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Where do electronica artists go to seek validation when philistine rock fans complain of techno's "incessant repetition"? Lately they've been turning to San Francisco-based composer Steve Reich and his notion that seemingly "minimal" modern classical music can sound shapely, gorgeous, propulsive, and, yes, funky. With Music for 18 Musicians, composed in 1978, Reich culminated his two-decade rebellion against staid avant-garde composition. Three high-register female voices, clarinet, violin, cello, maracas, piano, and xylophone blend into each other for 70 minutes of pulsing note-modulations that are paced to correspond with the breathing patterns of the musicians themselves. The album starts spare and grows organically, repeating the same lovely theme until the composition reaches a massive, stop-action climax. Today, Reich's influence can be heard in the work of grooveriders like the Orb and Spring Heel Jack and modern classical revisionists from Stereolab to Tortoise. This version (recorded in 1996 and available separately or as part of Nonesuch's ten-CD box Works: 1965-1995) slows down the original piece, opening up the music's pores to give new and old fans a fresh perspective on one of the most compelling records of the century. Jon Dolan, Barnes & Noble