Main content

Maxing out on Minimalism

Fascinating and intricate patterns or the emperor's new clothes? What is minimalism in music and how do you listen to it?

Less really is more on today’s The Listening Service: we’re maxing out on minimalism, that most popular but also most divisive and most misunderstood of all 20th-century musical movements. Music that either makes you bliss out or brings you out in hives - it's the sound of that rhythmic repetitive music by a quartet of American composers - Steve Reich, Philip Glass, LaMonte Young, and Terry Riley, who have defined the movement, the style, even the genre of minimalism. Take a chord, a pattern, a handful of notes - and repeat them - and repeat again…and again...

What is minimalism in music and why should you listen to it?

Available now

30 minutes

Last on

Fri 28 Feb 2020 16:30

Music Played

  • Steve Reich

    Piano Phase

    Performer: Mahan Esfahani.
    • Archiv.
  • Steve Reich

    Music for 18 musicians

    Performer: Steve Reich and Musicians.
    • ECM.
  • Éliane Radigue

    Trilogie de la Mort - Kyema

    Performer: Éliane Radigue.
    • Experimental Intermedia Foundation.
  • Dennis Johnson

    November

    Performer: Jeroen van Veen.
    • Brilliant Classics.
  • Michael Nyman

    A Zed and two noughts - music for the film: Prawn watching

    Performer: Zoo Orchestra. Performer: Michael Nyman.
    • Venture.
  • John Adams

    On the Dominant Divide (Grand Pianola Music)

    Performer: Alan Feinberg. Performer: Ursula Oppens. Performer: Solisti New York. Performer: Ransom Wilson.
    • EMI.
  • Mike Oldfield

    Tubular Bells

    Performer: Mike Oldfield.
    • Virgin Records.
  • Alban Berg

    Concerto For Violin And Orchestra (Beginning of part 2)

    Performer: Itzhak Perlman. Performer: Boston Symphony Orchestra. Performer: Seiji Ozawa.
    • DG.
  • Chuck Berry

    Back in the USA

    Performer: Chuck Berry.
    • Chess.
  • Steve Reich

    Drumming

    Performer: Steve Reich and Musicians.
    • DG.

Broadcasts

  • Sun 16 Sep 2018 17:00
  • Sun 23 Feb 2020 17:00
  • Fri 28 Feb 2020 16:30

Why do we call it 'classical' music?

Tom Service poses a very simple question (with a not-so-simple answer).

Six of the world's most extreme voices

From babies to Mongolian throat singers: whose voice is the most extreme of all?

How did the number 12 revolutionise music?

How did the number 12 revolutionise music?

How Schoenberg opened a new cosmos for composers and listeners to explore.

Why are we all addicted to bass?

Why are we all addicted to bass?

Bass is everywhere, but why do we enjoy it? Join Tom Service on a journey of discovery.

Watch the animations

Join Tom Service on a musical journey through beginnings, repetition and bass lines.

When does noise become music?

We like to think we can separate “noise” from “music”, but is it that simple?

Podcast