Sunset Strip has a duration of approximately fifteen minutes and is composed in three movements:
7 PM
Nocturne
7 AM
Inspiration
The composition is inspired by the eponymous Sunset Strip, a culturally significant mile-and-a-half stretch of Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. In the score notes for Sunset Strip, Daugherty wrote:
In my orchestral composition, I create a musical landscape where I re-imagine the various sounds and images of Sunset Strip, past and present, from sundown through the midnight hour until sunrise. My dreamlike musical journey takes us past swank restaurants, beatnik hangouts, dazzling hotels, Rat Pack nightclubs, private eye offices, rock clubs with go-go dancers, Mexican Restaurants, and smoky jazz lounges. In Sunset Strip, I place the listener in the driver’s seat and create music-in-motion where anything can happen; and it usually does.[1]
Ivan Hewett of The Daily Telegraph lauded Daugherty as "the orchestral chronicler of American culture" and described the piece, in addition to Daugherty's Route 66, as "winning and affectionate." Hewett added, "In works such as Route 66 and Sunset Strip he paints the hopes and dreams embodied in Interstate highways, wide-open spaces and all-night bars where Frank Sinatra crooned."[2] Mark Estren of The Washington Post called the piece "another nostalgia-tinged work, tunefully bouncy in its outer movements (whimsically titled '7 PM' and '7 AM') and warm in its central nocturne."[3] David Gutman of Gramophone called it "one of [Daugherty's] accessible but diffuse postmodern collages of overheard shards and elegant juxtapositions."[4] Alex Chilvers of Limelight also praised the work, noting its development as "allowing for moments of ear-relieving sparsity."[5]