Sleep (Max Richter album)
Sleep | ||||
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Studio album by Max Richter | ||||
Released | September 4, 2015 | |||
Studio |
Avatar Studios (Manhattan, New York) AIR Studios (London, England) StudioKino (Berlin, Germany) | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 504:21 | |||
Label | Deutsche Grammophon | |||
Producer |
Max Richter Christian Badzura (exec. producer) Yulia Mahr (exec. producer) | |||
Max Richter chronology | ||||
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Sleep (stylized as SLEEP) is the 2015 album by neo-classical composer Max Richter, released on September 24, 2015 on Deutsche Grammophon.[1] The album is over eight hours in length, totalling eight hours, twenty-four minutes, and twenty-one seconds.
Background
Richter conferred with American neuroscientist David Eagleman while working on the album's piece to learn about how the brain functions during sleep. Richter stated, "Sleeping is one of the most important things we all do," he said. "We spend a third of our lives asleep and it's always been one of my favourite things, ever since I was a child. ... For me, Sleep is an attempt to see how that space when your conscious mind is on holiday can be a place for music to live."[2]
Live performance
The album was performed in its entirety as one compositional piece at the Reading Room at Wellcome Collection in London, England on September 27, 2015 from midnight to 8:00 AM as the climax of the BBC Radio 3 "Science and Music" weekend.[3]
The performance broke several records, including the longest live broadcast of a single piece of music in BBC Radio 3's station's history.[4] The performance also set Guinness World Records for longest broadcast of a single piece of music and longest live broadcast of a single piece of music.[2]
Instead of chairs to sit in and watch the performance, audience members were given beds to sleep in.[2]
Richter played piano, keyboards, and electronics, and was joined by Grace Davidson (soprano), Reiad Chibah (viola), Natalia Bonner and Steve Morris (violins), and Ian Burdge and Chris Worsey (cellos).[2]
Critical reception
Professional ratings | |
---|---|
Aggregate scores | |
Source | Rating |
Metacritic | 79/100[5] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [6] |
Drowned in Sound | 9/10[7] |
The Line of Best Fit | 8/10[8] |
Pitchfork | 7.0/10.0[9] |
Uncut | [10] |
Sleep received wide acclaim from contemporary music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 79, based on 7 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".[5]
Jon Falcone of Drowned in Sound gave the album a very positive review, stating, "Sleep implores you for companionship and bleeds into itself as it bleeds into the listener. Typing while the fizz of ‘Never Fade Into Nothingness’ plays makes transforms Word documents in an epic dance of black pixels on white light, binary marks scratching into a too-bright glassy reflection. Walking while the echo-drenched monastic vocals of ‘Non-Eternal’ exposes that the world we occupy is haunted is exhilarating and avoiding awkward work colleagues as ‘If You Came This Way’ patters out its motif, that dangles held violin notes over electronic burbles, is to experience the sound of solace itself."[7]
Grayson Haver Currin of Pitchfork Media gave the album a positive review, stating, "At its best, Sleep feels like compositionally rigorous new age music. It’s a place in which you can settle for a while, with or without a pillow, and emerge only when you are ready to rejoin the restive world."[9] However, Currin was also slightly critical of the release, stating, "Sleep, then, is simply too didactic as a name. It’s a command that tells us how to enjoy something that clearly has other uses. That handle, combined with Richter’s conceit, has turned the record into a kind of clickbait story, too, which seems entirely antithetical to Richter’s point."[9]
Track listing
All songs written and composed by Max Richter.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Dream 1 (before the wind blows it all away)" | 18:31 |
2. | "Cumulonimbus" | 10:09 |
3. | "Dream 2 (entropy)" | 10:02 |
4. | "Path (7676)" | 11:00 |
5. | "whose name is written on water" | 11:15 |
6. | "Patterns (cypher)" | 2:47 |
7. | "Solo" | 6:53 |
8. | "Aria 1" | 11:06 |
9. | "Return 2 (song)" | 16:46 |
10. | "nor earth, nor boundless sea" | 19:17 |
11. | "Dream 11 (whisper music)" | 18:54 |
12. | "moth-like stars" | 28:53 |
13. | "Path 17 (before the ending of daylight)" | 26:52 |
14. | "Space 26 (epicardium)" | 6:56 |
15. | "Patterns (lux)" | 16:43 |
16. | "Constellation 1" | 6:56 |
17. | "Constellation 2" | 15:20 |
18. | "Space 2 (slow waves)" | 7:42 |
19. | "Chorale/glow" | 25:29 |
20. | "Dream 19 (pulse)" | 18:53 |
21. | "Cassiopeia" | 19:36 |
22. | "Non-eternal" | 23:50 |
23. | "Song/echo" | 4:59 |
24. | "Aria 2" | 11:02 |
25. | "never fade into nothingness" | 9:41 |
26. | "Return 16 (time capsule)" | 24:25 |
27. | "if you came this way" | 14:29 |
28. | "Space 17 (chains)" | 17:59 |
29. | "Sublunar" | 25:22 |
30. | "Dream 17 (Alpha)" | 28:47 |
31. | "Dream 0 (till break of day)" | 33:47 |
Total length: |
504:21 |
- Track 5 (Who's [sic] Name Is Written On Water) was misspelt on the first release of September 4, 2015.
Personnel
- Main personnel
- Max Richter – composer, electronics, liner notes, mixing, organ, piano, primary artist, producer, quotation author, synthesizer
- American Contemporary Music Ensemble – strings (ensemble)
- Grace Davidson – vocals (soprano)
- Brian Snow – cello
- Clarice Jensen – cello
- Caleb Burhans – viola
- Ben Russell – violin
- Yuki Numata Resnick – violin
- Additional personnel
- Christian Badzura – project manager
- Tom Bailey – assistant engineer
- Tim Cooper – liner notes
- Rupert Coulson – engineer, mixing
- David Eagleman – liner notes
- Merle Kersten – art direction
- Yulia Mahr – executive producer
- Mandy Parnell – mastering
- Anna-Lena Rodewald – project manager
- Mike Terry – photography
- Alejandro Venguer – engineer
- Mareike Walter – design
References
- ↑ Sleep: Deutsche Grammophon Catalog
- 1 2 3 4 Max Richter Performs Sleep Live for Eight Hours, Sets Guinness World Record on BBC Radio 3
- ↑ Sinfini Music - Latest: Music and the brain
- ↑ The New Yorker: Music to Sleep By
- 1 2 "Reviews for Sleep [8 Hour Version] by Max Richter". Metacritic. Retrieved February 19, 2016.
- ↑ "Sleep – Max Richter". AllMusic. Retrieved February 18, 2016.
- 1 2 Falcone, Jon. Max Richter - Sleep. Drowned In Sound. 11 September 2015. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
- ↑ "The Line of Best Fit review".
- 1 2 3 Currin, Grayson Haver (September 21, 2015). "Max Richter: Sleep". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved February 19, 2016.
- ↑ Metacritic: Uncut Magazine score
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