


2012's Recomposed: The Four Seasons, an experimental reimagining of Vivaldi's violin concertos, topped classical charts in over 20 countries. Despite the high-concept nature of much of his work, Richter always maintains a powerful emotional connection with his listeners. Richter's fascination with the growing role of technology in everyday life was a major theme of releases spanning 2008's collection of bespoke ringtones to the music for a particularly paranoid 2016 episode of the TV series Black Mirror. On early masterworks such as 2002's Memoryhouse and 2003's The Blue Notebooks, he united his childhood memories and commentary on war's devastating aftermath into gorgeous, aching music with 2015's eight-hour Sleep, he challenged the increasing disposability of art and music as well as audiences' ever-decreasing attention spans. Foobar2000 1.6.11 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1Īnalyzed: Max Richter / The New Four Seasons - Vivaldi RecomposedĭR10 -12.08 dB -25.57 dB 2:58 09-Autumn 2ĭR13 -10.18 dB -28.37 dB 2:36 12-Winter 2Ĭombining the discipline of his classical background with the inventive spirit of electronic music, Max Richter's work as a producer and composer speaks to - and frequently critiques - 21st century life in eloquent and evocative ways.
