| 1. Terry Riley In C |
Editorial Reviews
Reissue of the 1968 album by this minimalist pioneer/ avant-garde/ ambient/ classical composer. The recording is one 42:01 long track, mastered using Super Bit Mapping (SBM) technology. Also features the original cover art. 1999 release.
In C,Terry Riley,Sony,Ambient,Classical
Average customer rating:
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Riley: In C
Manufacturer: Da Capo [Naxos] ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000KJTPY8 Release Date: 2007-01-30 |
Customer Reviews:
A stunning performance of a contemporary classic.......2007-07-28
A Unique, Stunningly Original Rendition: via Reich & Indonesia.......2007-03-09
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Terry Riley: In C
Bang On A Can Manufacturer: Cantaloupe ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005NUPM Release Date: 2001-09-11 |
Tracks:
- In C
Amazon.com
Bang on a Can prove once again why they're one of the most exciting New Music ensembles performing today with this riveting version of Terry Riley's In C. There are a handful of recordings available of this minimalist masterpiece, but Bang on a Can's--featuring violin, chimes, clarinet, mandolin, and bass at the fore--is easily one of the best. The delicate tremolo of Scott Kuney's mandolin gives the entire recording a nervous energy that's much needed on this New Music warhorse. The piercing violin of Todd Reynolds is haunting, and Mark Stewart's electric guitar gives the ensemble added sonic punch. Throughout, Bang on a Can sound less like they're jamming and more like a taut musical machine bursting at the seams, running through Riley's motifs with abandon. It's a new, slightly ominous take on In C, but one that was much needed. Recommended. --Jason VerlindeAlbum Description
In 1964, Terry Riley kicked off a revolution with his landmark piece, "In C" -- inspiring such young composers as Philip Glass and Steve Reich. Now, Bang on a Can reinterprets this minimalist claassic with an explosive combination of instruments from around the globe, propelling this transcendental 60's masterpiece into the future.Customer Reviews:
In C: You never forget your first girl.......2006-11-10
Never mind all that, because "In C" is one of the very few musical pieces that will still be regularly played in the year 3000. The score is a single page of scribbles. When that page is put in front of 57, or 30, or 96 musicians, and they dive in, it allows us, when we listen...
...to directly understand part of our place in the Universe.
Here is a group of closely-crowded egotistical people with problems, warts, compromises, mortgages, divorces, inappropriate lusts, intestinal problems, attitudes, fears, hopes. You and I probably wouldn't much enjoy their company. Some are probably aggressive enough to cut you off in traffic and give you the finger. Meanwhile, they are all looking at the same page of scribbles, communicating seamlessly with each other, and creating the closest thing to the Music of the Spheres that has ever been heard on this Earth.
How are we, as a race, capable of doing this thing? Communicating in this way? I wrote a review of the original recording that I poncily titled: "From What Mystical Grammar Springs This?" The phrase has since been stolen by many Riley-appreciation sites. I don't mind, but the question is real.
30, 60, 90 people looking at one sheet of paper and individually banging away on their musical typewriters for 30, 60, 90 minutes, and what they create is more profound, and is more beautiful, than Shakespeare at his best? Yes.
OK: It's a difficult piece to appreciate. Some of my brightest music-loving friends have recoiled in horror, but all it needs is a truly open mind. (I freely admit that a few hits of decent ganga doesn't hurt, either, but it's not necessary.)
But this is a review of Bang on a Can's version, not the original. Let's get back to my title: "You never forget your first Girl." I was astonished, almost immobile for several days, upon hearing the original recording. I've since collected all of them, including the rather rigid one from the Chinese film orchestra. Some are just wonderful, like the 25th Anniversary version, but you never forget your first girl. If this version becomes your first girl, then so be it. After all, it's just Life, the Universe, and Everything.
WOW!! This version is beautiful in sonority and timbre and.......2004-06-25
I just listened to this for the first time and I am in total rapture from it.
All I can say is WOW.
This is an excellent recording of In C, not to be missed.
Good, very good, and it varies.......2004-02-24
Thumbs up to Bang on a Can!
If you like this one, check out the Shanghai Film Orchestra Version.
Bang on a Can ought to record Olson III.
It will leave you speechless........2003-11-08
From the very start, it is obvious this is going to be a very different experience than what fans might expect. The first thing that caught my attention, and made me smile, was the piano in there playing parts instead of being relegated to its usual position as an expensive metronome. This version seems also to have many more crescendos and decrescendos during its forty-five minute length. It is so much fun to listen to one instrument suddenly give rise a powerful presence and the others build around the base, then peel off into their own tangents. It is like a great swelling and ebbing of chaotic tides. I smiled as, like old friends, I heard familiar melodies bursting forth in new ways.
As another person put it, this recording makes the listener feel happy to be alive, especially if they find joy in music. I would also go so far to suggest that those who are new to In C might find this a better place to start than the classic renditions. They all have their own strengths. However, something about the richness and sizzling energy mixed with effortless delicacy and foreboding in BoaC's version makes the composition extremely accessible, despite its decidedly experimental basis.
Since I found this disc three days ago, I have already listened to it countless times. Sometimes focusing on the pounding C note is fun, letting everything else flower around it; other times following one or two musicians is fun; or just letting the whole cacophony wash over at once. To the power of the bass, the sizzle of the mandolin, the soaring of the violin, and the dancing of the saxophone-- highly recommended!
A minimalist classic in a bold new rendition.......2003-07-31
For those who are inclined toward Riley's pioneering experiment, this will be arresting and rewarding listening. The score fits on a single page, and consists of a series of 53 short instrumental figures, designed to be played in order by any combination of instruments. Each musician performs a given figure as many times as desired before moving on to the next one. The score is designed so that all figures mesh with each other, resulting in a huge wall of sound, slowly evolving as the musicians reach new plateaus.
Compared to the relative innocence and sunshine of the original, this one has a raucous, fiery quality that I like even better. The go-for-broke Bang on a Can crew gives it a loud, intense performance that is especially satisfying in the climactic thickets, when the entire group seems immersed in throbbing harmonic waves. It would be hard to single out musicians, but Evan Ziporyn's beautiful clarinet cannot go unnoticed, as well as David Cossin's excellent work on glockenspiel and vibraphone, and Maya Beiser on cello. But pretty much everyone here seems to be having a great time, and the effect is flat-out exhilarating.
The original version, still available on Sony, has its own charms, and there is an intriguingly delicate one with the Shanghai Film Orchestra (Celestial Harmonies), but this is now my favorite -- involved, committed and extremely powerful. Cantaloupe's sound is crystal-clear, and the lively packaging is excellent, too -- mostly bright orange and green graphics that do both Terry Riley and the group proud.
Average customer rating:
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Terry Riley: In C
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000024Q8 Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- In C
Amazon.com
Sometimes simplicity is the mother of invention, and with In C, Terry Riley composed nothing short of a classic. A cornerstone of minimalism, Riley's 1964 composition is little more than a loose guideline for musicians. Driven by the repeated pulses of even octave eighth notes played on the top two C keys of the piano, each member of the ensemble runs through 53 simple phrases at a self-determined pace. Gradually, swarms of instruments find themselves playing in unison, always to be overtaken by the perfect pacing of the pulsing piano. The entire composition gradually moves from C to E to C to G and, when performed correctly, the effect is otherworldly.This recording from 1968 features Riley himself on saxophone and a small ensemble of musicians from the New Music Center in Buffalo, New York. Overdubs were employed to keep the flow going and the effect of all this repetition is nothing short of mesmerizing, albeit slightly clinical. An even jazzier recording of this composition exists, the 25th Anniversary Concert on New Albion. On that live recording, a larger ensemble of jazz and classical's elite (including members of Kronos and Rova) invigorate In C with a full sound and plenty of gusto. --Jason Verlinde
Album Description
Terry Riley's In C, one of the most influential compositions of the past quarter century, has been played by almost every conceivable combination of instruments; however, the Shanghai Film Orchestra's version ranks as one of the most exciting and exotic interpretations. It marks the 25th anniversary of the piece, and represents the first time a Western new music piece has been recorded in China. In C is a rhythmic, energetic work, but it also echoes the mystical, embroidered music of the Near East and India. By staying in or around the key of C, this 1964 work creates a model sound that can be seen as a forerunner of today's minimalist and world music styles.The Shanghai Film Orchestra plays this contemporary Western work on traditional Chinese instruments. The tuning is different, and the tone colors of the ancient Chinese bells and strings lend a new vibrancy to the piece. The construction of this version is equally striking. Instead of following the score straight through, earlier parts are brought back and woven into a tapestry of sound even more mesmerizing than Riley's original recording.
The talented Chinese-American composer, David Mingyue Liang, contributes two works that extend the orchestra's range to include the ethereal sounds of bowed vibes and the haunting resonance of China's only complete set of mangluo gongs. This remarkable recording, the result of a cultural openness in China, proves that the East and West have much to say to each other.
Customer Reviews:
fresh .......2006-11-16
This performance is extraordinary, a flowing of soundscapes, real musical streams, In C sounds even more like some ethereal far-eastern music when played by all those chinese instruments and the other two compositions fit together with it perfectly. I think this is a really gorgeous contemporary music.
Still the Best Recording.......2005-12-30
Different but Classic.......2005-07-01
Hard to listen to.......2002-12-04
From the beginning you can tell that this recording has suffered from the ravages of age (either that or they're using a very cheap piano). That's really too bad, because this might have been a very good performance, were we only able to hear it better.
"In C" is a very hard piece to play, both mentally and physically. The subtle, ever-shifting patterns demand that you not "listen", to the music, but just play it in the background, "tuning in" from time to time. But I have a problem with Riley's instrumentation: he always uses way too many woodwinds and mallet percussion, making the piece sound like an indonesian gamelan orchestra. If you like the gamelan sound, then you won't have any problem with that, but if you find it somewhat annoying, then watch out.
Instead of this album, I would recommend the superb version recently released by Bang on a Can. They eliminate the gamelan effect and almost all of the wind instruments, using mostly strings such as Double Bass, Mandolin, and Electric Guitar.
Listen for Jon Hassel playing trumpet on this release (with the mouthpiece on, I presume), sixteen years before his collaboration with Eno on "Fourth World Possible Musics". Hmmm. Interesting.
A minimalist classic.......2002-04-16
Since this landmark recording, there have been other noteworthy versions. I own an interesting one by the Shanghai Film Orchestra, which includes a number of Chinese instruments which create a uniquely shimmering texture. And the recent recording by the superb Bang on a Can All-Stars is not to be missed. But this one was the first, and has its own place in history.
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Terry Riley: In C [Germany]
Terry Riley Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000259OD Release Date: 2000-06-23 |
Tracks:
- Terry Riley In C
Album Description
Reissue of the 1968 album by this minimalist pioneer/ avant-garde/ ambient/ classical composer. The recording is one 42:01 long track, mastered using Super Bit Mapping (SBM) technology. Also features the original cover art. 1999 release.Album Details
Early Minimalism from One of the Founders of the 'new' Classical Music. Similar in Style to Philip Glass, with Flowing Repetition of Arpeggios Abounding. In C is a Vertiable Classic in Itself.Customer Reviews:
Superb - but cover art is missing the "score".......2006-11-09
Sounds better than the CBS CD!.......2003-08-20
I thought I get this import release (call it the "Rewind" edition) since I've read about this "Super Bit Mapping" technology. Well, nowhere on the cover or on the CD did it mentioned this "SBM" thing. But I compared the sound quality with the CBS CD. I listen carefully and noticed that the Rewind does sound better! So for the sound quality (even though it costs more) the Rewind edition is worth getting. Just be aware that the recording itself is not quite state-of-the-art hi-fi stereo.
One thing you might as well be aware on the Rewind: The orange CD label mentioned "A Rainbow in Curved Air / Poppy Nogood and the Phantom Band" besides "TERRY RILEY: In C." A correction needs to be made since there's ONLY the 42-minute track, "In C." If you want the "Rainbow" and "Poppy Nogood," you could get them in a separate CBS CD (If these pieces will someday be on the Rewind edition with SBM, I'd get that, too).
But where's the rainbow?.......2000-10-17
Anyway, if you like Terry's "In C", try to find a copy of his follow-up "A Rainbow in Curved Air". You'll be in for a treat.
From what mystical grammar springs this?.......2000-09-19
I'm still shivering from my first hearing, three days ago. I dearly wish I knew musical notation, so that I might understand how one person's scribbles can cause a group of people to make this ... thing. And yet I must already understand, because while it still played, I came to foresee where it might go next. Within its timeless fabric, small rebellions arise and fall, ideas appear and are absorbed, and the ocean rolls on, unabated.
I suspect that "In C" has the same relationship to its score as a dancer to her DNA.
Few Pieces Composed This Century Are Better.......2000-08-16
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Riley: Reed Streams, Untitled Organ, In C / Boudreau
Walter Boudreau Manufacturer: Cortical Foundation ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000IJPC Release Date: 1999-04-20 |
Tracks:
- Untitled Organ
- Reed Streams: Dorian Reeds
- In C (Mantra)
Amazon.com
Thanks to the Cortical Foundation, the lost works of minimalist kingpin Terry Riley are finally seeing light of day. It's truly a revelation. Take Reed Streams, Riley's first LP, originally released in an edition of 1,000 on the Mass Art label in 1966. Consisting of Untitled Organ and Dorian Reeds--both remastered here from their original tapes--the album marked the first appearance of Riley's Time Lag Accumulator (the composer's system for making tape loops). The first piece is hypnotic, with Riley's rapid keyboard notes softly pulsating over the course of its 20-minute span, never really letting up. "Dorian Reeds" takes a similar approach, but furthers the use of tape recorders. The effect is dizzying, varied, and almost jazzy. Riley's sax solos meld into each other to create multilayered collages of varying intensity. Notes are extended and solo passages sneak out, but the piece works best as a whole: a giant New Music traffic jam of car horns. But perhaps the real gem on this disc is the bonus of 1970's In C (Mantra). Here, Riley's seminal work is performed by a Montreal collective through a psychedelic haze. Electric bass, a drum kit, and a rock sensibility enter into the fold, giving new life and imparting a wild flair to a composition that wasn't so tame to begin with. A truly unique, great recording. --Jason Verlinde
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In C: 25th Anniversary Concert
Manufacturer: New Albion Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000R3V Release Date: 1995-02-09 |
Tracks:
- In C Terry Riley
Customer Reviews:
Magnificient!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.......2006-08-08
I can understand though why some people would dislike this work. Not everyone likes free jazz, not everyone likes contemporary erudith music, not everyone likes "In C". I wonder if they "understand" the work though...
At terryriley dot com there's a 10:33 minutes excerpt of this work. It's probably good to listen to this before buying it, although, as any excerpt, it does not show the magnificience of the work it is taken from.
Rough Around the Edges, But Exhuberant Music Making.......2003-05-24
Tedious version.......2003-04-25
The Worst Ever.......2001-11-20
Some composers begin with an interesting concept but fail in the execution of the piece. This selection was stillborn from the beginning.
Here's the premise: Riley provides a series of brief passages, and the performers play them all in the order written, repeating them as often as THEY want - each musician deciding on the fly how often to repeat a passage. They play as they see fit, soft or loud, slow or fast.
Ultimately 'In C' becomes an exercise in vanity. (Talk about a player's self-centeredness!) This particular recording takes forever to end, it fills the entire CD; and when thankfully it does end there's a LONG stretch of applause. I applauded too because my suffering had ended.
I've heard lots of music - lots. I've suffered through much, but this particular album is the worst music I've ever heard.
"music to try to awaken ourselves".......2001-05-04
"I feel it's my field to try to create magic in sound. Magic in the sense of transcendence of this ordinary life into another realm. An awakening, you know. To use music to try to awaken ourselves."
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Keys of Life: Piano Music from Celestial Harmonies
Manufacturer: Celestial Harmonies ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000007W5 Release Date: 1992-01-23 |
Tracks:
- Spirit Of Peace: Part 1 - Florian Fricke
- Spirit Of Peace: Part 2 - Florian Fricke
- The Book Of Sounds: Part 7 - Hans Otte
- Transpersonal - Peter Michael Hamel
- Hymns From A Great Temple: Hymn 1 - Herbert Henck
- Hymns From A Great Temple: Hymn 2 - Herbert Henck
- Hymns From A Great Temple: Hymn 3 - Herbert Henck
- Prelude Op.74 No.1 - Cecil Lytle
- Prelude Op.74 No.2 - Cecil Lytle
- Prelude Op.74 No.4 - Cecil Lytle
- Prelude Op.17 No.6 - Cecil Lytle
- Prelude Op.32 No.1 - Cecil Lytle
- Prelude Op.65 No.2 - Cecil Lytle
- The New Albion Chorale - Terry Riley
Album Description
Keys of Life represents the finest of contemporary piano music. This release offers an excellent sampler of the music of Celestial Harmonies' most celebrated artists. According to Stephen Hill and Anna Turner from Music From the Hearts of Space, "Keys of Life is an elegant collection of solo piano music selected with great care and understanding from the last five years of Celestial Harmonies releases". Without any intellectual pretensions toward doing so, Keys of Life documents the twentieth century European post-Romantic attempt at the direct stimulation of consciousness (rather than emotion) through music. From Cecil Lytle's sensitive performance of six miniatures by Russian mystic composer Alexander Skryabin, through the enormously dignified pan-Eurasian temple music of G.I. Gurdjieff and his pupil Thomas de Hartmann, to the latest just intonation piano experiments of Terry Riley, we hear a living artistic tradition unfolding through time. Florian Fricke's spacious and beautiful Spirit of Peace, Hans Otte's hypnotic, delicate music from The Book of Sounds, and the rippling, minimalistic patterns of Peter Michael Hamel's Transpersonal complete the collection. For those who appreciate clarity, intelligence, and the unique aesthetic world of refined subtlety, Keys of Life will completely satisfy.Listeners will enjoy this beautiful combination of styles and artists that celebrates music as the key to life.
Customer Reviews:
Surprisingly consistent.......2007-06-21
Average customer rating:
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In C
Manufacturer: Squealer ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000647KU Release Date: 2002-04-30 |
Tracks:
- In C
- In E
- In D
Customer Reviews:
Better Effort.......2003-05-20
Space Groove.......2002-12-16
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In C
Manufacturer: Celestial Harmonies ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000007WF Release Date: 1992-01-23 |
Tracks:
- In C
- Music Of A Thousand Springs
- Zen (Ch'an) Of Water
Amazon.com
There is no doubt about composer Terry Riley's position in the history of 20th-century music. When his watershed composition In C was recorded in 1964, very little of its ilk was available. In C is a pulsating exploration of musical tones, all of them surrounding a riveting repetition of a C note on the piano. To simplify the event, its debut was the formal birth of minimalism. While Riley's original CBS recording has strong charm, and bragging rights as first-on-the-block, one measure of a piece's greatness is its translatability. To this end, Celestial Harmonies presents the Shanghai Film Orchestra on traditional Chinese instruments playing the piece. Percussive, lilting, and thick with energy, Shanghai is monumentally faithful to Riley's designs, loping and looping the segments brilliantly and utilizing the Chinese instruments' pitches to the advantage of the composition. --Andrew BartlettAlbum Description
Terry Riley's In C, one of the most influential compositions of the past quarter century, has been played by almost every conceivable combination of instruments; however, the Shanghai Film Orchestra's version ranks as one of the most exciting and exotic interpretations. It marks the 25th anniversary of the piece, and represents the first time a Western new music piece has been recorded in China. In C is a rhythmic, energetic work, but it also echoes the mystical, embroidered music of the Near East and India. By staying in or around the key of C, this 1964 work creates a model sound that can be seen as a forerunner of today's minimalist and world music styles.The Shanghai Film Orchestra plays this contemporary Western work on traditional Chinese instruments. The tuning is different, and the tone colors of the ancient Chinese bells and strings lend a new vibrancy to the piece. The construction of this version is equally striking. Instead of following the score straight through, earlier parts are brought back and woven into a tapestry of sound even more mesmerizing than Riley's original recording.
The talented Chinese-American composer, David Mingyue Liang, contributes two works that extend the orchestra's range to include the ethereal sounds of bowed vibes and the haunting resonance of China's only complete set of mangluo gongs. This remarkable recording, the result of a cultural openness in China, proves that the East and West have much to say to each other.
Customer Reviews:
fresh .......2006-11-16
This performance is extraordinary, a flowing of soundscapes, real musical streams, In C sounds even more like some ethereal far-eastern music when played by all those chinese instruments and the other two compositions fit together with it perfectly. I think this is a really gorgeous contemporary music.
Still the Best Recording.......2005-12-30
Different but Classic.......2005-07-01
Hard to listen to.......2002-12-04
From the beginning you can tell that this recording has suffered from the ravages of age (either that or they're using a very cheap piano). That's really too bad, because this might have been a very good performance, were we only able to hear it better.
"In C" is a very hard piece to play, both mentally and physically. The subtle, ever-shifting patterns demand that you not "listen", to the music, but just play it in the background, "tuning in" from time to time. But I have a problem with Riley's instrumentation: he always uses way too many woodwinds and mallet percussion, making the piece sound like an indonesian gamelan orchestra. If you like the gamelan sound, then you won't have any problem with that, but if you find it somewhat annoying, then watch out.
Instead of this album, I would recommend the superb version recently released by Bang on a Can. They eliminate the gamelan effect and almost all of the wind instruments, using mostly strings such as Double Bass, Mandolin, and Electric Guitar.
Listen for Jon Hassel playing trumpet on this release (with the mouthpiece on, I presume), sixteen years before his collaboration with Eno on "Fourth World Possible Musics". Hmmm. Interesting.
A minimalist classic.......2002-04-16
Since this landmark recording, there have been other noteworthy versions. I own an interesting one by the Shanghai Film Orchestra, which includes a number of Chinese instruments which create a uniquely shimmering texture. And the recent recording by the superb Bang on a Can All-Stars is not to be missed. But this one was the first, and has its own place in history.
Average customer rating:
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In C
European Music Project , and Terry Riley Manufacturer: Wergo ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000060O60 Release Date: 2002-06-11 |
Tracks:
- In C
Customer Reviews:
Fascinating Music BUT Electronica Problematica.......2003-05-10
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