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Double Sextet

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Double Sextet
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{{Short description|Composition by Steve Reich}}
missing image!
- Doublesextet.png -
Performance of Double Sextet in Russia
Double Sextet is a composition by Steve Reich scored for two sextets of flute, clarinet, violin, cello, vibraphone and piano.WEB, Huizenga, Tom,weblink Steve Reich Wins Music Pulitzer, NPR, 2009-04-20, 2012-03-22, It won the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Music,WEB,weblink The Pulitzer Prizes | Citation, Pulitzer.org, 2012-03-22, the first for the composer.Walls (2009 April 24) Seth Colter. "Steve Reich on Winning the Pulitzer for 'Double Sextet'" Newsweek With funds from the Carnegie Hall Corporation, The Abe Fortas Memorial Fund of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Liverpool Culture Company – European Capital of Culture 2008, The Modlin Center for the Arts at the University of Richmond, Orange County Performing Arts Center, The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music – Music 08 Festival the piece was commissioned in 2007 by Eighth Blackbird who performed its premiere in 2008, at the University of Richmond in Virginia.{{Citation needed|date=March 2012}}. The Liverpool Culture Company (Gordon Ross, music programme manager) was the only non-US commissioning organisation and hosted the rest-of-the-world premiere at St. George's Concert Room, Liverpool on the 21st of November 2008 as part of Liverpool's European Capital of Culture celebrations.WEB, Ross, Gordon, Dr,weblink Liverpool Culture Company, Liverpool City Council, 12 October 2013, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20131014000546weblink">weblink 14 October 2013,

Structure

Double Sextet is in three movements, lasting about 22 minutes in its entirety:
  1. Fast
  2. Slow
  3. Fast
The piece is strongly driven by the two pianos and the two vibraphones, marking out each phrase and key change, particularly in the fast movements. Within each movement are four harmonic sections in the keys of D, F, A{{music|flat}} and B (or their relative minors), similar to many of Reich's works; the reason being that the sections eventually return to the original key.WEB,weblink Carnegie Hall Commissions - Steve Reich: Double Sextet, Carnegiehall.org, 2012-03-22, The interlocking piano rhythm themes occur throughout the piece. The pianos interlock, creating the effect of constant eighth-note chords.

Performance

The piece is either played by 12 musicians in total (2 sextets) or one sextet and tape, playing against a recording of themselves, the latter being more popular due to less demand for space and players.The piece has been recorded by Eighth Blackbird and was released on CD on September 14, 2010 along with "2×5".

References

{{Reflist}}{{PulitzerPrize Music 2001–2010}}{{Steve Reich}}{{Authority control}}{{Italic title}}

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