Erik Hall’s Reimagining of Charlemagne Palestine’s “Strumming Music” Highlights Its Minimalist/Maximalist Tonal and Rhythmic Flourishes as Sonic Texture

Erik Hall, photo courtesy the artist

Erik Hall released his new album Solo Three on January 23, 2026 via Western Vinyl. The record features the composer and multi-instrumentalist’s reimagining/reworking of contemporary classical pieces. Minimalist/maximalist composer Charlemagne Palestine will appear at the Big Ears Festival in Knoxville, Tennessee in March and Hall’s version of Palestine’s 1974 solo work “Strumming Music” captures in short the energetic movement of the song and the way Palestine orchestrated the shifts in tone and counterpoint across over fifty minutes but in a mere fourteen minutes nineteen seconds. Hall includes a background harmonic drone but maintains the piano of the original and its spare but evolving arrangement like paradoxically analog iterative music so that the piece increases in brightness of pitch and density of rhythms and sonics without drifting into concessions to pop accessibility. As well, Hall preserves the tight but subtle movements within the composition and its performance while putting his own touches in the performance and production so that its essence is expressed while not merely doing a cover. Listen to “Strumming Music” on YouTube and follow Erik Hall at the links provided.

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Listen to Erik Hall’s Bold and Lively Interpretation of Steve Reich’s “Music For a Large Ensemble”

Erik Hall, photo courtesy the artist

Erik Hall will release his new album Solo Three on January 23, 2026 via Western Vinyl. The composer and multi-instrumentalist interpreted pieces by Glenn Branca, Charlemagne Palestine, Laurie Spiegel and perhaps most ambitious of the group, “Music For a Large Ensemble” by Steve Reich. The composition originally written in 1978 for at least 23 performers finds its bright, lively spirit in dazzling sonic detail with its component parts supporting, augmenting and complementing each other in short and then longer lines back to those shorter and alterations in accent and volume to bring to the experience of listening an organic feel and one that stimulates the mind with the simple joy of its arrangements. Hall uses a divergent sound palette with synths, organs, pianos, guitar, bass (all performed, recorded and mixed by himself—impressive on its own) to lend a modern almost electronic music aesthetic to one of Reich’s classics. Listen to “Music For a Large Ensemble” on YouTube and follow Erik Hall at the links below.

Erik Hall on Twitter

Erik Hall on Facebook

Erik Hall on Instagram