts) consider the work of Lawrence Kramer in their
respective articles on The Desert Music. Kramer’s 1984 book Music and Poetry: The
Nineteenth Century and After examines the correspondences between music and poetry in
settings composed during this time period and observes, “this relationship, far from being
harmonious, is instead antagonistic.”53 While Coroniti offers The Desert Music as an
example of this type of deconstructive setting noted by Kramer, Rugoff instead argues
that in The Desert Music “the contrast between music and words and their particular
mingling in a musical setting creates a third text” in which the meaning of music and text
50Ibid., 27. 51Ibid., 20-1. 52Ibid., 25. 53Kathy Rugoff, “Readings of William Carlos Williams by Contemporary Composers,” Yearbook
of Interdisciplinary Studies in the Fine Arts 3 (1992): 36.
32
cannot be considered separately.54 This in particular is an important point for The Desert
Music, where the composer has chosen specific excerpts of poems and arranged them to
suit his own program, thus distancing the poetic excerpts from their associated meanings
in the original poems.
Unfortunately Rugoff’s subsequent analysis fails to present a cohesive reading of
this “third text.” As the analysis proceeds, Rugoff abandons the idea of a “third text” and
instead describes how Reich musically adapts the themes of Williams’ poetry. She
argues that The Desert Music “joins the impulses towards life and death”55 in the same
way that the metaphor of music in “The Orchestra” is “associated with the human drive
toward life and death.”56 In addition, her descriptions of musical events are brief and,
from the perspective of a music critic, somewhat vague.57 Despite a lack of precise
supporting evidence, Rugoff makes some pertinent observations that could guide further
studies of The Desert Music. She recognizes that The Desert Music “marks an important
step in the course of Reich’s career” as it “extends some of the melodic and rhythmic
motifs” of Tehillim and “anticipates the referentiality and the message” of Different
Trains.58 Rugoff also comments on the artistic relationship between Williams and Reich
54Ibid., 38. 55Ibid., 46. 56Ibid., 44. 57For example, Rugoff writes, “…light pizzicati sounds in the percussion section are voiced in
each movement and open and close the piece.” Ibid., 45. A music critic would not find this statement to be an appropriate characterization of the work’s ubiquitous percussive pulse because it does not extend beyond surface description and because the term “pizzicati” usually applies only to string instruments. While statements such as the one quoted above may be distracting for specific audiences, it should be noted that Rugoff’s conclusions about The Desert Music are quite perceptive. Furthermore, this issue is a reminder of the difficulty all writers encounter when attempting prose descriptions of music.
58Ibid., 43.
33
observing, “it is the poet’s compassion that has engaged the musician.”59 Thus the “third
text” created in the intersection between music and text is a fruitful area for further
analysis.
Mark Stephen Bennett’s “detailed analysis” of The Desert Music, completed as a
D.M.A. document in 1993, presents an admirably thorough exploration of the harmonic
underpinnings of the work but devotes little space to the complicated relationship
between music and text. Instead Bennett seems content with perhaps the most basic
reading of the work as a message that “implies the ever-impending ‘desert’ of a nuclear
holocaust should man not heed the warnings of both the composer and the poet.”60
Bennett argues that this meaning is implied “both musically and textually,” yet his
analysis is consumed by the discovery of a mathematical formula in which the numbers
4-6-12 “and other factors of the number twelve, arranged in combinations of additive,
subtractive, and multiplicative sets, constitute a rational, pristine perfection at the
foundation of The Desert Music.”61 It is not clear how Bennett aims to reconcile the
disconnection between this foundation of perfection with what he recognizes to be the
work’s apocalyptic message.62
59Ibid. 60Mark Stephen Bennett, “A Brief History of Minimalism: Its Aesthetic Concepts and Origins and
a Detailed Analysis of Steve Reich's The Desert Music” (D.M.A. doc., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1993), 45.
61Ibid., iv. 62It may be possible that Bennett does not see a need to consider the music and text on equal terms
because he does not entirely approve of Reich’s part-writing technique. For example, he believes that “structural considerations take precedence over textual” at certain points, “diminishing the value of the individual line and its meaning.” Ibid., 44. While Bennett concludes that this phenomenon is “indicative of the composer’s instrumental background … and likewise … of his occasionally awkward handling of voice and lyric” (Ibid.), Reich explains in his program note that The Desert Music intentionally “addresses that basic ambiguity between what the text says, and its pure sensuous sound.” Reich, Writings on Music, 124.
34
There is no doubt that the formula exists; Bennett provides impressively detailed
systematic evidence of its existence. However, it is possible that the formula is an
unintentional by-product of other intentional compositional decisions, such as the
metrical ambiguity of the 12/8 time signature (often notated as 6/4 or 3/2), which can be
divided into groups of three or four, or the alternating groups of two and three employed
by Reich in order to achieve a more natural text-setting. Since Reich rejects “[t]he use of
hidden structural devices in music” and values the contribution of his intuition to the
compositional process, it seems appropriate to question whether the mathematical
formula is the most significant aspect of the work.63 Indeed Bennett recognizes that “The
Desert Music is worthy of critical examination and this analysis can only begin to reveal
the full depth of a truly remarkable accomplishment.”64 This thesis is inspired by his
thorough approach to the work and aims to produce a similarly methodical consideration
of both music and text, albeit from a less scientific perspective.
The contradiction in Bennett’s analysis (mentioned above) is an example of what
may happen when the critic excludes from analysis his intuitive emotional response to the
music. Robert Wallace Fink recognizes that this problem plagues musical analysis in his
1994 dissertation entitled “ ‘Arrows of Desire’: Long-Range Linear Structure and the
Transformation of Musical Energy.” Referring to the reductive “transcendental
organicism” of theorist Heinrich Schenker, Fink advocates a focus on listener response:
63Reich, “Music as a Gradual Process,” Writings on Music, 34. In the preface to the 1974 edition
of his Writings on Music, Reich writes, “The truth is, musical intuition is at the rock bottom level of everything I’ve ever done,” (Ibid., x.) a statement that he reaffirms in the preface to the 2000 edition. Ibid., vii.
64Bennett, “A Brief History of Minimalism,” 139.
35
It may make intuitive sense to claim that music’s putative organic perfection can exist objectively, without reference to any actual listener (the Urlinie is there, heard or not). But it feels to me certain that what music does —the energy it controls — has to be tied up with its effect on the listening subject. Before we can analyze how musical mechanisms work, we must take a clear-eyed look at how music works on us.65
Like this thesis, Fink proposes a new approach to analysis in an attempt to qualitatively
describe the visceral effect of musical compositions. His method tracks the development,
transformation, and final release of musical energy. Those readers familiar with The
Desert Music may immediately recognize why Fink chose to include the work in his
study, as the constant motion that pervades each movement seems at its heart to be a
musical representation of physical energy.
What Fink’s analysis reveals about The Desert Music is that two compositional
“building blocks” (what he calls terraced ostinatos and blocks and levers) are actively
involved in both pushing forward and delaying “a large-scale linear ascent” that can be
traced through non-functional harmonic motion of the soprano line.66 This linear motion
pervades both short-term “blocks” of musical material and as well as the entire work.67
Through this analysis, Fink indeed is able to describe “how music works on us” by
confirming a clearly audible phenomenon in concrete theoretical analysis.68 Still Fink’s
65Robert Wallace Fink, “ ‘Arrows of Desire’: Long-Range Linear Structure and the
Transformation of Musical Energy” (Ph.D. diss., University of California at Berkeley, 1994), 17. 66Ibid., 271-2. 67Fink remarks: “the linear/harmonic mechanism seems to be constructed on … [a] global scale.”
Ibid., 276. 68I often noted in my listening analysis moments in which the “build” to a musical climax was
abruptly abandoned so that the process could begin again (for example see the entry in the “Effect” column at 3:15 in Table 3.1). Fink explains how this perception is achieved musically by tracing the notes of the soprano line throughout Movement III. Ibid., 272.
36
excellent work has only begun to explain how The Desert Music affects the listener.
What remains to be considered is both the music and the message.
Observations made by musicologist Denise Von Glahn confirm my evaluation
that The Desert Music has been underserved by purely theoretical methods of analysis:
Assessments of Reich’s music that focus exclusively upon its systemization, method, precision, and formal balance tell only part of the story. Perhaps more affecting and enduring is the deeply human quality that inspires and permeates many of Reich’s works. If his music endures, this is why.69
In The Desert Music, Von Glahn locates this humanity in Reich’s engagement with the
text. When setting the poetic excerpts, Reich “infused his music with William’s [sic]
moral urgency.”70 However, Von Glahn recognizes that the work’s relationship to
Williams’ concerns about atomic warfare is more nuanced than a warning to humanity.
She notes that “nowhere in ‘The Orchestra’ does Williams directly mention the bomb,”
and accordingly Reich’s setting musically highlights “the ambiguity of what is stated and
what is implied.”71 Von Glahn uncovers these elements of the work because of her
approach. The “place” in the work, the desert metaphor, provides an explanation for the
apparent contradiction between the music and the text left unexplained by Bennett’s
analysis:
Perhaps the greatest ambiguity of the piece goes beyond chameleon-like meters and harmonies … and relates to Reich’s larger experience at White Sands Desert.
69Denise Von Glahn, The Sounds of Place: Music and the American Cultural Landscape
(Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2003), 252. Von Glahn’s work explores musical representations of places on the premise that “places can inspire art, and that musical response can, at some level, evoke those places.” Ibid., 2. She examines The Desert Music, along with three of Reich’s other compositions, in a chapter entitled “A Sounding Place: America Redefined.”
70Ibid., 257. 71Ibid., 258-9. Musical examples of this ambiguity include flexible meters and the indefinite
nature of the work’s “cadential activity.”
37
Like the pure and beautiful landscape that hid nuclear missile silos, Reich’s rich, luminous, shimmering sound mass appears to be at odds with the ominous text.72
In the end, Von Glahn believes Reich also includes a message of hope. While the arch
form suggests the questions addressed in The Desert Music “won’t go away,” the work’s
“final transcendent sounds” indicate “that light can overtake darkness.”73
My listening analysis that follows, conducted before I read Von Glahn’s work on
The Desert Music, highlights many of the aspects that appear in Von Glahn’s discussion
of the work. Specifically my analysis also discusses how ambiguity pervades both music
and text.74 While Von Glahn examines how The Desert Music recalls a sense of “place,”
my study aims to present an assessment of The Desert Music’s meaning based on the
systematic documentation of my listening experience. The fact that Von Glahn and I
have similar ideas is not in my mind problematic; instead it demonstrates the viability of
the subjective listening analysis as a tool for music criticism. As the discussion of
musical communication that follows will demonstrate, all assessments of meaning are
subjective, but two different listeners may hear a work similarly because of common
cultural experiences.75 My approach to The Desert Music allows me to consider the work
differently than any of the studies reviewed here because I have systematically
documented my experience of both music and text.
72Ibid., 260-1. According to Von Glahn, Reich “lived for a time” in the vicinity of the White
Sands Desert missile testing facility. Ibid., 12. 73Ibid., 262-3. 74See “Locating the Desert” in Chapter 3 of this work. 75For example, Von Glahn also notes how The Desert Music references time in Movement III very
similarly to my own analysis. I write on page 54 of this document “the alternating fifths in the xylophone that open Movements IIIA and C reminded me of a ticking clock,” while Von Glahn remarks “a xylophone struck with hard rubber mallets ‘ticks’ time on a metaphorical Doomsday clock.” The Sounds of Place, 262.
38
Chapter Three “The / theme is difficult / but no more difficult / than the facts to be / resolved.”
I. Musical Meaning: Definition and Theory My claim is that the significance of The Desert Music is better understood from a
listening-based analysis, as opposed to a theoretical, score-based analysis. As evidence, I
offer my personal analysis of the work in listening tables (see the Appendix),
accompanied by a prose summary of patterns that I observed from these tables (in section
three of this chapter). However, it is necessary to preface the listening analysis with a
brief discussion of a theory of musical meaning (relevant to this work) in order to explain
how perceptions of musical meaning can vary based on the perspective of the approach.
My work shares with new ethnography studies a focused self-consciousness, with the
hope that such a self-study might help reveal aspects of commonly experienced nonverbal
processes. This study is aimed towards addressing one of the troubling results of
traditional musicological discourse, in which Western art music is “defined by the
passive and increasingly private consumption of commodified products rather than
through the active, social processes of participatory performance.”76 I aim to invite
critical discussion of The Desert Music’s meaning by presenting my observations in this
work.
Firstly, my study proceeds from the perspective that meaning is not an inherent
property of any piece of music, nor any physical object, concept, emotion, event, or
situation. Rather, meaning is a concept assigned to such entities based on contextual
76Nicholas Cook, “Between Process and Product: Music and/as Performance,” Music Theory
Online 7, no. 2 (April 2001): par 6.
39
relationships to other physical or intangible objects and ideas, as determined individually
or collectively by the observer or observers. Ethnomusicologist Travis Jackson, in an
article on determining meaning in rock music, defines meaning as “something that
humans individually and collectively create as they navigate the shifting terrain in which
sounds, symbols and concepts are embedded.”77 Additionally Jackson argues that
meanings are not automatic assessments but rather that meanings “emerge from processes
of interpretation, from the often unconscious ways in which we relate individual terms or
elements to larger patterns and structures.”78 To follow the line of reasoning proposed by
Jackson, musicologists, by writing about music and publishing their critiques, are thus
involved in collectively determining the meaning of a musical work, even if they do not
explicitly acknowledge this fact. These meanings are related to, by comparison or
contrast, existing musical works or established concepts (musical or otherwise). Theorist
Leonard B. Meyer, quoting Morris R. Cohen, explains in his seminal book Emotion and
Meaning in Music that “anything acquires meaning if it is connected with, or indicates, or
refers to, something beyond itself, so that its full nature points to and is revealed in that
connection.”79 The acknowledgement of these external references, whether or not they
are specifically intended by the composer, is thus entirely dependent on the listener’s
perception of these relationships (a point that will be discussed later).
The definition of musical meaning as a contextual assessment of relationships to
external references suggests that ideas and concepts are communicated through the
77Travis Jackson, “Spooning Good Singing Gum: Meaning, Association, and Interpretation in Rock Music,” Current Musicology 69 (2000): 9.
78Ibid., 10. 79Leonard B. Meyer, Emotion and Meaning in Music (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1956), 34.
40
sounds of a musical work, prompting further consideration of how music communicates
concepts. While a full review of the literature regarding musical communication is
beyond the scope of this thesis, discussion of a few points related to this topic will help
contextualize the listening analysis that follows. I find most useful the views of Meyer.
His understanding of musical meaning is derived from the psychological theory of
emotions, namely that “emotion or affect is aroused when a tendency to respond is
arrested or inhibited.”80 Meyer contends that the main method of human communication
is dependent upon learned emotional behavior.81 In music, this learned behavior
corresponds to expectations formed from “the general system of beliefs relevant to the
style of the work.”82 These systems can be learned from prior musical experience or
suggested by the work itself. When expectations about the resolution of musical events
are unfulfilled, the listener’s response becomes self-conscious, and this awareness
prompts an emotional reaction.83 It is this cognitive process that creates what Meyer
terms “embodied musical meaning”:84
One musical event (be it a tone, a phrase, or a whole section) has meaning because it points to and makes us expect another musical event. … Embodied musical meaning is, in short, a product of expectation. If, on the basis of past experience, a present stimulus leads us to expect a more or less definite consequent musical event, then that stimulus has meaning.85
80Ibid., 14. 81Ibid., 17. 82Ibid., 29. 83Ibid., 24. 84Meyer also describes a category for metaphoric or symbolic references in music. These
“designative” meanings are perceived when “a stimulus … indicate[s] events or consequences which are different from itself in kind, as when a word designates or points to an object or action which is not itself a word.” Ibid., 35.
85Ibid.
41
Reactions to musical stimuli continue to take place in the mind of the listener as the piece
proceeds. As expected outcomes of musical events (“hypothetical” meanings) are
confirmed or denied (resulting in “evident” meanings), the listener must continually
reassess the relationships of these meanings on “several architectonic levels.”86 This
experience culminates in the “determinate” meaning of a musical work, which is the
understanding of the “work as a total experience … when all the meanings which the
stimulus has had in the particular experience are realized and their relationships to one
another comprehended as fully as possible.”87
Thus the individual listener and his or her private mental activities are the first
stages in the process of creating musical meaning, a process that later continues in the
realm of public critical discourse. Additionally, Meyer does not discriminate between
intellectual and affective responses to musical stimuli; both make valid contributions
towards determining the designative meanings of a musical work. He argues, “thinking
and feeling need not be viewed as polar opposites but as different manifestations of a
single psychological process.”88 Thus the determination of “whether a piece of music
gives rise to affective experience or to intellectual experience depends upon the
disposition and training of the listener.”89
Meyer’s theory of how music “means” lends support for the inclusion of
listening-based analyses in critical discussions of musical works. Meyer asserts that
while observed meanings are individualized, “the relationship itself is not to be located in
86Ibid., 37-8. 87Ibid. 88Ibid., 39. 89Ibid., 40.
42
the mind of the perceiver.”90 Rather, these seemingly subjective perceptions are derived
from “real connections existing objectively in culture.”91 Recognizing the common
origin of all determinations of musical meaning, whether stated by novice or highly-
educated listeners, compels one to consider how all opinions may offer valuable
contributions to critical discussions.
Since musical meanings can be objective, as Meyer argues, many theorists have
considered if music is in fact a language and whether music communicates specific ideas
in the same way. Jos Kessels allows that these attempts at semiotic analysis are not
entirely misguided:
Music has some properties that make it particularly akin to the forms of concept-processing in language: music, too, is bound to the limits of time-sequence, and music, too, consists of a limited set of easily manageable elements, perfectly suitable for the building of complex structures and, so, for the construction of meaning.92
In fact Kessels concludes that comparisons with language may indeed offer some insight
into the question of how music creates meaning. However, the problem with direct
comparisons to language is the difficulty of “fixing the precise reference to musical
terms,” as the same terms often belong to several musical vocabularies but may connote
different meanings within these different lexicons.93 In addition, there appears to be a
greater complexity to musical communication; in music’s “double syntax,” adjectives
90Ibid., 34. 91Ibid. 92Kessels, “Is Music a Language of Emotions?” Music Review 47 (1986-7): 206. 93Ibid., 214.
43
“may be ‘pronounced’ or expressed at the very same moment, together with the subject”
thus increasing the expressive structuring potential of music.94
For other theorists these qualities of ambiguity and complexity are not a
communicative disadvantage but, rather, are assets. Ian Cross accepts that musical
meaning is “inherently ambiguous” as it “gather[s] meaning from the contexts within
which it happens and in turn contribut[es] meaning to those contexts.”95 However, this
quality of “floating intentionality” serves a significant purpose in human communication:
Music's attributes of embodying, entraining, and transposably intentionalizing time in sound and action … enable it to be efficacious in contexts where language may be unproductive or impotent precisely because of its capacity to be interpreted unambiguously.96
Music, according to Cross, allows humans to express ideas and emotions in ways that
language cannot, possibly because of the “double syntax” described by Kessels. This
ambiguity also leads Cross to recognize the value of the individual in the social process
of musical performance; since “music allows each participant to interpret its significances
individually and independently without the integrity of the collective musical behaviour
being undermined,” it provides “a social and mental space for the unhindered exploration
of the capacity to mean.”97
Since The Desert Music has a text, some of the “inherent” ambiguity in the
communication of its meaning is relieved by the association of words with the music.
Yet from the discussion above it is apparent that musical events do have the potential to
94Ibid., 209. 95Ian Cross, “Musical Meaning, Ambiguity and Evolution,” in Musical Communication, ed.
Dorothy Miell, Raymond MacDonald, and David J. Hargreaves, forward by Evelyn Glennie (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 30.
96Ibid., 30, 35. 97Ibid., 36, 41.
44
communicate fairly specific ideas through objective cultural connections. Therefore it is
possible to determine the external references suggested in The Desert Music simply by
listening.98 How these ideas are interpreted, however, is dependent upon several factors
unique to each individual listener.
Cross, Kessels, and Meyer all agree that in order for communication to take place
there must be some “body of knowledge” understood by both composer and listener.99
Often this knowledge comes from education in a particular musical tradition and
information about the composer or work that the listener has acquired prior to attending a
performance. For example, any amount of knowledge a listener might have about the
traditions of Western art music, Steve Reich’s compositional philosophy and other works,
or specific information about The Desert Music gathered from reviews or program notes
will influence the determinate meaning of The Desert Music established by that particular
listener. But even if two listeners have equal access to and understanding of this very
same knowledge, it does not necessarily mean that both listeners will arrive at the same
meaning, even if the two listeners were to consider one particular performance of a work.
Additionally, a listener’s musical tastes and emotional responses to the music may
influence their opinions. Thus if listeners are not fond of music that is not explicitly
tonal, they might not feel that The Desert Music effectively communicates anything at all.
And if listeners are particularly concerned about the threat of nuclear warfare, they might
98In this context, “external” applies to metaphoric references. 99Cross, “Music, Ambiguity and Evolution,” 31. For Meyer, communication “arises out of the
universe of discourse which in aesthetics is called style.” Emotion and Meaning in Music, 42. Kessels gives an example from the movie The Sting in which members of a gang use a specific gesture to indicate their involvement in a plot, a gesture that means something more benign to those outside of the gang. “Is Music a Language of Emotions?” 201.
45
feel that Reich and Williams’ interest in this subject is the most important aspect of The
Desert Music and may be quite moved by the suggestion of an air raid siren in Movement
III. Finally, the approach to analysis undoubtedly influences determinations of meaning.
As discussed in Chapter 1, use of the score in analysis can lead a critic to value musical
structure over symbolic references in critical discussions.
But while multiple meanings are possible, this does not mean that there are an
unlimited number of meanings that are equally plausible. Jackson writes, “particular
items do not so much determine the kinds of meanings that can be attached to them as
their qualities constrain the kinds of meanings we construct.”100 Thus as composers make
compositional decisions, they are not so much forming the meanings determined by the
listener as they are narrowing the field of possible meanings. These possibilities are then
debated in the domain of social discourse. It is by comparing personal observations with
the observations of others that individual opinions are legitimized. Jackson argues that
while individual determinations of meaning can vary widely, “those meanings seem
appropriate only to the degree that they are shared or thought to be compelling by
others.”101
So perhaps it is not necessary, nor may it be possible, to definitively determine the
meaning of a particular work. Following an observation Nicholas Cook has made about a
musical work and its performance, the process of discussing musical meaning may even
be more meaningful than the product, the collective accepted opinion.102 While each
100Jackson, “Spooning Good Singing Gum,” 10. 101Ibid. 102Cook, “Between Process and Product,” par. 27, 31.
46
listener’s opinions are the first step in this process, R. Keith Sawyer argues that the social
aspect of experiencing music is what makes music itself meaningful:
Music is fundamentally social and communicative — after all, all music has its origins in improvisational group performance. Even when we’re listening to music at home alone, it still taps into our social brain, evoking the social world that we all have within us, the internalized social world that defines us as human beings.103
Sawyer argues that analysis of musical communication should include a way to describe
these social references encoded in our brains:
Instead of structural approaches that focus on notes, syllables, and phrase structures, to explain musical communication we need a new approach based on the semiotic concept of indexicality. An index is a sign which requires an association between the sign and its object.104
Kessels reaches a similar conclusion from his comparison of music and language:
The full impact [of a musical work] can be explained only by showing how all the different individual terms and their continuously changing interplay build up to an intricate and detailed symbolic representation of one or more complex emotional states and their development.105
The listening analysis of The Desert Music that follows is an attempt to document this
“continuously changing interplay” of musical events, experienced by a single listener and
against which other experiences might be measured.
103R. Keith Sawyer, “Music and Conversation,” in Musical Communication, ed. Dorothy Miell,
Raymond MacDonald, and David J. Hargreaves, forward by Evelyn Glennie (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), 56.
104Ibid., 54. 105Kessels, “Is Music a Language of Emotions?” 216.
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II. The Listening Analysis
If the subjective listening experience is to enter the realm of objective critical
discourse in music, there must be some way to document the mental processes of the
listener in order to offer concrete evidence that will support a listener’s opinion of
musical meaning. The listening tables that follow detail the usually unconscious mental
processes that take place while listening to a piece of music chronologically. In this
manner the relationship between musical events and their significance may be
specifically identified for an individual listener, thereby explaining how a listener
systematically arrives at a given determinate meaning.106 Also illuminated is the process
that informs Meyer’s theory of musical meaning (the listener’s expectations, the
subsequent confirmation or denial of these expectations, and impact of this outcome on
the listener), as well as some demonstration of the indexicality described by Sawyer.107
Finally, the tables may be used in a further study to record and compare the observations
of several individual listeners, thus continuing the process of collective signification of
musical meaning.
As stated above, the listening analysis records observations made chronologically,
as it would if one were to attend a performance of The Desert Music, while listening to a
2002 recording of the chamber version performed by Alarm Will Sound and Ossia.108
106In the tables that follow the listener is, of course, the author of this thesis. 107While the tables are not specifically intended as examples of semiotic analysis, by identifying
the relationship between a “musical event” and its “effect” this method does to some degree interpret the symbolic references embedded in the music.
108Alarm Will Sound and Ossia, Steve Reich: Tehillim and The Desert Music, Cantaloupe B00006H6B5, 2002. I will acknowledge that such detailed documentation of my experience is somewhat artificial and does not represent the experience of the average listener. However, I chose to listen in this systematic fashion in order to align my process of analysis more closely with that of theoretical analysis.
48
Throughout the analysis, I consulted the score only for clarification of musical elements
such as instrumentation. The first column of each table records the time indications from
this recording of the text and musical events identified in the next two columns. These
musical events are those I determined to be significant while listening. Thus the entries
of the table will not always be recorded at regular intervals. The next column transcribes
the text associated with the musical material, primarily for the benefit of the reader.
While the words are not always audible in this performance (and perhaps rightfully so),
the text of The Desert Music probably would be available for the audience in program
notes, and therefore it seems suitable to include it here for clarification when needed. To
be fair, I have made an attempt to describe whether the text is clearly audible or not in
any given entry as this often has an impact on the meaning of a particular section or
movement. The final column describes both the musical and metaphoric significances of
all of the information in the previous three columns, again as I perceived them. While
these “effects” are my personal observations, they also reflect my knowledge of Western
art music, as well as Steve Reich and his oeuvre. Informed by this knowledge, the
subjective opinions offered in this listening analysis are therefore made relatively
objective through extensive and thoughtful consideration of this work.
It should be noted that the idea of the listening analysis was inspired by Reich’s
music in general, and The Desert Music in particular, as a method of analysis that perhaps
could describe Reich’s process-oriented compositional style more appropriately than
theoretical or structural analysis. Support for this type of analysis (applied both to
Reich’s works and those of other composers) is slowly appearing in critical and
49
theoretical discourse. David Schwarz, in an exploration of his theory of listening
subjectivity in music, concludes, “the new minimal style of recent postmodern music
invites an intimate exploration of psychic and musical structures.”109 Schwarz proposes
that musical “listening subjects” are created “when moments in performed music allow
access to psychological events that are presymbolic” and uses brief analyses of several
works of Reich, including Different Trains and Come Out, as illustrative examples.110 In
these analyses he uses time indications instead of measure numbers to reference musical
events, thus affirming my observation that time, as opposed to musical structure, is more
relevant to the listening experience of works by Reich. A similar theoretical position
underlies recent work by Finn Egeland Hansen. His 2006 book, Layers of Musical
Meaning, revisits the works of W.A. Mozart and J.S. Bach, among others, and presents
an extensive theory of how music means “in audiendo.”111 Hansen asserts “a course of
musical events can only be meaningfully analysed through the musical codes or
grammars … that govern the musical style in question,” further supporting the idea that
Reich’s unique compositions may require a unique method of analysis.112
Perhaps even more pertinent to this topic is a recent reception case study of The
Riot by British composer Jonathan Harvey.113 Composer and critic Adrian Beaumont
109David Schwarz, “Listening Subjects: Semiotics, Psychoanalysis, and the Music of John Adams
and Steve Reich,” Perspectives of New Music 31, no. 2 (1993): 47. 110Ibid., 24. 111Finn Egeland Hansen, Layers of Musical Meaning, Danish Humanist Texts and Studies vol. 33,
ed. Erlad Kolding Nielsen (Copenhagen: The Royal Library, Museum Tusculanum Press, 2006), 6. Unfortunately this work was not published in time to receive a more extensive review in this thesis, but its publication does indicate that musical meaning is currently an important topic in musicology.
112Ibid., xi. 113Adrian Beaumont, “Expectation and Interpretation in the Reception of New Music: A Case
Study,” in Composition – Performance – Reception, ed. Wyndham Thomas, Studies in the Creative Process in Music (Brookfield: Ashgate, 1998), 93-104.
50
arranged to record and discuss listener responses to this new work, which had never been
heard in concert before this study took place at the 1994 Colston Symposium of Bristol
University. His aim was to explore how personal musical experience influences
expectations for and interpretations of new works. The Riot was an apt choice because of
its unusual instrumentation (flute, bass clarinet, and piano) and unique musical structure,
therefore providing little frame of reference for most listeners. Listeners heard the piece
twice, before and after an intermission. Only two of the listeners were allowed to briefly
view the score. After the first performance, the audience was given the composer’s
program note. The participants later completed a questionnaire asking for their initial
expectations, their emotional impressions of the work after the first performance, whether
or not they felt the program note to be helpful during the second performance, and their
general reactions after the final performance.
Beaumont compared the responses of the two with-score listeners to those who
did not have access to the score. Those without the score generally liked the work and
responded to the mood of the work on the questionnaire, describing it as “exciting” and
“fun.”114 Fewer than half of these listeners felt that the program note was helpful, as it
either confused them or “pushed them into listening in a way they did not wish to.”115
The two listeners who either listened with the score or viewed it briefly before the
performance were preoccupied with discerning the work’s structure during the
performance. It is therefore evident that different aspects of the piece may be important
when listening, as opposed to when looking at the score. Beaumont realized that some
114Ibid., 100. 115Ibid., 101.
51
notational devices used by Harvey are intended to guide the performers and thus may not
be detected by the audience. “To that extent,” Beaumont reasons, “… knowledge of the
printed score alone could be somewhat misleading.”116
Beaumont’s study is significant because of these observations about the role of
the printed score in musical interpretation but is even more notable because it aims to
discern how and in what way a piece of music affects listeners. In other words, studies
like Beaumont’s attempt to describe the social and communicative aspects of music from
the perspective of the composer’s intended audience, individual listeners attending a
performance. While analysis of harmony and structure can provide significant insight
into the language of tonal music, other methods, such as Beaumont’s, may prove more
effective for more recent music that does not rely so heavily on the traditional tenets of
Western art music. For a composer like Reich, who values music not only as a technical
craft but also as a socially communicative process, individual responses recorded while
listening can therefore offer valuable insight into musical meaning.
Finally, as is evident from the discussion of meaning above, recording one
person’s listening experience is only the first step in the process of analyzing meaning.
As observed by Jackson, many listeners should confirm an individual’s opinions before
these opinions can be considered generally applicable. The listening tables developed
here could be used in a further study of The Desert Music, or even perhaps other works
by Reich or similar composers, to record and compare the observations of several
individuals. Such a study might be of interest to composers and the discipline of
116Ibid., 99-100.
52
comparative musicology, as well as the areas of communication studies and music
psychology.
53
III. Locating the Desert
The listening analysis documents my personal assessment of the significance of
musical and textual elements of The Desert Music for the moment in which they occur in
the work. What remains to be considered in this discussion of the work’s meaning is how
these localized elements and the relationships between them can be organized into a
comprehensive assessment of meaning, or what Meyer terms the “determinate” meaning.
Though it may not be possible to incorporate all of my observations into one or two
overarching conclusions about what ideas are communicated in the piece (especially if
one was to hear the piece only one time through), it is important to recognize that the
patterns that emerge are not purely coincidental. Thoughtful listening, at least with
compositions by Reich, may reveal themes that the composer intended for the listener to
hear.117
In my listening analysis, three concepts continually evoked by musical events and
textual elements of The Desert Music are time, ambiguity, and contrast. The
rhythmically and harmonically static ostinato (most often presented by pitched percussion
instruments such as the marimba, vibraphone, and glockenspiel) that opens the piece and
continues almost unrelentingly throughout the entire work functions as an aural
representation of the intangible dimension of time.118 Thus throughout the work I was
117Here and throughout this chapter, “theme” is defined in the literary sense, as in a subject or
topic. However, in accordance with other ambiguities throughout The Desert Music, it should be noted that the word “theme” in the text has a double meaning in Movement IIIB; in this context, the phrase “The / theme is difficult” refers both to the seriousness of the topic introduced in the text of Movements IIIA and C and to the difficulty of performing the complex canon that is the musical setting of this text.
118Time itself is not a concept that we can see or hear; we only notice its effects on things in our environment, including ourselves as we age, and as it is represented in human constructions, such as clocks.
54
reminded of time and, by association, its unabated forward movement in my daily life, a
thought I usually put aside when attending a musical performance. This pulse also has a
musical function as the foundation of each movement; even if the tempo of the movement
were not to be emphasized in such an overt manner, all of the performers in the orchestra
would need to be aware of it in order to play correctly with other members of the
ensemble. In a musical sense the pulse is simultaneously simplistic and complex; though
I may hear notes played on each beat, this beat is often the synthesis of several
syncopated patterns of alternating notes and rests played concurrently by two or more
instruments. As I listened, I noticed how my attention shifted back and forth between
one or another of these patterns and the resulting pulse.
Time is metaphorically addressed in The Desert Music in a similarly ambivalent
manner. Although the pulse is a direct representation of the forward motion of time,
repetition on many levels provided me with a sense that time in the context of this work
was often not moving forward. For example the reiteration of musical material that
occurs in the first few minutes of the piece (see 0:00 – 2:40 in Table 1) creates an
impression of suspended time because I am not able to form expectations about future
musical events; instead my attention is focused on the present musical moment in which
it appears that the current musical material could repeat indefinitely.119 The arch
(ABCBA) structure of the entire work further undermines an expectation of forward
progress and musical development that I bring to the listening experience from
The alternating fifths in the xylophone that open Movements IIIA and C remind me of a ticking clock; perhaps this is an observation that others would share as it is a common occurrence in Western culture.
119All tables appear in the Appendix, beginning on page 72.
55
knowledge of Western art music. Instead of a long-range development and resolution of
harmonic or thematic tension, The Desert Music appears to end where it began – with the
pulse and the syllable “De.” The value of the time spent performing this work therefore
must not lie in the collective experience of a definitive resolution of musical conflict but
in the collective social experiences of listening and being present in the musical moment.
Repetition is a compositional device that also conveys to this listener the theme of
ambiguity that surfaces throughout the work. I perceive this ambiguity when my
attention shifts between the sum and individual parts of the musical fabric during
repetitive sections, as noted above in reference to the pulse. Instances of melodic
phasing, particularly in Movements IIIA and C, are excellent examples of this repetition-
based musical ambiguity (see for example entry 0:19 in Table 3.1). Successive violin
entrances that begin by echoing a section of the initial melodic cell, often displaced only
a fraction of a beat, obscure the listener’s aural perception of the original melodic line as
each part is added. As more phased repetitions are added, it becomes difficult for the
listener to perceive how many parts there actually are, much less their individual
melodies. Finally, while each of the individual parts is still present, together they evolve
into something else entirely, much like molecules of water retain their original form
whether they appear on the whole to be a solid, liquid, or gas. Yet it is often still possible
to follow an individual part among the fray, and as I question exactly what to be listening
for, I am made aware of the usually unconscious process of how “the mind is listening.”
Repetition of textual elements, to my ears, highlights a tension between language
and music. As the words of the canons in Movement IIIB are repeated incessantly, they
56
begin to lose their structure as recognizable words and thereby become divorced from
their associated definitions. The individual syllables that make up the words become the
focus of my attention, and these syllables are meaningful as musical sounds more than
they are as sounds that are associated with a specific concept. Similarly, the “De”
syllable first heard in the opening of the piece and in all subsequent movements becomes
attached to a specific meaning as it is referenced throughout other movements. From the
opening of the work, where the “De” syllable slowly morphs into the opening syllable of
the word “Begin,” the presence of “De” symbolizes the barrier between musical and
linguistic communication. As I listen to The Desert Music, I realize that this division is
not a clear boundary but, rather, is an obscure confluence where instruments often sound
like voices and voices often sound like instruments. The similarity of vocal and
instrumental timbres in several instances is so striking that it is impossible not to
associate one with the other. For example, in the opening moments of the final
movement (see 0:40 in Table 5), the short brass chorale is nearly identical in harmony
and timbre to that of the voices in the previous movement when heard pronouncing the
line “Say to them.” Thus, instruments are able to communicate specific ideas associated
with words and voices are capable of expressing the abstract ideas of musical language.
While there are many examples of harmonious blending of musical sounds, to my
ears, many moments in the work highlight differences in instrumentation or musical
material. Contrasting vocal and instrumental groups are often layered to create a dense
musical fabric. The final minute of Movement I (see 6:09 – 7:00 in Table 1) is a
representative sample: sustained brass and vocal “De” eighth-note ostinati create long
57
phrases on each chord of the harmonic cycle over the energetic phased string motif
(continuing from the previous section) and the ubiquitous percussion pulse. This intricate
infrastructure follows the emotional and musical climax of the movement that ends with
the word “world” (5:27 in Table 1), and thus, in my experience, this section suggests a
representation of the variegated voices of humanity in musical microcosm. The middle
movements that follow could be viewed as closer examinations of these simultaneously
contrasting musical thoughts: the second and fourth movements explore the tension
between the straight and syncopated rhythmic patterns that compose the foundational
pulse (making extensive use of the “De” syllable), while the slow sections of the third
movement (A and C) investigate the process of melodic phasing in the strings, as well as
the implications of the sustained brass phrases. The center of the work, Movement IIIB,
questions the meaning of harmonic organization and text through repetition. Also,
neighboring movements juxtapose fast and slow tempos. Because the work is played
attacca and transitions between movements are avoided, the listener is often subjected to
abrupt shifts in mood and tempo. These contrasts on a higher organizational level
suggest that the musical ideas introduced in the opening movement are occurring
simultaneously but are extracted for the benefit of the listener in the middle movements
in defiance of the dimension of time. The return of musical material from Movement I
that ends one movement and the gong strike that begins the next are aural indications of
magical shifts in musical space and time.
Here in the intersection of these themes (time, ambiguity, and contrast), I perceive
the location of the desert suggested by the title of the work. The desert landscape is a
58
space of ambiguity where there is a striking disconnect between appearance and reality.
The desert’s reputation of desolation is surprisingly erroneous as, in my experience, it is
actually home to a wide variety of well-adapted plants and animals, often living just
below the surface. This environment is associated with the absence of water, but yet
there are moments of torrential downpours resulting in violent floods. Although there are
many types of deserts, the image of a severe and unchanging landscape without
foreseeable boundaries is a common mental image. Though time may seem to stand still
in this physical and metaphorical landscape, in reality desert spaces are not exempt from
the effects of time — they are constantly evolving and developing. Similarly, musical
material often repeats in The Desert Music, both within movements and in corresponding
movements of the cycle (such as Movements II and IV), but my close listening reveals
that there are few moments that are exactly the same. These subtle changes may be
actual differences written in the score or may result when a listener focuses on another
layer or pattern within the musical texture. Thus in accordance with the desert metaphor,
The Desert Music combines the appearance of similarity with the reality of difference.
For one who knows the landscape, the desert metaphor conveys polar opposites:
beauty and desolation, fertility and emptiness, and life and death. This space symbolizes
both a lifeless wasteland and also the opportunity for rebirth from the depths of despair.
A person who finds herself alone in the desert is in a state of limbo — she may either
succumb to the harshness of the environment or survive by reinventing herself through
mental strength and resourcefulness. Musically The Desert Music presents the same
ambivalent space for this listener. Constant repetition, tonal and linguistic ambiguities,
59
and lack of musical development require me to set aside my expectations and truly be
“wide awake” as I listen for meaning.
The desert therefore functions as the setting of the work, in the literary sense.
Accordingly, as other topics are explored in this space, in my experience they both derive
meaning from the characteristics of the setting and contribute to the significance of this
metaphor. Communication is an important example of such a topic. The Desert Music
emphasizes the act of musical communication between the performers in the ensemble in
addition to the usual line of communication that occurs in the performance of a musical
work, from the performer to the listening audience. Lines of the text could be viewed as
moments of dialogue, in which the listener may presume that the speaker is addressing
one or more specific participants in a conversation. For example the first line of text
(other than the syllable “De”) in the opening movement, “Begin, my friend,” suggests
that the speaker is initiating a conversation.120 The text of the second movement uses the
personal pronoun “we” as it asks the important question “Well, shall we / think or
listen?” The opening line of the third movement is a command (“Say to them:”). Instead
of textual responses to these (and other) lines, what often occurs is purely musical
commentary. Indeed, each movement of The Desert Music features long instrumental
sections that function as musical meditations on the subject of the text presented in that
movement. For example, following the text about “fire” and “light” in the final
movement, an instrumental section illustrates the tension between rhythm and harmony
120As discussed above, the vocal “De” crosses the boundary between a sound and a word, i.e. from
the abstract expressiveness of music to the relative specificity of linguistic meaning, as “De” becomes “Begin.”
60
metaphorically suggested by the melody of the vocal line associated with this text (see
Table 5 – 6:03).
These instrumental sections, however, do not always follow presentations of text.
Since it is one of the parameters of this work that instruments are attempting to
communicate with the effectiveness of language, it seems appropriate that lines of text
could also be viewed as responses to the musical ideas presented in each movement.
Movements IIIA and C are conspicuous examples of the phenomenon. The tempo,
harmony, and melodic content presented instrumentally in the opening of these two
sections (from 0:00 to 5:31 in Movement IIIA and from 0:00 to 4:34 in Movement IIIC)
together serve as an appropriate prelude to the important text that follows. By the time I
was confronted with the text at the end of these sections, the music had established a
mood that highlighted the serious nature of the words and encouraged me to consider
them closely.
The theme of communication is underscored by moments in The Desert Music
when musical events depict the act of conversation. This metaphor is suggested by the
simultaneous expression of conflicting musical ideas layered to create an intricate
construction of voices (discussed above), as well as sections that feature a call-and-
response-like musical structure. In Movement II (beginning at 1:52), voices and strings
take turns presenting the syncopated melodic/rhythmic pattern for equal numbers of
measures before an abrupt musical return to the opening of the movement. As the two
groups alternately debate the merits of a straight pulse or syncopation, they also seem to
be engaged in a musical discussion of the question “Well, shall we / think or listen?” The
61
canons in Movement IIIB are even more prominent examples of the metaphor of
conversation suggested by the musical structure of call and response. As a compositional
device, the canons illustrate the repetitive “principle of music” while simultaneously
undermining the textual assertion of how musical meaning is created. Overemphasizing
repetition undercuts the communication of meaning by creating ambiguity of melodic
content and phrasing. Additionally, the canons transmit the complexity of musical
meaning to language as repetition transforms words into music.
Thus in my experience the ambiguity and complexity of the desert setting
complicates the relationship between music and text. In The Desert Music musical
settings of the text allow linguistic meaning to embody the qualities of ambiguity and
“double syntax” associated with musical meaning (discussed in section one of this
chapter). For example, the music often conveys the opposite meaning of the words. In
Movement V, the long notes of the vocal line emphasize each syllable of the word
“inseparable,” thereby stressing the separate syllables instead of the word as a whole (see
Table 5 from 3:50 – 3:57). This movement also features the only moments in the entire
work where the voices are separated from the instruments. Appropriately, as the canons
of Movement IIIB undermine meaning through repetition, the settings of text in other
moments of the movement undermine the expected meaning of individual words. Reich
lengthens the note values that accompany “as the pace mounts” with each repetition
(2:04), thus slowing down instead of increasing the pace of the declamation. At the end
of the movement (4:44 in Table 3.2), the phrase “the facts to be / resolved” ends with a
different harmony or voicing each time the phrase is repeated, leaving the harmonic
62
center of the movement quite unresolved. The capacity of the setting to suggest double
meanings is explored through the levels of meaning suggested by the work as a whole.
Lines such as “The / theme is difficult” and “The mind / is listening” may refer both to
the musical performance as well as the act and subject of the metaphorical conversation
that is occurring.
Thus I hear The Desert Music as an exploration of the spaces between sounds and
words, music and language, and thinking and listening. Reich challenges the audience’s
perception of the distinction between each pair of concepts and shows how this ambiguity
of meaning is a reality of musical and linguistic communication. Like the poem that
provides the text for all but two of the movements of the work (“The Orchestra”), The
Desert Music uses musical sounds and the interplay of instrumental groups as a metaphor
for human communication. Music becomes a language in this comparison, allowing the
audience to discover how the properties that complicate musical communication also
muddle communication between individuals and societies.
I believe that the theme of communication is emphasized in The Desert Music to
reveal another level of meaning communicated by the work. The topic of the
metaphorical conversation is quite clearly presented in Movements IIIA and C. A
straightforward chorale-like setting allows the words of this movement to become the
focus of my attention and conveys none of the ambiguities of meaning that characterize
the text settings of other movements. The text refers to a crisis of global proportions:
Say to them: Man has survived hitherto because he was too ignorant to know how to realize his wishes. Now that he can realize them, he must either change them or perish.
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Preceding the text in Movement IIIC is a musical event that focuses the meaning of these
words; the viola glissando (see 2:46 in Table 3.3) is an example of a sound with a distinct
cultural meaning. I imagine that most listeners would connect this sound with that of a
siren, either an air raid or disaster siren or one used by emergency vehicles. To my ears
the connotations of this sound are also unambiguous: the siren warns of impending
danger and, given the nature of the text, I associate the meaning of the siren with military
conflict.
To discern the connection between all of the elements discussed here (the desert
setting, the musical conversation, the humanitarian crisis), it is helpful to consider how
The Desert Music does not address this serious topic. Aside from the brief use of the
siren in one section of Movement III, Reich has not chosen to musically dramatize the
sounds of warfare; there are no musical depictions of exploding bombs. Instead The
Desert Music explores the social environment that both creates and recognizes this threat.
The work’s preoccupation with repetition, time, tonal ambiguity, and linguistic
uncertainty metaphorically reflects the reality of social responses to modern crises. Just
as the instruments and voices continually repeat the words and melodies of The Desert
Music, as if searching for the proper ending, incessant discussion of the facts is a reality
of crisis resolution in our world today. There are peace talks, congressional debates, talk
radio call-in shows, summits, political speeches, news analysts, bloggers, and discussions
in classrooms and taxicabs; all of these conversations hope to make sense of the situation,
yet because effective communication is difficult, the threat remains. Time moves
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forward but, like the work itself, there is the desire to return to the beginning, the origins
of the conflict, to see if therein lies the solution.
In this way, I experience The Desert Music as more of a meditation on the topic
than as a work of protest and social activism. Portions of the text consider how music
creates meaning (“It is a principle of music / to repeat the theme,” “it is the relation / of a
flute note to a drum”) just as the global conversations mentioned above are also attempts
to define meaning. These conversations occur because we want to uncover the reasons
why humanity has invented weapons, such as suicide bombs and atomic missiles, that
cause widespread death and suffering. I believe The Desert Music does not suggest a
solution to the crisis it explores, as it ends with a question (“who most shall advance the
light”) and fails to commit to a unifying tonal center. The process of musical
composition is emphasized over the outcome when, through phasing, I am made aware of
how a complicated musical pattern is created from a small melodic cell.
Yet it is the work’s defiance of resolution through ambiguity that also
communicates hope for humanity. In the desert the situation appears grim but there is
still the possibility of survival. The question “Well, shall we / think or listen?” seems to
be the crux of Reich’s artistic message. As I argue in this thesis, The Desert Music
suggests there is much to be learned simply by listening and considering what one hears.
Reich’s program note and an interview with the composer published as liner notes
for the 1984 Nonesuch recording of The Desert Music confirm that the listening analysis
offered here has uncovered many of the composer’s artistic concerns with respect to this
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work. Reich tells Jonathan Cott that the repetition in The Desert Music encourages close
listening:
If you want to write music that is repetitive in any literal sense, you have to work to keep a lightness and constant ambiguity … . In this way, one’s listening mind can shift back and forth within the musical fabric, because the fabric encourages that. But if you don’t build in that flexibility of perspective, then you wind up with something extremely flat-footed and boring.121
This rhythmic ambiguity allowed Reich to “present a slow movement and a fast
movement simultaneously,” an idea that was clearly audible to me during the listening
analysis.122 In his composer’s note Reich reveals more specific details about how the
harmony of the work also abides by this quality of ambiguity that permeates the rhythmic
character:
The harmonic cycle of the outer movements cadences, although with some ambiguity, on a D dorian minor.
This ambiguity resides in the fact that a prominent A altered dominant chord follows the D but an F altered dominant precedes it. … The piece ends with the women’s voices, violins, and mallet instruments pulsing the notes (reading up) G, C, F, A, which are the common tones to the A altered dominant, the D dorian minor, and the possible F major. The piece therefore ends with a certain harmonic ambiguity, partially, but not fully, resolved.123
This evidence confirms my perception of the unresolved nature of the work’s ending.
Although it was not possible to discern these specific details, other musical elements that
were clearly audible suggested an unresolved ending. In particular, the final phrase of the
music was not clearly defined as instruments and voices slowly dropped out until the
sound quietly vanished.
121Reich, Writings on Music, 130. 122Ibid. 123Ibid., 121.
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The tension between language and music discussed extensively above was also
one of Reich’s main concerns. Reich notes how he aimed to achieve a “mix of vocal-
instrumental sound” and that the “pulse that begins, ends, and recurs throughout The
Desert Music is significant musically and as a kind of wordless response to and
commentary on the text itself.”124 Ambiguity also pervades this subject as Reich asks the
listener to consider the “basic ambiguity between what the text says and its pure sensuous
sound.”125 Reich also intended for the music alone to communicate specific ideas in
addition to the text as “at certain points in The Desert Music, there’s no more to be said
— there are only things that can be said musically.”126
Like most composers, Reich does not tell his audience how to listen to this work.
He does reveal that there is no direct portrayal of a desert; instead the idea of the desert is
more of an atmospheric attribute of the listening experience. Reich informs Jonathan Cott
that he did have specific deserts in mind while composing the piece, particularly White
Sands and Alamagordo in New Mexico where the atomic bomb was tested, but that these
images “seem to be ingrained in people’s thinking generally when the idea of the desert
comes to mind.”127 In his program note Reich comments on how the words used in
Movements IIIA and C of The Desert Music were written by Dr. Williams during a time
when the poet was “acutely aware of the bomb.”128 But the sense that The Desert Music
is only about nuclear warfare does not come across in the interview or program note. In
fact Reich’s interview ends with this poignant quotation:
124Ibid., 124. 125Ibid. 126Ibid., 128. 127Ibid. 128Ibid., 124.
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I once had a vision where light became a metaphor for harmony, for tonality, a continuity of vibration from the lowest to the highest sounds we can hear. ………………………………………………………………………………
You see, I understand that human conventions are, in a sense, the light… . And the human construct that we call our music is merely a convention — something that we’ve all evolved together, and that rests on no final or ultimate laws.129
Reich reminds us that music is a flexible, expressive language; it has the ability to
communicate specific ideas through cultural conventions, yet it allows listeners to
interpret its sounds in a variety of meaningful ways.
129Ibid., 131.
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Conclusion “who most shall advance the light – call it what you may!”
Through my personal listening analysis of The Desert Music, I have attempted to
show that the subjective listening experience is a viable tool for musical analysis. If, as
John Blacking contends, music is “a metaphorical expression of feeling” instead of “an
immediately understood language which can be expected to produce specific responses,”
a listener’s intuitive sense of his or her emotional response can lead to an understanding
of the ideas communicated by a musical work.130 All music critics use listening as a tool
for analysis, but very few acknowledge the contributions of this tool to determinations of
meaning. This bias may exist because intuitive responses cannot be proved or disproved
as readily as evidence gleaned from notes in the score. Listening experiences are
subjective, but theoretical analysis also incorporates an element of subjectivity. I believe
that the systematic documentation of my listening experience lends a degree of
objectivity to my determination of the meaning of The Desert Music.
Listening to music results in powerful affective experiences that are the main
component of determining one’s like or dislike of a particular piece of music. It is
because of these experiences that one is compelled to examine a work more closely, to
apply theoretical analysis, and to research a composer’s compositional philosophy. My
interest in The Desert Music began in this way. I was immediately attracted to the work’s
remarkable blending of diverse timbres. The style seemed to be a very modern approach
130John Blacking, Music, Culture, and Experience: Selected Papers of John Blacking, edited and
with an introduction by Reginald Byron, forward by Bruno Nettl (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995), 35.
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to orchestration. The resulting sound was, to me, exhilarating. After reading the text, I
was struck by the work’s philosophical ruminations on a contemporary crisis.131 I
searched for music criticism of The Desert Music but found little discussion of the work
and found general criticism of Reich to be preoccupied with his compositional
techniques. It seemed to me that if no other music critics shared my enthusiasm for The
Desert Music perhaps an alternate perspective might be required to adequately discuss its
music and its message.
Perhaps the disconnection I perceived between music and criticism is not limited
to Reich and The Desert Music. I have recently become aware of the affinity of my work
with feminist musicological criticism. At the end of my study, I was fortunate to
encounter the work of Susan McClary. The description of her entry into feminist theory
resonated with my own experience:
I began my career with a desire to understand music. … Yet what I desired to understand about music has always been different from what I have been able to find out in the authorized accounts transmitted in classrooms, textbooks, or musicological research. I was drawn to music because it is the most compelling cultural form I know. I wanted evidence that the overwhelming responses I experience with music are not just in my own head, but rather are shared.132
I still desire to know if my understanding of The Desert Music, in whole or in part, is
shared by others. The theories of musical meaning considered here reveal that my
131This progression from music to text is precisely how Reich hoped listeners would experience
the work. He tells Jonathan Cott: “All pieces with texts – operas, cantatas, whatever – have, in my opinion, to work first simply as pieces of music that one listens to with eyes closed, without understanding a word. … He or she merely has to listen and hopefully, if moved, will follow the text as well.” Writings on Music, 129.
132Susan McClary, Feminine Endings: Music, Gender, and Sexuality, with a new introduction (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002), 4.
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assessment of The Desert Music’s meaning is only the beginning of the critical
conversation.
This work invites a new approach to musical analysis, as well as a reconsideration
of Reich’s categorization in the concert tradition of Western art music. This study has
developed a method for an ethnographic evaluation of listener response. So far, I have
only been able to present my own experience of the work, which I will acknowledge is
not a universal interpretation. But the tables developed for my analysis can be used to
evaluate shared listener experience of The Desert Music, other works by Reich, and
works by other composers. Understanding meaning to be a process of collective
discussion, a study that records several listener responses could generate data that could
then be evaluated to locate patterns.
Scholars acknowledge the process of collective determination of meaning in
popular music but have only recently recognized that this process may be applicable to
academic criticism of popular music.133 The application of methods of analysis
associated with popular music study to Reich’s music makes sense given the composer’s
artistic philosophies. While music historians view Reich as belonging to the concert
tradition of Western art music, in practice Reich defies such strict categorization. Reich
has never abandoned the artistic community, associated with venues such as the Park
Place Gallery in New York City, that initially embraced his works when mainstream
133See Travis Jackson’s study of the Cocteau Twins in “Spooning Good Singing Gum,” 23-33 and
Susan McClary and Robert Walser’s article “Start Making Sense! Musicology Wrestles with Rock,” in On Record: Rock, Pop, and the Written Word, ed. Simon Frith and Andrew Goodwin (New York: Pantheon Books, 1990), 277-92.
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classical audiences considered them unpalatable.134 Echoes of Reich’s techniques can be
heard in works by musicians and composers that are not considered to be part of the
Western art music tradition, such as Brian Eno and Sufjan Stevens. A more populist
approach to Reich could inspire a wider enthusiasm for his works and might well inspire
a new approach to classical works in general, by sending a message to audiences that real
understanding of such compositions is not limited to music critics or listeners with formal
musical training. Even if Reich does not aim to change the world, he does evoke
response and initiate conversation. And perhaps his works that deal with topics such as
terrorism, environmental devastation, and racism have the power to remind audiences of
the devastating consequences of complacency and apathy towards such important issues.
134Critic Alex Ross notes, “in the face of early incomprehension, [Reich] took a do-it-yourself
approach to getting his work before the public.” In welcoming associations with artists outside Western art music, “Reich changed music, and he also changed how music relates to society.” “Fascinating Rhythm,” New Yorker, 13 November 2006, 99.
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APPENDIX: LISTENING TABLES135
Table 1: Movement I – Fast Time Musical Elements Text Effect 0:00 Percussive/melodic pulse – 1st
phrase instruments, 2nd phrase with added chorus
“De” – echoes instrumental pulse
0:13 First change of harmony; each phrase is a slow moving envelope of sound - fading in and out using crescendos and decrescendos, like musical waves
0:33 Recognition of repetition with a new harmony for each phrase; musical material is constantly being revisited, each time with a slightly different approach
Time is suspended
0:45 Slow repetitions create a feeling of spaciousness
1:00 Progression has returned to initial harmony and is now beginning the cycle again; text is unclear as voices are so well blended with the instrumental pulse
Blurring of boundaries between text as words and text as sounds
135This listening analysis is based on the Alarm Will Sound and Ossia recording of The Desert Music. Steve Reich: Tehillim and The Desert Music,
Cantaloupe B00006H6B5, 2002.
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 1:15 Piano/percussion, voices, and
strings have become a pulse sound group; separate timbres are almost indistinguishable
As a listener, I am invited to enter a meditative state of mind, yet at the same time the repetition encourages me to listen closely for subtle musical changes
1:29 Sustained brass add another layer to the musical texture
Increases the urgency of the communication
2:00 Expectation of building to a climax – harmonic dissonance increases
Dissonance breaks the spell of the comforting and welcoming space created by the pulse sound group in the initial minutes of the movement and is ominous and unsettling
2:30 Strings, voices, and brass fade out; only the percussive pulse remains
Expectation of climax is unfulfilled – I wonder what will come next
2:40 Entrance of melodic cell played by the strings
Energetic contrast to the musical material of the pulse sound group
3:00 Melody divides into several identical parts organically - reminiscent of Reich’s instrumental phasing techniques
As with the opening pulse, a small element grows into something more complex than was initially expected
3:17 Vocal entrance – texture is building again
“Begin (repeated) “De” vocalise focuses into the word “Begin” – thus the whole movement so far has been like an invocation or appeal to start a communication
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 3:28
Entrance of low-string countermelody (3:38)
Begin, my friend (repeated)
4:05
Begin (repeated), my friend
4:16 Dramatic harmonic change – perhaps only because it is the first change since the initial string entrance (2:40)
Tonal ambiguity (as there is no clear tonic so far) is added to the formal and textual ambiguity of the movement
4:26 Voices present more text more quickly; sometimes words are clear, at other times I am listening to the suspensions and resolutions of the vocal line, yet still understanding that the text is a command
for you cannot, you may be sure, take your song
5:00 Text is clearly presented
take your song, which drives all things out of mind,
5:15
Harmony accompanying the word “mind” recalls the opening of the movement
with you to the other world.”
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 5:27 With the word “world,” vocal part
drops out and the instruments, especially violins, sustain the energy with the highly syncopated (dancing) melody
Dramatic harmonic change emphasizes the word “world” in what appears to be (and may later be confirmed as) the climax of the movement; highlighting this word establishes the global scope of the conversation that begins in this movement
5:49 Entrance of vibrant low-string countermelody and return of the sustained brass (5:57)
Brass is an ominous reminder of the difficult, serious situation
6:09 Pulse – which has faded far into the background of the musical texture – returns to prominence, as do the musical “waves” from the opening of the movement
“De” pulse Could the primal and unsophisticated “De” pulse be the “song / which drives all things out of mind?”
7:00 String motif persists until the end of the movement; “De” vocalise returns to more strongly recall the opening moments of the piece
“De” pulse
Musically and textually the movement finishes where it started, and I am left questioning what was accomplished, both musically and metaphorically, during the entire movement
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Table 2: Movement II - Moderate Time Musical Elements Text Effect 0:00
Percussion instruments open the movement with a more relaxed pace; sticks keep time strictly and precisely
Time continues despite the comforting environment of the first movement
0:10 Pitched instruments expand upon the initial pulse harmonically and rhythmically through syncopation
Contrast in mood between the 1st and 2nd movements is immediately apparent; atmosphere of the 2nd movement is more grounded in reality, indicated musically through thinner, more defined textures and articulation
0:15 Pace of harmonic movement is also slower than the first movement
“Well, shall we think or listen? Is there a sound addressed not wholly to the ear? (repeat)
Questions in the text confirm the ambiguities of the opening movement; slower, clearer presentation of the first question highlights its importance
0:37 Arpeggiated dissonant chord in the strings, with sforzando articulation
We half close our eyes. We
Female voices respond to questions posed by male voices – timbral contrast functions as a call and response
0:45
do not hear it through our eyes.
Sudden harmonic shifts initiated by the strings illustrate how “we / do not / hear it through out eyes”
0:48 Simple, syncopated melody and rhythmic pattern presented by the flutes/piccolo and timpani foreshadow the next line of text
Could this flute/drum section be a military reference?
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 0:54
Flute doubles the vocal line – perhaps the first time instrumental/vocal doubling has happened in the piece
It is not a flute note either, it is the relation of a flute note to a drum.
Meaning is created not by the instruments individually but by the relationship between them
1:15
Return of flute/drum syncopated pattern
Stravinsky-esque shifts between musical material (with no transitions), responding to one another like two opposing sides of an argument
1:22 Vocal line, which has been rising melodically, reaches an apex, as if building to a climax
I am wide awake. The mind is listening.”
1:32
Recall of the opening movement in both harmony, instrumentation, and text (including the ominous sustained brass) – however, slower in order to adapt to the tempo of this movement
“De” pulse from Movement I Another abrupt shift, defying an expectation, either confuses or compels one to continue listening closely; it is as if the “De” vocalise and accompanying musical pulse are distracting the performers from continuing the musical thought and the words of the text in this movement
1:52
After almost fading away, voices continue with a syncopated melodic line based on the next chord in the harmonic cycle
“De” slightly slower and syncopated Syncopated “De” vocal line is more sophisticated than the “De” pulse, a more complex argument
2:02
Strings continue where the voices left off; voices fade to the background
“De” pulse, faintly Echo is another example of call and response using two opposing timbral groups in this movement
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 2:12
Voices return to prominence; melodic line is rising
“De” syncopated
2:22
Strings and sustained brass echo at a higher pitch
“De” pulse, faintly
2:31
Abrupt return to the opening of the movement
Another build to a musical climax is unfulfilled
2:45
Something has changed – there is a different chord in the marimbas and vibraphones than was played at the opening of the movement
Perhaps this recall of the opening of the movement is not simply a repeat – there has been some musical development
2:49
Slower presentation of the text “Well, shall we think (repeat) or listen?
Return to a very important question
3:15
Male and female voices often sing together this time
Is there a sound addressed not wholly to the ear? (repeat)
3:36
Arpeggiated chord in strings We half close our eyes. We do not hear it through our eyes.
Very subtle differences between the first and second presentations of this musical material encourage the listener to be engaged in the repetition
3:47
Flute/drum section returns It is rewarding as a listener to recognize what comes next, yet because I do not form expectations about musical events, it is more difficult to recognize my intellectual responses
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 3:57
Again, slower presentation of the text; timpani accompanies voices instead of flutes this time
It is not a flute note either, (repeat)
New harmonies for the repeated text function as a reconsideration of the meaning of these words
4:13
it is the relation of a flute note to a drum.
4:22
Flute/drum material returns, extended this time
4:38
I am wide awake. The mind is listening.”
“The mind is listening” seems to be the most important text of the movement – relatively high vocal pitch communicates a sense of urgency
4:48
Reference to the opening movement is not heard this time; instead the musical material that followed this reference appears
“De” syncopated Transition to the syncopated “De” section is more seamless than before – the argument makes more sense
4:58
Instruments echo the prior vocal material
“De” pulses Towards the end of the movement I find myself listening more than thinking as more familiar musical material reappears
5:08
Sustained brass, slowly crescendoing from the dense musical texture, becomes more audible in each section
“De” syncopated Dissonant (diminished harmonies including tritones) brass harmony is a noticeable contrast to strings and voices (open, major sounds)
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 5:18 “De” pulses, “De” syncopated (5:28)
Final echoes between these two musical groups confirm that this movement emphasizes contrasts
5:41 Recall of Movement I occurs at the end of this section, building to a harmony that does not resolve
“De” pulses
At the end of the movement, it is clear that none of the harmonic resolutions have conformed to the (tonal) expectations of my ears
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Table 3.1: Movement IIIA – Slow
Time Musical Elements Text Effect 0:00 Gong, along with piano and
pitched percussion, signals another abrupt shift in mood between movements; slow alternating fifths, played on downbeats by the xylophone, set the pace for this movement
Suggestion of time interceding on the musical moment is even stronger than in the opening of Movement II – xylophone almost certainly suggests the ticking of a clock
0:05 Piano strikes the opening chord again unexpectedly, while the vibes oppose the “ticking” xylophone with their mellow tone and syncopated pattern
Surprising piano chord breaks the spell of the xylophone pattern, recalling the strident, shrill ring of an alarm clock
0:19 Solo violin enters with a short repeated melodic cell
Consistent repetition at this relaxed pace creates a meditative atmosphere
0:29
Second violin echoes a few select notes of the first violin part only about one beat behind the first violin – slowly echoing more and more notes of the initial melodic cell
Number of players and the melodic line has become ambiguous and appears to be constantly changing
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 0:48
Melodic material in the violins seems to evolve organically creating complex rhythmic patterns - an excellent example of phasing
Slow phasing technique counters traditional ideas of musical development; phrase appears to have no goal, and my ears only detect changes after they have happened
1:11 Higher countermelody enters in another violin part
Entrance of the countermelody is immediately apparent against the backdrop of the now-familiar phased pattern
1:22
Countermelody receives the same phasing treatment
Sense of spaciousness and suspended time that opened Movement I has returned
1:45
Voices in close harmony (mostly half steps) slowly crescendo to prominence and begin to decrescendo almost as soon as I become aware of them
“De” sustained “Waves” of sound, reminiscent of the Movement I, seem to have to no beginning or end, as if the musical thought has always existed
2:00
Brass echo the sustained “De” harmony of the voices
Voices seem to “hand off” this harmony to the brass instruments
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 2:17
Violins abruptly switch to a new melody, starting on a higher pitch; phasing beings almost immediately (2:23)
The violin melodies are related, despite the lack of transition between them, as if offering a slightly revised musical thought
2:47
Voices, louder this time, repeat the sustained harmony at a higher pitch
“De” sustained The unsophisticated “De” consistently intrudes on more complex musical arguments
3:00
Melody rises to a higher pitch as the brass enters
Expectation of building to a climax
3:15
Another abrupt change to a slightly recomposed melody as brass disappears; syncopated vibraphone continues underneath – when did the “ticking” disappear?
Expectation dissolves as this melody seems to lose energy, not build upon the previous intensity
3:33
Phasing increases the intensity as more notes fill the musical spaces (rests)
Metaphorically - are the violins constantly searching for a new way to express themselves?
3:47
Another repeat of the sustained vocal part; “De” syllable is never clearly pronounced
“De” sustained Repetition has become confusing and possibly aimless – what, if anything, could the movement be building towards?
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 4:00
Melody rises; brass echoes the voices
4:16
Again, the melody changes followed by phasing (4:35)
Another averted climax
4:49
Sustained vocal entrance “De” sustained
5:04
Melody rises, brass echoes the voices
5:17
Abrupt shift, this time to the opening of the movement, without the “ticking” xylophone
Expectations of resolution are once again thwarted, as if illustrating a deceptive cadence
5:26 Glockenspiel taps out the eighth notes of the measure
Reminder of time is less intense, an echo of the opening of the movement
5:31
Vocal entrance is reminiscent of previous phrases in this movement, with a more open harmony
“Say to them: Purpose of the previous musical repetition comes into focus
5:49
Chorale-like setting of the (clearly audible) text, accompanied softly by winds - only vibes and glock offer conflicting musical material
Man has survived hitherto because he was too ignorant The contemplative mood established in the opening of the movement prepares the listener to concentrate on these important words
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 6:01 to know how to realize his wishes. Now that he can
6:15
Word “change” is emphasized by a longer note value than other words and a suspension on the downbeat
realize them, he must either change them or perish.”
6:32
“or perish” “Say to
6:47
With the final declamation of the word “them,” the pulse quickens to recall the opening of the piece; brass harmony also recalls Movement I
them”
“song / which drives all things out of mind” persists
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Table 3.2: Movement IIIB – Moderate
Time Musical Elements Text Effect 0:00 Harmony and faster pace from the
end of the previous movement continues; mallet instruments provide supporting polyrhythms, while the text is presented quickly and prominently by female voices
“it is a principle of music to repeat the theme. Repeat and repeat again, as the pace mounts. The theme is difficult but no more difficult
Movements are clearly connected, yet the topics of their texts seem to have little to do with one another; perhaps the text of this movement serves as a commentary on the previous “message” - that is, “the facts to be resolved”
0:17 Harmonic suspensions on the word “resolved” illustrate the opposite meaning of the word
than the facts to be resolved.” “to be resolved”
The music is not a commentary on the text; rather, the text serves the meaning of the music
0:25 Female voices begin a canon on the first line of text using the first chord of the movement, each voice entering only a few beats behind the previous entrance; mallet instruments switch to a constant pulse instead of polyrhythms
Canon on “it is a principle of music to repeat the theme”
As the canon builds, words of the text lose their significance as ideas being illustrated by the text; instead the syllables of these words are significant as sounds
0:38
High strings accompany the voices, selecting one countermelody from the dense canon
Meaning of the words is even further obscured
0:48
Low strings play a descending diminished arpeggio at the end of each phrase
This arpeggio provides the only frame of reference for the passing of (musical) time
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 1:12 Canon continues on a new, higher
harmony
Intensity builds
1:31 Without any transition, canon switches to the second phrase of text, reverting to the opening chord
Canon on “Repeat and repeat again”
With even fewer words (and two that are the same), the canon creates an even more complicated and dense musical fabric
1:38
High string entrance; low string entrance (1:44)
Canons create a sense of suspended time in a different way that the previous movement – instead of a relaxed, contemplative atmosphere, there is the confusing and frightening sense of being lost in a maze
2:04
Words again come into focus as male voices join females voices on the next phrase of text; mallet polyrhythms come to the forefront of the musical texture
“as the pace mounts” (unison, repeated several times)
Contrary to the meaning of the words, the tempo does not increase, but the intensity of the music increases with the addition of male voices and the switch to polyrhythms in the mallet instruments
2:19
As the phrase is repeated, declamation of the words is stretched out, with two or more notes per syllable
As the vocal line “slows down” the declamation of the words, their meaning is undercut in a humorous fashion; the effect is reminiscent of slowing down the speed of a tape reel
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 2:46
The next text phrase is introduced by a solo soprano voice, followed by unison harmony on the word “difficult,” whereby a modulation also occurs
“The theme is difficult”
The sense that the music is building towards a climax is everpresent, but I know (because of what has occurred previously) not to hope for this expectation to be realized
2:52
Complicated canon begins (numerous entrances at irregular intervals) underscored by mallet pulse
Canon on “difficult” Here the meaning of the text and the music are more closely related, yet here the text seems to be a comment on the music, not the other way around
3:02
Violin echo of melodic cells created by the canon in a high register, as before
This canon on one word emphasizes a sense I have had previously: the voices have become almost mechanical – as if they are being manipulated by an outside force instead of choosing to sing such strange music on their own
3:11
Low string descending arpeggio begins
3:30
This section is even more strident and dense than those heard previously and continues for almost a full minute; this is quite uncomfortable for me as a listener – when will it end?
3:56
Solo again introduces final phrase of text – “resolved” harmonies are not resolved tonally
“but no more difficult than the facts to be (repeat) resolved.” (repeat)
Again the music subverts the meaning of the text
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 4:11
New harmony here – entrances are so close together
Canon on “facts to be resolved” As the entrances are closer together, each phrase sounds more like an echo of the previous entrance – the humanity of the voices is slightly restored
4:15
Violin countermelody followed by low string entrance (4:22)
4:35
Entrance of male voices, modulation to a new harmony
4:44
Each time the phrase ends the harmony is “resolved” in a new way
“resolved” (unison and repeated) With all of the tonal ambiguity throughout the movement, it seems that Reich cannot find a correct way to end harmonically
5:04
Movement ends with another homage to the opening of the piece: same harmony, mallet polyrhythms become a consistent pulse, sustained brass
The only logical resolution is to return to the beginning, the “song / which drives all things out of mind;” this time the return is, to me, a welcome change from the confusion of this part of the movement
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Table 3.3: Movement IIIC – Slow
Time Musical Elements Text Effect 0:00 Gong and chord played on the
downbeat by piano and mallet instruments signal an abrupt change of mood and tempo; the slow alternating fifths pattern played by the glockenspiel returns
Time is moving forward, just as it always has, despite the musical commentary that interceded
0:04 After a jarring chord on a downbeat in the piano, diminution of the glockenspiel fifths occurs, and mallet instruments enter with a slow syncopated pattern
It has become clear that the first part of the movement is repeating exactly, and thus that musical process (phasing), more than development (resolving a long range dissonance), is emphasized
0:15 Entrance of the same melodic cell heard in the section A of this movement
0:27
Phasing begin as other violins echo short segments of the melody
Juxtaposition of a feeling of stasis, provided by the mallet instruments, with slowly progressing time (phasing process)
0:48
Voices slowly swell to the forefront and then imperceptibly fade back into the musical texture
“De” sustained Ambiguity of the beginning and ending of the vocal phrase mirrors the ambiguity of the text here
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 1:04 Sustained brass faintly echo the
voices
1:20 Violins abruptly begin a new melody on a new chord, perhaps an inversion of the previous melody
Changes are so subtle I often do not recognize them until several measures after they have occurred
1:35
Phasing of this version of the melody becomes perceptible
1:45
Voices move up (half step in the top voice) halfway through the phrase
“De” sustained Small changes from the pattern established in section A ask the listener to question whether she is to “think or listen”
2:00
Sustained brass harmony resolves downward, opposite of the voices
Mirror image echo in the brass is a minute copy of the mirror image structure of this movement
2:17
A new melody begins, supported by a new harmony
2:37
This new melody evolves via the phasing process
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 2:46
Vocal entrance is overshadowed by the abrupt entrance of a siren-like sound
“De” sustained
Much of the musical material from sections A and C so far has prepared the listener for this important moment – shape and melodic content of the violin melody, the sustained brass, and vocal phrases all foreshadow this entrance
3:00
Sustained brass entrance underneath the siren
The idea communicated by all of these musical elements comes into focus: warning, danger
3:19
Suddenly the siren disappears the musical process continues as expected: new harmony, new melody in the violins that is phased (3:27)
3:47
Siren and voices begin again “De” sustained
4:03
Pitch of the siren rises with the brass entrance and continues to rise, building to a climax
Higher pitch signals an increasing emotional state of anxiety and tension
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 4:20
A decisive ending of the phrase in the violins is followed by a return to the opening of the movement
Finally a building of intensity that resolves in an emotionally satisfying way, a payoff for the listener – again a moment foreshadowed throughout sections A and C
4:29
As before, a bell-like mallet instrument establishes the pulse
Faint reminder of time
4:34
Slow, chorale-like declamation of this important part of the text
“Say to them: Clear presentation of the text emphasizes the importance of the words and their meaning
4:52
Harmonization of the melody has changed from section A; violin doubles the soprano melody
Man has survived hitherto because he was too ignorant to know how to realize his wishes.
Throughout section C, resistance of exact repetition reveals that subtle development is taking place both in the musical argument and in the story that is being told
5:15
New harmonization emphasizes the word “realize”
Now that he can realize them, he must either change them or perish.” (repeat)
Although the melody is less monotone here than in section A, the character of the melody suggests speech and direct communication; the last section of the movement (B) repeated the words of the text until their meaning almost disappeared, achieving the opposite effect
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 5:42
“Say to
5:51
As the melody reaches its highest point, the pulse from Movement I returns again
them” The focus and concentration of this section cannot continue; the pulse always intercedes
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Table 4: Movement IV – Moderate
Time Musical Elements Text Effect 0:00 Gong, piano, sticks, and mallet
instruments open the movement and establish an underlying rhythmic pulse characterized by a quick tempo and consistent syncopation
The austerity of the previous movement gives way, by means of pulse from Movement I, to an almost jovial rhythmic energy; this musical material from Movement II seems less serious when compared with sections A and C of Movement III
0:17 Text is emphasized through elongated declamation (more than one note per syllable) and a higher melodic line with more supporting harmonies
“Well, shall we think or listen?
Listening to this question after Movement III it becomes clear what one should either “think or listen” to: the problems of “man,” or humanity; thus it makes sense that our attention should be drawn to this question through differences in melody and harmony
0:34 Both male and female voices present the text this time, in rhythmic unison
Is there a sound addressed not wholly to the ear?
Voices have come together to consider a common problem
0:45
Violins repeat the same note on the downbeat, with vigorous articulation, thereby drawing attention to the text that follows
We half close our eyes. We do not hear it through our eyes.
Changes in the melodic line and vocal harmonization convey a heightened intensity
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 0:53
Drums in the flute-drum duet are accompanied by mallet instruments this time
There is even more energy in this musical material than in Movement II – as if the listener is being propelled towards some pivotal musical revelation
1:08 It is not a flute note either, (repeat)
1:23
it is the relation of a flute note to a drum.
This text invites the listener to consider the metaphoric implications of the musical material and also to look for meaning in the relationships between musical elements
1:31
Flute-drum material returns to complete another example of a mini arch
1:48
Reharmonizations in the vocal parts allow a higher soprano pitch
I am wide awake. The mind is listening.”
Contour of the vocal line seems to illustrate the meaning of “awake” (upward skip in the melody – akin to opening ones eyes) and “listening” (half steps suggest the vibration of sound waves) – the two most important words in these lines of text
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 2:00
Voices, strings, mallet instruments, and winds emphasize the syncopated pulse that opens the movement, while contrasting sustained brass highlight the harmonic movement from one chord to the next in the cycle
“De” syncopated Unexpected harmonic resolution in the brass helps propel the energy of the movement forward
2:10
Strings and brass take over the syncopated pulse, while voices fade to the background
“De” pulses Monotone melody conveys a sense of stasis despite the intense rhythmic energy
2:20
“De” syncopated Switching between two groups conveys the idea of call and response between two opposing sides in a conversation
2:30 “De” pulses
2:39
Chords of the harmonic cycle are paired together in antecedent and consequent phrases
“De” syncopated While the text has no linguistic meaning here, (it is only a single syllable), the “De” syllable still has a meaning when placed in context here – it helps to illustrate the opposition between thinking and listening
2:52 Movement ends with the (now expected) reference to the opening of Movement I
“De” pulses
Musical material does not repeat as it did in Movement II; I observe this but do not fully understand the significance
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Table 5: Movement V – Fast
Time Musical Elements Text Effect 0:00 Movement begins with musical
material from the middle of Movement I: mallet pulse covering every division of the beat and a melodic cell in the violin
As the gong again signals the transition from one movement (or state of mind) to the next, there is the sense of a natural evolution from the pulse that ended the previous movement, as opposed to an abrupt shift
0:24 Phasing entrances in subsequent violin parts fill all of the rests between the notes of the initial melodic cell
At first the notes of each individual violin part (which are each like an annotation of some part of the original cell) are distinct – at some point it becomes difficult to discern the distinctions between them as each individual part is absorbed by the pulsing energy of the musical moment
0:40 Brass melody is reminiscent of that used to present the text “Say to them”
While this movement does not include the text “Begin,” there is the suggestion that a conversation is being initiated with this melody
1:05
Piccolo, bass, and tuba enter at the end of the phrase
Top and bottom harmonics create a sense of musical spaciousness
1:20
While the pulse remains constant, sustained brass and winds suggest forward movement, as each phrase has a definitive beginning and ending
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 1:37
Brass and wind phrases begin on the same harmony but resolve to a different chord at the end of each phrase
Repetition suggests the composer searching for the correct way complete the phrase
1:44
Imperceptible changes in the supporting pulse harmony create the illusion of suspended musical time; however, with the forward movement of the brass/wind phrases, there is also the expectation that the movement so far is building towards something
2:13
Musical accompaniment to the brass phrases (violin phasing and mallet pulse) are a musical illustration of an abstract concept: energy
2:34
Compositional technique used here is one that also characteristic of all other movements of the piece: layering of distinct musical groups that, through repetition, become a cohesive whole
2:55
First perceptible (to my ears) change in the supporting harmony
Again the listener is encouraged to listen for such subtle changes
3:19
Each note of the brass/wind phrase is emphasized with messa di voce-like articulation
Timbre, harmony, and articulation of the brass and wind parts suggests a blurring between vocal and instrumental sounds
100
Time Musical Elements Text Effect 3:30
Final note of the brass/wind phrase is held for more beats than in previous phrases delaying resolution of the harmony
Unexpected change in the pattern reminds me to listen closely
3:50
All instruments abruptly stop; long solo vocal notes emphasize each syllable of the word
“Inseparable The syllables of the word “inseparable” are, curiously, separated
3:57
Mallet pulse returns on the final syllable of “inseparable”; sustained brass/winds return on the word “fire”
from the fire
Undercutting the meaning of the word “inseparable,” the pulse is separated from the melody
4:09
After brass and winds drop out on the repeat of “inseparable,” violins return on the word “fire”
Inseparable (repeat) from the fire
4:24
Notable change in the harmony on the word “light” is supported by the climax of the vocal melody and the entrance of low brass/strings
its light (repeat) takes precedence over it.
If the pulse is the representation of the word “fire,” and “light” is connected with melody and harmony
4:42
At the end of the vocal phrase, the dynamic rises and violins hint at another melodic cell from the opening movement
Energy of the instrumental group increases
4:49
Low string entrance adds depth and energy to the violin melody
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Time Musical Elements Text Effect 4:56
After moving to the next chord in the cycle, low string melody becomes more independent from the violin melody
Density of the musical texture, as well as the fast tempo and frequency of the notes, conveys a sense of excitement
5:18
Melody from Movement I finally materializes from the musical texture
5:34
Instrumental section swells into the vocal entrance, not abruptly, yet with no transition
who most shall advance the light – (repeat) Question asked here may be interpreted as “what instrument will resolve the harmony,” as well as in the philosophical and literary sense: “who shall solve the problems of humanity?”
6:03
who most shall advance the light – Harmonic change on the word “light” again suggests light as a metaphor for harmony
6:07
Instruments dramatically drop out for a vocal solo
call it (repeated) (Emotional) climax of the entire work – (musical climax may be the “difficult” canon in Movement IIIB)
6:27
All instruments return on the final declamation of this phrase as suddenly as they stopped
call it what you may!” Text, particularly the emphasis on the words “call it,” conveys the theme of communication and also suggests that multiple meanings of “light” are possible
102
Time Musical Elements Text Effect 6:35
Mallet pulse and slowly moving “waves” of sound from the opening of the piece return
“De” – echoes instrumental pulse (to the end) The work has come full circle and is ending as it began
6:46
Second phrase begins on a new chord
Sense of suspended time returns
6:55
High winds repeat the melody heard supporting the words “who most shall advance the light”
Blending of vocal and instrumental sounds suggests that music communicates ideas as if it were a language
7:04
The return of the “song which drives all things out of mind” suggests that communication takes place on many sonic levels
7:28
Sustained brass from the opening of the movement returns
The danger of the “wishes” of mankind persists
8:19
Musical texture thins as instrumental layers disappear – beginning with the sustained brass
Entire work is almost a mirror image - slowly building and slowly fading away
8:51
Cycle stops – same harmony to the end of the piece
As only the highest vocal and instrumental parts remain, thus conveying a sense of the music becoming higher and lighter and eventually floating away
103
Time Musical Elements Text Effect 9:30 Following the tonal and linguistic
ambiguities throughout the work, even the exact moment the work ends has some ambiguity
104
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