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Erik Satie, precursor
Deadpan … Erik Satie, whose Gymnopédies and Gnossiennes are remixed on Re:Works Piano. Photograph: Granger/Rex Shutterstock
Deadpan … Erik Satie, whose Gymnopédies and Gnossiennes are remixed on Re:Works Piano. Photograph: Granger/Rex Shutterstock

Various artists: Re:works Piano review – tiring, tedious and boring

This article is more than 6 years old

Decca

In 1917, Erik Satie coined the term “musique d’ameublement” – furniture music – in a radical stunt of deadpan performance art. “It’s new!” he wrote in his manuscript. “It isn’t tiring! It isn’t boring!” Satie’s rogue irony pre-empted muzak by several decades and set in motion (or anti-motion) the slow cogs of ambient music and experimental minimalism. Then there’s the dross. The most callous kind of crossover saps the integrity of both forms being crossed. Decca – once a stamp of prestige, now part of the Universal label group cashing in on the trend for insipid “neo-classical” – releases the next in its Re:Works series with this grim chillout collection of electronic remixes. Cheerless, senseless and overproduced, it smothers the remaining life out of Pachelbel’s Canon, weirdly straitjackets Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata and trashes the maverick surrealist stasis of Satie’s Gymnopédies and Gnossiennes. It’s not new, it is tiring, it is very boring.

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