The Guardian (USA)

Steve Reich festival review – Colin Currie and the Hallé ease into the groove

- Clive Paget

Back in the 1980s, Steve Reich abandoned writing for symphony orchestra, dishearten­ed by conductors and classical musicians who simply didn’t get his uniquely challengin­g vibe. The opening concert in the Hallé’s threeday Reich mini festival was a chance to hear both 1985’s The Desert Music – the work that broke the camel’s back, so to speak – and 2018’s Music for Ensemble and Orchestra, the octogenari­an composer’s bounce-back piece, encouraged by a new generation brought up on his intricate rhythms and distinctiv­e sound world.

Festival curator Colin Currie and four Hallé percussion­ists kicked off with a textbook account of Music for Pieces of Wood. Written in 1973, five sets of pitched wooden sticks clatter away like woodpecker­s on speed. The taut concentrat­ion on the players’ faces gradually fell away as they eased into the groove, hypnotic patterns throwing up subtle variations as the piece hurtled to its rattling conclusion.

Music for Ensemble and Orchestra is perhaps Reich’s most purely beautiful work, a five-movement, unbroken arc that pits an ensemble of 20 soloists against the rest of the orchestra in the manner of a Baroque Concerto Grosso. Paired pianos and chiming vibraphone­s provide the engine as shimmering strings, frequently doubled by woodwind, flesh out Reich’s trademark timbres. Tightly corralled by Currie – a conductor with a percussion­ist’s instinct for meter – shimmering washes of sound and aching melodies coalesced in moments of iridescent splendour.

The Desert Music sets words by William Carlos Williams (the 16-year-old Reich was typically fascinated by the US poet’s palindromi­c moniker). Scored for titanic forces, Currie launched proceeding­s with a huge wodge of pulsating sound, driven by four pianists, two timpanists and a phalanx of mallet instrument­s. Although sheer volume occasional­ly smudged textures, technicall­y this was a highly assured performanc­e.

Leaner moments provided welcome relief, as when delicate dancing fiddles engaged in a fleeting hoedown. Meanwhile, the amplified 10strong RNCM Chamber Choir coped magnificen­tly with text that ranged from Greek-inspired idylls to oblique meditation­s on “the bomb”. Reich’s tugof-love between the meaning of words and the sounds they make came over loud and clear in Currie’s deft blend of voices and orchestra.

The Steve Reich festival continues with Radio Rewrite at Hallé St Peter’s tonight, and Electric Counterpoi­nt with Jonny Greenwood tomorrow.

 ?? Colin ?? Conductor and percussion­ist Currie. Photograph: Alex Burns
Colin Conductor and percussion­ist Currie. Photograph: Alex Burns
 ?? ?? Utter concentrat­ion … Hallé players with Colin Currie Photograph: Alex Burns
Utter concentrat­ion … Hallé players with Colin Currie Photograph: Alex Burns

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