Max Richter's Sleep lulls slumbering concert-goers in Berlin

The composer performed the public world premiere of his eight-hour lullaby as the 400-strong pyjama-clad audience settled into camp beds for the night

Richter and his musicians are performing for three nights as part of the Berliner Festspiele’s Maerz Musik Festival.

In September 2015, Richter performed Sleep to an invited audience of just 20 at the Wellcome Collection, London. Radio 3 broadcast the piece, thereby earning the world record for the longest piece of music ever broadcast live.

Richter composed his piece, which features piano, strings and vocals fused with electronics, in consultation with US neurologist David Eagleman as a way to explore the effect music has on subconscious minds.

Hannah Ellis-Petersen was at the London performance. “As silence cloaked the room and the soft piano chords began, followed by the deep melancholic vibrations of the cello, I was engulfed by a sense of calm,” she wrote.

Richter describes his piece as “an eight-hour place to rest in a frenetic world”.

Guardian music

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Inside Max Richter's vinyl collection: Aphex Twin, Bach, Grouper and more
In the lead-up to the release of his eight-hour lullaby album, Sleep, the composer creates a playlist of some his favourite music, from noise-rockers Girl Band to Aphex Twin

Max Richter

01, Sep, 2015 @4:21 PM

Hear a Forbidden City concert

Listen to exclusive tracks from a concert of Chinese orchestral music held inside the heart of Beijing's imperial palace

Andrew Dickson

10, Mar, 2008 @3:15 PM

The longest concert in the world

The current organ performance of As Slow as Possible at St Burchardi church in Halberstadt, Germany, began in 2001 and is scheduled to end in 2640

Kate Connolly

07, Jul, 2008 @2:15 PM

Article image
The Berlin Philharmonic's stalemate: what next?
After 11 hours of voting, the Berlin Phil have failed to choose a new conductor. Tom Service speculates on just what went on inside that Berlin church and how the orchestra will replace Simon Rattle in 2018

Tom Service

12, May, 2015 @11:08 AM

Chamber concert v rugby final. No contest

First our publicity drive was set back by the postal strike. Then Jonny Wilkinson went and made things even worse.

Susan Tomes

18, Oct, 2007 @10:54 AM

Article image
Max Richter's Sleep review – mellow look at his somnolent magnum opus
This meditative documentary about Richter’s eight-hour composition for a sleeping audience is anything but a snooze

Peter Bradshaw

11, Sep, 2020 @10:00 AM

Article image
OAE's Night Shift is a winning concert format

Tom Service: With its late-night early-music initiative, the Night Shift, the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment looks to have found the holy grail of classical music

Tom Service

05, Nov, 2008 @12:51 PM

Article image
What concerts have sent you to sleep?

Salisbury Arts Centre wants its audience to drift off during tonight's concert, curated by violinist Pekka Kuusisto. What music would you put on such a concert programme, and what have you inadvertently dozed off during?

Imogen Tilden

30, May, 2014 @1:50 PM

Article image
The Berlin Phil's century of recorded sound

One hundred years of Berlin Phil recordings is being celebrated with a tortuous anachronism

Tom Service

21, Aug, 2013 @1:27 PM

Article image
Concert cancellations - and why they're a good thing!

Cancellations make the musical world go round - and they sometimes give a Prommer a chance to sing the solo part in Carmina Burana...

Tom Service

10, Oct, 2013 @10:27 AM