Steve Reich - Come Out

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 18 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 250

  • @desteddyeggroll
    @desteddyeggroll 8 років тому +138

    I like how the description of the video just says, "ballet".

  • @MisterF_1984
    @MisterF_1984 10 років тому +41

    It's a beautiful thing that I can watch & listen to this incredibly obscure piece of art without leaving my seat.

    • @MisterF_1984
      @MisterF_1984 10 років тому +12

      I think you need to go back and re-read my post, as you've clearly misunderstood what I've written.

    • @louismcguire2887
      @louismcguire2887 9 років тому +3

      Mister F If you have the stomach to be selective, the internet is one of the most incredible and interesting technologies we have developed.

    • @Quim1441
      @Quim1441 5 років тому +1

      @@louismcguire2887 so true.

  • @movewithying
    @movewithying 7 років тому +122

    Such great video! This part is called "Come Out" created by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker when she was at 22, is among Anne's marvelous choreographic unity "Fase, Four Movements to the Music of Steve Reich". The music "Come Out" was created by Steve Reich in 1966. I was luckily enough to watch Anne's live performance in Shanghai 2 days ago. Their movements on the stage were really remarkable & fasinating, the repetition of the music and selected movements, the devision of the space, the lighting. Anne explained they named each movement with lables A, B, C, D, A1, B2, C4, D3 etc in her interview.

    • @RealFakeRyan
      @RealFakeRyan 6 років тому +4

      THANK YOU. I've always appreciated ballet and dance but I could never explain or show something solid about why.... this video is hitting an awesome nerve.

    • @elefphanth
      @elefphanth 5 років тому +3

      Hey Ying that info its so important! thanks to share it! im really interested in this kind of compositions because rescently im making a music proyect based on this kind of musicians, like Reich, Ligeti Philip Glass and others! if you like i can show you that! im sure that it will be kind interesting for you

    • @mahdirabie-far5453
      @mahdirabie-far5453 4 роки тому

    • @kodrinsky
      @kodrinsky 3 роки тому

      Lucky you! She's my hero.

    • @ThomasBaxter
      @ThomasBaxter 3 роки тому +1

      I don't know much to anything about dance. On the other hand I find modern compositional music deeply engaging.
      The way that De Kerermaeker internalized the work of Glass and transformed it into Fase transformed my opinion on dance.

  • @DrumWild
    @DrumWild 6 років тому +77

    The audio used for "Come Out" was selected by Steve Reich from over 70 hours of audio given to him related to The Little Fruit Stand Riot in 1964. The young man speaking on the tape is Daniel Hamm, age 18, and he was part of a group of young men known as the "Harlem Six."
    Mr. Hamm was not involved in the fruit stand incident, and was only trying to protect children from the police. He was still beaten severely by police and spent over 8 years in prison.
    On the Captain Beefheart song, "Moonlight on Vermont," from the 1969 album "Trout Mask Replica," the Captain can be heard singing "Come out to show dem" over and over again. It is suggested that this was his nod to the Steve Reich piece.
    Steve Reich has a performance scheduled for this fall [2018] in Los Angeles.

    • @mxrkxo
      @mxrkxo Рік тому +1

      that's fucking very helpful. thanks...

  • @MsLeguman
    @MsLeguman 7 років тому +18

    1966. One of the earliest source of techno music. More radical than anything produced nowadays. Historic masterpiece.

  • @tgonzalez3
    @tgonzalez3 7 років тому +20

    Come Out is a 1966 piece by American composer Steve Reich. Reich was asked to edit down tape footage into a form of collage for a benefit for the Harlem Six and Come Out was a byproduct of the collage's production. The Harlem Six were six black youths arrested for a murder of a white woman in Harlem in the weeks following the Little Fruit Stand Riot of 1964. Only one of the six was responsible while the lead witness is generally considered the actual perpetrator. Truman Nelson, a civil rights activist and New Yorker who had asked Reich to compose a sound collage that was separate from Come Out, gave him a collection of tapes with recorded voices to use as source material. Nelson agreed to give Reich creative freedom with the tapes that he presented him for the sound collage. Come Out was a loop of four seconds of the more than 70 hours of tapes Nelson presented to Reich.

  • @ternitamas
    @ternitamas 10 років тому +12

    So hypnotic! I'm enjoying the trance feeling, can't stop watching/listening

  • @jngrand
    @jngrand 10 років тому +17

    An outstanding piece and an outstanding performance!

  • @edwinkirk1706
    @edwinkirk1706 7 років тому +33

    Watching this just made me cry. It's so descriptive, intense and yet locked in such a tiny area - like the real lives of us plebs, the ones who don't matter and never did. Come out! Dissent! In a moment of illumination the reason for everything becomes clear. Life afterwards, no matter what happens, now means something. They can and probably will break and shatter us, but that exaltation - it's beyond their claws. Come out and show them! It's worth it!

    • @kumoyuki
      @kumoyuki 5 років тому +1

      brilliant reading of the piece

  • @brucecollins2156
    @brucecollins2156 5 років тому +20

    This piece changed my life as exceptionally few pieces of art have.

  • @rtermnc2
    @rtermnc2 9 років тому +36

    the coregraphy in this one is on holy fuck level

  • @themightysrc1962
    @themightysrc1962 10 років тому +17

    Absolutely astonishing.
    It's difficult music anyway, but to interpret it in such a superb manner is fitting. The physicality of those - identical but different - dancers, more production line than art school, is superb, their timing is amazing.
    I'm absolutely in awe of this piece of work, and whoever's responsible for it should be immensely proud, as should whoever came up with the excellent filming concepts, the immediacy of the sound interpretation and choreography.
    If I can persuade my daughter to watch this, she might suddenly get her daddy...

  • @jezzkool1579
    @jezzkool1579 11 років тому +7

    Dynamic movements in a world class style performance, expressed passionately. Yay!

  • @AmbientWalking
    @AmbientWalking 4 роки тому +2

    Incredible. The presence of these dancers.

  • @DanJWilcox
    @DanJWilcox 9 років тому +71

    Pretty ambitious especially due to the fact that this was made in 1966 and Reich was one of the first to experiment with tape looping, food for thought.

    • @srothbardt
      @srothbardt 9 років тому +1

      Dan Wilcox It's a pretty good piece. I remember when Columbia released it. They mentioned it along with "Time has come today"

    • @vanessadewolf1772
      @vanessadewolf1772 9 років тому +3

      Dan Wilcox the choreography is from the 1980's though

    • @TomDePlonty
      @TomDePlonty 9 років тому +5

      +Vanessa DeWolf 1975 - women dancing on chairs, in shirt and slacks, comes directly from the staging of "Einstein on the Beach".

    • @andregalas
      @andregalas 7 років тому +8

      Actually the first experiments and recording with tape looping were done by Delia Derbyshire and the likes in the early 60's at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop.

    • @seenyourshine6989
      @seenyourshine6989 7 років тому +7

      Pierre Schaeffer in he 1940s/50s

  • @srothbardt
    @srothbardt 9 років тому +8

    One of Reich's earliest works. Tape loop.

  • @TheKungfulol
    @TheKungfulol 8 років тому +9

    It's surprisingly hypnotic.

  • @immusicmad2
    @immusicmad2 8 років тому +36

    This could easily pass as a future house track these days - what a masterpiece

    • @sideratux
      @sideratux 3 роки тому +3

      first i can think of is Villalobos

    • @saper3590
      @saper3590 Рік тому

      Im SURE that i heard this as a sample in some gta 5 radio song like on soulwaxor some other shit

  • @Pyoko123
    @Pyoko123 8 років тому +39

    Sampled by Madlib on Madvillainy's "America's Most Blunted"

  • @lulubelle320
    @lulubelle320 9 років тому +5

    C'est ce qui s'appelle y croire... Une vraie performance, j'adore !

  • @Newton14alan
    @Newton14alan 6 років тому +9

    Wow. That was really necessary. I'm so happy now.

  • @kh-ro5su
    @kh-ro5su 2 роки тому +10

    the producers of this did a great job. it's the perfect setting in an empty modernist building, the camera work fits well, the editing becomes as choreographed and important as the dance itself

  • @JohnVKTM
    @JohnVKTM 10 років тому +6

    I first heard Come Out by Steve Reich on a sampler record called M.O.O.T. Music of Our Time probably in 1969. It was to promote progressive music put out by Columbia
    Records. It has well stood the test of time as has his long career. Great choreography here too!

  • @dmartin_sound
    @dmartin_sound 3 роки тому +14

    Reich was one of the first composers of the mid-twentieth century to explore the concept of phase modulation and minimalism in his work. As one of his earliest works, "Come Out" uses a recording of a human voice because of the complex timbres, vowel sounds, and percussive consonant content within spoken word. As the piece progresses, all semblance of the original phase is dismantled while more layers and copies are added and slowly pushed out of phase. The dancing pairs well with the piece because they capture the essence of "together but separate" in their gestures, which can be interpreted as phase modulation in movement. Love it or hate it, Reich's work here paved the way for a lot of music released today. He also composed this in commemoration of the Harlem six, which is a history lesson for another time.

  • @trollmanthatrollington6407
    @trollmanthatrollington6407 9 років тому +54

    I'm glad someone did this video so i dont have to

  • @melanch0lia97
    @melanch0lia97 7 років тому +3

    Beautiful

  • @renatoaraujinho
    @renatoaraujinho 3 роки тому +1

    After the "tiny dancer" it's the turn of the lagging dancers! great!

  • @scarter3569
    @scarter3569 5 років тому +14

    Utterly magnificent. Disturbing, compelling and spellbinding.
    I don't know who commissioned this, but they deserve an award,as do the dancers.
    A true work of art.

  • @mxrkxo
    @mxrkxo Рік тому

    Beautiful in every possible way

  • @annamilluzzo8077
    @annamilluzzo8077 4 роки тому +1

    il loro sacrificio per il dolore del mondo contemporaneo ( emozionante ) grazie from Italia (Grazie Anne Teresa)

  • @BigShoals
    @BigShoals 9 років тому +3

    Brilliant! Thanks so much for sharing this, cagriebier.

  • @dansv1
    @dansv1 7 років тому +3

    I first heard this piece probably in the 70s on an "underground" radio station.

  • @omarsolis4618
    @omarsolis4618 5 років тому +2

    Steve Reich, es uno de los pocos compositores de occidente que me hace sentir un contacto con lo etéreo.

  • @karmafarm
    @karmafarm 7 років тому +14

    This is a great rendering of Reich's minimalist tape piece into dance and movement. The two women explore phase relationships and random dynamics, and the result is captivating.

    • @chrissmith8526
      @chrissmith8526 3 роки тому

      An absolutely brilliant piece very clever on every level

    • @tessierashpoolmg7776
      @tessierashpoolmg7776 2 роки тому

      Merde manger, poseurs.

    • @karmafarm
      @karmafarm 2 роки тому

      @@tessierashpoolmg7776 you actually brain-dead, or you jus pretending?

  • @55gargoyle
    @55gargoyle 4 роки тому

    I love this work since early graduate days. Now I love it even more.

  • @harryplourde1721
    @harryplourde1721 7 років тому +3

    can't just help but somehow come out to show them

  • @nickveale1521
    @nickveale1521 9 років тому +10

    This is hauntingly beautiful

  • @whlewis9164
    @whlewis9164 Рік тому

    step this way to explore the wonderful world of Steve Reich! It's Gonna Rain.

  • @jorgerm6357
    @jorgerm6357 9 років тому +4

    Hypnotic...

  • @TTBAI
    @TTBAI Рік тому

    one of the coolest things ive ever found on this website

  • @ALONSOBETETTA
    @ALONSOBETETTA 7 років тому +3

    the same couple with the same maestro
    Performance: Rosas - Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker & Michele Anne de Mey
    Music: Steven Reich
    Directed by Thierry de Mey
    ua-cam.com/video/RTke1tQztpQ/v-deo.html

  • @naranjatheminiseries4694
    @naranjatheminiseries4694 7 років тому +8

    like a nightmare in a dream

  • @thetinmaamfromozthemagicdragon
    @thetinmaamfromozthemagicdragon 2 роки тому +1

    beautiful

  • @danielsepulveda9491
    @danielsepulveda9491 10 місяців тому

    Su nivel de expertise es sublime ❤️

  • @pereztube2
    @pereztube2 7 років тому +1

    im finding these kind of loops pretty good for studying to.

  • @lovelovelovekayan
    @lovelovelovekayan 7 років тому +8

    Use Earphones.

  • @mikeg2924
    @mikeg2924 3 місяці тому

    Wonderful! Please share the particular details of this performance though. Who? Where? When? It is way too good to hide.

  • @retarteddogg9674
    @retarteddogg9674 4 роки тому

    Even after 23 years.......I still have flashbacks sometimes

  • @ThomasBaxter
    @ThomasBaxter 7 років тому +2

    Holy crap this is amazing

  • @pallmall7385
    @pallmall7385 4 роки тому +2

    Can't believe I'm watching this in 2020.

  • @e-ternell
    @e-ternell 8 років тому +93

    art is not to please but to question and move you

    • @deinonymous9909
      @deinonymous9909 8 років тому +5

      All things are art--and when you show someone something they question to be art, they will likely respond, "that's not art, that's ________."
      Something is only thought not to be art by the process of becoming trivialized, and therefore, the definition of art must be as subjective as the art itself.

    • @seenyourshine6989
      @seenyourshine6989 7 років тому +3

      put down the pipe

    • @GingerDrums
      @GingerDrums 7 років тому +12

      The art of pleasing people is called entertainment.

    • @ericmonin4835
      @ericmonin4835 5 років тому

      Why do we have major 7th chords then. Because they are pleasing.

  • @kozy15x
    @kozy15x 6 місяців тому

    Captain Beefheart gave homage to this recording in the song "moonlight on Vermont"

  • @familyresemblance7343
    @familyresemblance7343 7 років тому +1

    The 5th movement!

  • @rachelsevereid9989
    @rachelsevereid9989 7 років тому +5

    I wonder if there is a formula to calculate how long it will take until all the tracks are in sync again?

    • @tW4r
      @tW4r 3 роки тому +3

      Lowest common multiple of phases, all phases will be in sync again

    • @rachelsevereid9989
      @rachelsevereid9989 3 роки тому +2

      Makes sense

  • @glmx778
    @glmx778 5 років тому +6

    Now we know where "OA" got her "moves" from.

  • @alicaciglanska6954
    @alicaciglanska6954 6 років тому

    Beautiful!

  • @Quim1441
    @Quim1441 5 років тому

    Practically perfect.

  • @karaloca
    @karaloca Рік тому

    First class art wank, got to love it.

  • @christianbonilla5332
    @christianbonilla5332 4 роки тому +2

    Orales, sin querer encontré una canción que sampleo Madlib. Tremenda cultura la de ese hombre.

  • @MoFiTheMagnificent
    @MoFiTheMagnificent 3 роки тому +2

    This is meme worthy

  • @seangregorian834
    @seangregorian834 7 років тому +54

    What kind of tool bag would search for Reich and thumbs down something like this?

    • @kumoyuki
      @kumoyuki 5 років тому +8

      @Christopher Elliott - Steve Reich worked with a *LOT* of different musical textures. This is an amazing work of electronic music and a really interesting deconstruction of speach. Additionally, the choreography is appropriate and frankly amazing. However, both take a long time to unfold - which is another characteristic of Steve Reich's work.
      Disapproving of something because of your ignorance says more about you than it does about the video.

    • @yacoale8153
      @yacoale8153 5 років тому

      me nibba
      this sucks
      the original "song" had a meaning, it was made for a purpose. to deliver a message to someone and that is genius imo
      this is random because people are obssesed with these kind of things
      the weirder/bizarre and uncomfortable, the more avant garde and revolutionary
      its been done a thousand times and its lazy. it was cool the first time but its not worth seeing/hearing it more than once or twice

    • @-Trauma.
      @-Trauma. 5 років тому

      A nobody, that's who. Fuck'em.

    • @h.blaize
      @h.blaize 4 роки тому

      @Christopher Elliott I LOL'd

  • @netako
    @netako 6 місяців тому

    No way this “music video” was made in 1982, it's so ahead of its time.

  • @zeroinfinit
    @zeroinfinit 11 років тому

    thank you for sharing this.

  • @kemaxiu
    @kemaxiu 8 років тому +2

    So fucking amazing !!!

  • @TomMaynard--TCM--
    @TomMaynard--TCM-- 2 роки тому

    The OCD twins listen to Steve Reick. Spellbinding!

  • @harlacz
    @harlacz 8 років тому +2

    Bravo !

  • @dr_gregman69
    @dr_gregman69 8 місяців тому

    this causes me great pain

  • @RickWolffTV
    @RickWolffTV 8 років тому +1

    awesome!

  • @leeproctor7132
    @leeproctor7132 7 місяців тому

    Brilliant

  • @lukasknoll8125
    @lukasknoll8125 9 років тому +10

    this is not ballet this is contemporary dance !!!!

  • @johnappleseed8369
    @johnappleseed8369 7 років тому +1

    Woah, that's quite overwhelming :0

  • @6thfaith
    @6thfaith 7 років тому +1

    SEMANTIC SATIATION AT ITS FINEST

  • @carojmoore
    @carojmoore 10 років тому +9

    Does anyone know who the choreographer is or the dancers? Thanks

    • @carpedei_
      @carpedei_  10 років тому +26

      Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker

    • @carojmoore
      @carojmoore 10 років тому

      ***** Thank you!

    • @Ragnarokr
      @Ragnarokr 8 років тому +2

      And Michele Anne de Mey

  • @Ӝ̵̨̄-к6ж
    @Ӝ̵̨̄-к6ж 8 років тому +17

    Kamout Tushowden

  • @jodalsgaard5792
    @jodalsgaard5792 8 років тому +28

    really interesting and moving story behind the original sample, if anoone's interested: pitchfork.com/features/article/9886-blood-and-echoes-the-story-of-come-out-steve-reichs-civil-rights-era-masterpiece/

    • @lawrencechalmers5432
      @lawrencechalmers5432 8 років тому

      Thanks for the great article!

    • @katesgomes
      @katesgomes 8 років тому

      thank you!

    • @simon-benoitbretchko3617
      @simon-benoitbretchko3617 7 років тому +1

      Finally someone in the comments that actually does some research and contributes it to everyone! nice job @Johannes Dalsgaard

  • @Lgg130
    @Lgg130 4 роки тому

    Why am I so anchored to the one on the right?
    Thanks Devs.

  • @AugmentedOctave
    @AugmentedOctave 7 років тому

    Choreographer!!? Dancers? !!! COME OUT AND SHOW IT !!!!

  • @iracknads
    @iracknads Рік тому

    Steve Reich and the Nervous Ticks!

  • @renatoaraujinho
    @renatoaraujinho 3 роки тому

    I love to phase my deceiver... and to lag my dephase!

  • @eugenebesancon7494
    @eugenebesancon7494 7 років тому

    Dit is zo mooi. Zo mooi.

  • @gritaworksfineforme5922
    @gritaworksfineforme5922 10 років тому

    thank you

  • @rmac5584
    @rmac5584 6 років тому +8

    I would like to see robots perform this!

  • @michelagrammatico9927
    @michelagrammatico9927 11 років тому +1

    is this a Gurdjeff's original dance or a modern inspired one? Thanks for sharing, great performance!

  • @alsaulso1332
    @alsaulso1332 5 років тому +1

    Love it

  • @transportenthusiast11
    @transportenthusiast11 Рік тому

    "NPCs were invented in 1984"
    NPCs in 1983:

  • @АлександрХмелевский-з8о

    Здравствуйте, а может мы так раньше общались

  • @shookstylez
    @shookstylez 9 років тому +1

    wow.

  • @marcotartagni2767
    @marcotartagni2767 8 років тому +2

    Bellissimo

    • @xeshing
      @xeshing 7 років тому

      Marco Tartagni Non.

  • @kevinhughes1659
    @kevinhughes1659 9 років тому +9

    i must admit, this is not what i see in my head when i listen to this piece. i would put a different visual to this. but this is a fantastic piece of sound art. it has a strange, kind of scientific magic to it.

    • @arte0021
      @arte0021 7 років тому

      why would you even listen to this? its not pleasant to the ear.

    • @newclarence
      @newclarence 6 років тому +1

      You need to get your ear examined.

    • @vmcampos
      @vmcampos 2 роки тому +1

      @@arte0021 art doesn't need to be "pleasant"

    • @arte0021
      @arte0021 2 роки тому

      @@vmcampos whats the point of consuming it then if its unpleasant? Are you a masochist?

    • @coreyyohm
      @coreyyohm Рік тому

      @@arte0021art doesn’t need to be “consumed”

  • @julianjacobmusic
    @julianjacobmusic 6 років тому

    I'm waiting for the drop :D

  • @TheDimidom
    @TheDimidom 4 роки тому

    super

  • @h92o
    @h92o 7 років тому

    What is art and why is art art? Where is not art? Choreography is illusions like this is because more important is what we know than truth in art.

  • @ZeacorZeppelin
    @ZeacorZeppelin 4 роки тому

    So as the the tape loop comes out of phase, their dance moves and gestures come out of phase.

  • @widodomohammad8816
    @widodomohammad8816 6 років тому

    shit i love this

  • @graysonwilson-cacciapalle7989
    @graysonwilson-cacciapalle7989 7 років тому

    I might enjoy this if I were high

  • @heggy_69
    @heggy_69 5 років тому +2

    This would be so crazy on acid holy shit

  • @venelinpetrov6811
    @venelinpetrov6811 7 років тому +16

    I bet this was far more difficult to create than Star Wars Ep7

  • @alexperegrin4044
    @alexperegrin4044 4 роки тому +1

    О май Гад)

  • @ChampagneCraig
    @ChampagneCraig 9 років тому

    Aw heck, I could dance like this.

  • @egapnala65
    @egapnala65 8 років тому +3

    But would it get some wind for the sailboat? Bugger.. wrong composer.