Category: Ballet

  • TAKE Dance: THERE AND HERE

    Safe_image.php

    Friday March 27th, 2015 – Takehiro Ueyama’s TAKE Dance celebrating their tenth anniversary with an evening-long work entitled THERE AND HERE, presented at the Schimmel Center. For this special occasion, guest artists Miki Orihara, Amy Young, Nana Tsuda, and Orion Duckstein joined the members of Take’s company, and Take himself appeared in an enigmatic role. Take talks about influences and inspiration here.

    Composer Kato Hideki performed his mystical score live, perched on high in the shadows at the rear of the stage. The music feels improvisational, giving the dancers a soundscape in which their individual expressiveness can be sustained. Hideki’s score has an other-worldly quality, with the sounds of wind blowing, resonant drumming, and a sustained motif of perpetual sonic beeps, which seems like a signal from another world that is trying to reach us.

    For indeed THERE AND HERE straddles two worlds: the world of the living and the unknown world of the afterlife. The performing space, open to the riggings on the sides, is a patch of desert – the sands of time – with a small mound to one side. Pieces of broken altar-rock are scattered in the space, indicating it as a once-sacred setting for some lost or forgotten tribe.

    Darkness has settled over the land, yet a spirit (Nana Tsuda) slowly awakens to sombre, eerily ominous music. Over time various wanderers come into the space, moving in a stylized manner; at times they seem almost like sleepwalkers. Fleeting connections between dancers – all but Take clad in red, unisex overalls – maintain the sense of mystery. Much of the choreography is slow-paced and ritualistic; from time to time there are bursts of activity and ensemble passages where the dancers seem increasingly absorbed into the landscape. The stones are piled, cast down, walked or sat upon; and sand sometimes falls from the sky or is sprinkled in handfuls by the participants. 

    In this purgatorial setting, there were numerous passages which seized our imagination: Jill Echo quietly seeks to re-build the shattered altar; John Eirich and Nana Tsuda rushing about like flying birds and go scampering up the hill; a combative duet for John and Brynt Beitman; an inventively-choreograhed pas de deux duet for Amy Young and Orion Duckstein. Brynt has a solo, observed by the others seated on the rocks. A vivid swaying motif is danced to drummed rhythms; Gina Ianni’s impressive solo (later joined by John Eirich) and a wild duet for Marie Zvosec and Kile Hotchkiss followed by solos for Kile and Brynt show off the members of Take’s company to distinct advantage.

    The girls fling themselves into the arms of the waiting boys, then all the dancers collapse in a domino effect. As the others perform gestural sequences, Orion is isolated and is perhaps being judged. Amy Young appears as a living statue; to intense music she sifts the sands. In a moment of exquisite beauty, Miki Orihara walks along a pathway of stone blocks – so simple yet so effective.

    At last Take – a priestly figure all in black – returns, and the restless spirits at last sink into rest on the desolate Earth.

  • Paul Taylor @ Lincoln Center 2015 #4

    Piazzolla Caldera michelle

    Above: Michelle Fleet in Paul Taylor’s PIAZZOLLA CALDERA; photo by the late Tom Caravaglia

    Tuesday March 24th, 2015 – The tonight’s programme, my final opportunity to see the Paul Taylor Dance Company during their current Lincoln Center stint, featured two works I’d seen earlier in the season: SUNSET and EVENTIDE, plus the darkly alluring PIAZZOLLA CALDERA.

    SUNSET, with its off-duty soldiers and a quartet of white-clad girls, is set to music by Edward Elgar with a nostalgic feeling and to a central section where only the sounds of loons crying is heard. There are playful passages – Aileen Roehl gets tossed daringly from man to man – but the overall atmosphere is pensive, with fleeting possibilities of romance. The men march off to duty, leaving the girls downcast. In a high-lighted role, Eran Bugge was superb; she is left at the end clutching a red beret which one of the soldiers has dropped. 

    Eventide 1

    Above, from EVENTIDE: James Samson, Laura Halzack, Francisco Graciano, and Heather McGinley in a Paul B Goode photo.

    I really fell under the spell of EVENTIDE during this Taylor season. This romantic work, with its melodious Vaughan Williams score, was poetically danced tonight. A series of duets presents us with the opportunity to savor the expressive qualities of ten of the Company’s distinctive artists while in ensemble passages the simple act of walking takes on a poignant resonance. 

    Piazzolla Caldera 3

    Above: the Taylor men in PIAZZOLLA CALDERA; photo by Paul B Goode

    PIAZZOLLA CALDERA premiered in 1997, drawing Paul Taylor into the world of the tango. The tango grew out of many musical influences – Spanish, Italian, Indian, African and Jewish – and reached a height of artistic expression in the music of Astor Piazzolla. For his ballet, Paul Taylor avoided using any actual tango steps but was able magically to distill the essence of this exotic dance form. In a smoke-filled, dimly lit and disreputable bar, working-class men and women meet to dance and imbibe in a steamy after-hours atmosphere. They pose, provoke, titillate, and deny each other in a series of sexually fraught duets and trios.

    Parisa Khobdeh showed a vivid mixture of tension and allure in a commanding performance; she drifted in and out of a pas de trois with Eran Bugge and Robert Kleinendorst, later seizing the stage for herself. In a sexy/drunken duet, Francisco Graciano and Michael Apuzzo seemed alternately on the verge of kissing or knifing each other, while the sizzling pairing of Michelle Fleet and Michael Trusnovec gave fresh meaning to the word “electrifying”. PIAZZOLLA CALDERA was the perfect finale for an evening of great dance, and the crowd went wild at the end of the show.

  • Paul Taylor @ Lincoln Center 2015 #3

    Brandenburgs 5

    Above: Michael Trusnovec and ensemble in Paul Taylor’s Brandenburgs; photo by Paul B Goode

    Saturday evening March 21st, 2015 – This evening, the programme at Paul Taylor Dance Company’s Lincoln Center season featured Taylor’s latest creation, Death and The Damsel, book-ended by two of his celebrated works from the 1980s: Sunset and Brandenburgs.

    The simple but evocative Alex Katz set design for Sunset shows a flat aquamarine sky with suggestions of tree limbs in black. Along one side of the stage is an iron fence, which might also be a ballet barre. A group of soldiers in khakis and red berets are lounging and casually dancing. We know not what country they serve; they are simply universal soldiers. 

    Sunset 2

    Above: Robert Kleinendorst and Michael Trusnovec in Sunset; photo by Paul B Goode

    Unlike Jerome Robbins’ Fancy Free, to which it is sometimes compared, Sunset is mostly devoid of humor or playfulness. Perhaps Taylor’s soldiers are part of an occupying force. When three white-clad girls appear, there are flirtations, tensions, and hopes. But Sunset retains throughout an under-current of sadness, fed by the wistful lyricism of the Edward Elgar score.

    Sunset 3

    Above: Aileen Roehl and the ensemble in Sunset; photo by Paul B Goode

    Passing playfulness – with four lovely ladies Aileen Roehl, Michelle Fleet, Parisa Khobdeh, and Eran Bugge – gives way to the sounds of birdcalls as dusk approaches. The tone becomes more pensive. In a sustained passage with the men, Ms. Bugge seems angelic, the white purity of her dress matching the purity of her dancing. The men then march off: to guard duty? To battle? Or to an unknown fate. 

    Paul Taylor’s newest work, Death and the Damsel, is set to Bohuslav Martinů’s Sonata #2, beautifully played live from the pit by Myron Lutzke (cello) and Margaret Kampmeier (piano). Massive backdrops of Gotham cityscapes (designed by Santo Loquasto) loom over the action; especially marvelous is Loquasto’s view of the Chrysler Building.

    Jamie Rae Walker awakens from sleep in her tiny loft-room. In her introductory solo, Ms. Walker does everything from fouetté turns to cartwheels, expressing her innocence and her joy at living in the most exciting city on Earth. Suddenly her peace of mind is disturbed by the entrance of vampiric creatures dressed in black leather with Goth hairdos and makeup. 

    The action suddenly shifts to a dance club where Ms. Walker is heartlessly gang-raped. In a duet which combines terror and deadly allure, the girl is partnered by the glowingly sinister Michael Trusnovec. Later, she tries to fend off the gorgeously evil and predatory Laura Halzack. The ballet ends with Ms. Walker apparently being devoured by her attackers (though the people seated behind us were saying the ending was somewhat different at an earlier performance they had seen). Whether the scenario represents the damsel’s nightmare or her secret fantasy we cannot guess; but the work did offer a big opportunity for Ms. Walker and she made the most of it.

    Brandenburgs 2

    Above: the Taylor men in Brandenburgs; photo by Paul B Goode

    Paul Taylor’s 1988 abstract Bach ballet Brandenburgs brought the evening to a marvelous close. Wearing Santo Loquasto’s rich forest-green velvety costumes, the men perform stylized leaps and semaphoric gestures that made me think of some of Martha Graham’s unison passages. Three beauties appear – Michelle Fleet, Parisa Khobdeh, and Eran Bugge – each dancing a solo enmeshed with the men: each woman radiant and creating her own perfumed atmosphere. In an adagio solo demanding peerless physical control and expressiveness, Michael Trusnovec was simply magnificent. Tonight’s Brandenburgs showed Taylor’s choreography and his thrillingly talented dancers at their very finest.

    Brandenburgs 1

    Above: Parisa Khobdeh and the ensemble in Brandenburgs; photo by Paul B Goode

    I loved running into Annmaria Mazzini and John Eirich tonight.

  • Gallery: Martha Graham/Joyce Season 2015

    150212_M_Graham_steps_012_web

    Above: XiaoChuan Xie (foreground) in Martha Graham’s Steps in The Street; photo © Yi-Chun Wu

    Photographer Yi-Chun Wu has provided a portfolio of images from the Martha Graham Dance Company’s 2015 season at The Joyce Theater. In terms of both repertory and dancing, these Graham Company performances were outstanding. Read about two particularly memorable evenings here and here.

    150212_M_Graham_steps_003_web

    From Martha Graham’s Steps in The Street

    150212_M_Graham_steps_007_web

    Carrie Ellmore-Tallitsch in Graham’s Steps in The Street

    150212_M_Graham_steps_006_web

    Carrie Ellmore-Tallitsch and the ensemble in Graham’s Steps in The Street

    150212_M_Graham_summer_007_web

    Guest artist Misty Copeland of American Ballet Theatre and Graham principal Lloyd Knight in Martha Graham’s At Summer’s Full

    150212_M_Graham_echo_004_web

    PeiJu Chien-Pott in Andonis Foniadakis’ Echo

    150212_M_Graham_echo_005_web

    Charlotte Landreau in Andonis Foniadakis’ Echo

    150212_M_Graham_echo_014_web

    Abdiel Jacobsen and Ying Xin in Andonis Foniadakis’ Echo

    150212_M_Graham_errandMaze_007_web

    Abdiel Jacobsen and Blakeley White-McGuire in Martha Graham’s Errand Into The Maze

    150212_M_Graham_errandMaze_012_web

    The Joyce season marked Blakeley White McGuire’s farewell performances as a member of the Graham company. On the closing night of the season, Blakeley (above) danced Errand Into The Maze with her long-time Graham colleague, Tadej Brdnik, also taking his final bows as a member of the Company.

    All photos © Yi-Chun Wu.

  • Graham @ The Joyce 2015 – Part II

    30828_433083144185_6944679_n

    Above: Blakeley White-McGuire and Tadej Brdnik; these two phenomenal dancers were making their ‘farewell’ appearances as members of the Graham company tonight.

    Sunday February 22nd, 2015 – For me it was a bittersweet evening at the Martha Graham Dance Company‘s final performance of their 2015 Joyce season following the news earlier this week that tonight would mark the ‘farewell’ Graham performances of Blakeley White-McGuire and Tadej Brdnik, two of the great Graham interpreters of our time and two people I greatly love and admire both as dancers and personalities. 

    Tadej danced in the very first performance of a Graham work that I ever saw: Appalachian Spring at Jacob’s Pillow some 20 years ago. That afternoon his Bride was the inimitable Miki Orihara. Combining the physique of a champion athlete with an appealingly boyish face, Tadej’s boundless energy and commitment have made him a Graham icon; he also has a devilish sense of humor, and I’ve seen him at the end of a long rehearsal keeping his fellow-dancers merry with one-liners and dead-pan expressions. In these final performances as a Company member, he has again shown the power and presence that have made him an emblematic Graham dancer throughout his career.

    Of Blakeley White-McGuire, one can say she has indomitable technical prowess and a rare gift for communicating emotion. But beyond that there’s an undefinable element in her dancing which only a handful of dancers in my experience have possessed: a spiritual connection with the music and the movement that makes her performances not just important, but essential. Blakeley is twice-blessed by Terpsichore, and it is we – the audience – who reap the benefits of her beauty and generosity of spirit. 

    Like Wendy Whelan, who recently retired from New York City Ballet (and who was in the audience tonight!), both Blakeley and Tadej have indicated that they aren’t retiring, but simply turning a page in the chronicle of their dancing careers.

    Blakeley and Tadej walked into the Graham studios for the first time on the same day some two decades ago. Although in the original scheme of things they were not scheduled to dance Errand Into The Maze together this season, it seems they were destined by the gods to do so.

    _MG_7823

    Their performance was thrilling, commencing with Blakeley’s opening solo (photo above by Brigid Pierce) in which she danced with a palpitating mixture of fear and resolve, delineating the character’s destiny in a vivid marriage of technique and temperament. Tadej, as the monstrous Minotaur, stalks her like a vicious predator, his incredible thigh musculature giving him grounded strength of purpose. Their pas de deux, so fraught with struggle and sexuality, shows Graham’s gift for devising miracles of leverage, counter-balance, and entwining in her partnering motifs. Blakeley and Tadej’s joint triumph was vastly cheered by the packed house, and their Graham colleagues joined them onstage for the celebration. 

    For all the excitement generated by Blakeley and Tadej, the evening was an enriching one overall, commencing with two Graham works in which two of my beloved Muses appeared: Deep Song opened the program in a vivid performance by Carrie Ellmore-Tallitsch, and Miki Orihara gave a luminous rendering of an excerpt from Primitive Mysteries, presiding over a corps of young women in blue.

    _MG_7545

    Above: Carrie Ellmore-Tallitsch in Deep Song; photo by Brigid Pierce

    Deep Song is a solo work by Martha Graham, set to Music by Henry Cowell. It was premiered in 1937 as one of the choreographer’s responses to the horrors of war (the Spanish civil war in this case). In a black and white gown, Carrie Ellmore-Tallitsch is first seen seated on a white bench. The choreography develops with seeming inevitability as she struggles with her  inner torment, sinking to the ground. She later lifts the bench, seeming to use it as a shield or hiding place. Finally the bench takes on a coffin-like aspect as she lowers it over herself. Carrie, a dancer I have always held in highest esteem, danced as superbly as I expected. The audience seemed to agree: she won a prolonged ovation which made me want to smile and weep at the same time.

    6a00d8341c4e3853ef01a511cbecd5970c-800wi

    Miki Orihara (rehearsal image, above) appeared like a shimmering angel all in white to perform the ‘Hymn to the Blessed Virgin’ from Graham’s 1931 ballet Primitive Mysteries. This is the Graham work I am most curious about, and tonight’s tantalizing excerpt makes me curiouser and curiouser. Escorted by a group of attendants in deep blue gowns (members and apprentices of Graham II), Miki radiates feminine mystique with her poetic gestures, moving with an almost ghostly lightness of tread. To Louis Horst’s atmospheric melody for flute and piano, the women perform antique rituals in this finely-structured dancework. The ensemble’s signature poses and port de bras make a particularly strong effect as Miki walks forward between facing rows of acolytes who sink down or raise their arms to heaven as she passes by. Miki sustains a powerful pose in demi-plié as the women circle about her. All to soon, their cortège passes onward but the resonance of their dancing lingers. Miki, always so movingly inspired and inspiring, sets a lovely example for the young dancers surrounding her: not only of how to move, but how to be.

    In the Graham Company’s on-going project of asking now-generation choreographers to create short danceworks inspired by Martha’s legendary solo Lamentation, Michelle Dorrance and Liz Gerring have now devised new pieces – Lamentation Variations – for the Graham dancers. Bulareyaung Pargalava’s Variation, a classic by now, was also on offer tonight.

    007_ChristopherJones_013

    Above: the Graham men in Michelle Dorrance’s Lamentation Variation; left to right are Abdiel Jacobsen, Ben Schultz, Lloyd Knight, Lloyd Mayor, Tadej Brdnik. Photo by Christopher Jones.

    Ms. Dorrance, a tap-dancing paragon, did not ask the Graham dancers to tap. But the music she used relied on tap rhythmics with a jazzy over-lay. The men formed a kind of central knot, while a quintet of women were seen in walkabouts…which one or two of the men sometimes strayed into. Though abstract, an underlying aspect of sadness and solitude prevailed throughout this work.

    001_MG_2624

    Liz Gerring’s Lamentation Variation is a quartet – performed by Natasha M Diamond-Walker, Charlotte Landreau, Ying Xin, and the indefatigable Tadej Brdnik (photo, Brigid Pierce) – which is set to a score for electronics and piano. The movement is rather stylized, and choreographer and dancers make excellent use of the space.

    150212_M_Graham_B_Pagarlava_003

    Above: from Bulareyaung Pargalava’s Lamentation Vartiation; photo © 2015 Yi-Chun Wu.

    Pargalava’s Variation opens to the sound of Martha Graham’s voice speaking about the solo that inspired all these variations. Soon a haunting melody from Mahler’s ‘Songs of the Wayfarer’ is heard. In flesh-coloured tights, the delicate XiaoChuan Xie and her three demi-god partners – Ben Schultz, Lloyd Knight, and Lloyd Mayor – move with a sense of flowing lyricism through intricate partnerings in which Chuan alternately sinks down and is lifted on high. The dancers and the dance certainly wove a hypnotic spell tonight.

    002_MG_7971

    Above: Tadej Brdnik and XiaoChuan Xie in Annie-B Parson’s The Snow Falls in the Winter; photo by Brigid Pierce.

    I saw Annie-B Parson’s The Snow Falls in the Winter a few seasons ago when OtherShore performed it. It’s simply not my cup of tea. For me one of the great joys of watching dance is: the dancers are silent. Once they begin to speak, a whole element of mystery falls away. Ms. Parson’s work is more like a play with a bit of dancing thrown in. The Graham dancers of course flung themselves into the piece with their customary zest, and Carrie Ellmore-Tallitsch and Natasha Diamond-Walker in particular proved themselves adept actresses. But while many in the audience applauded lustily and commented enthusiastically on this very ‘different’ work, I found it pretty tedious.

    006_MG_8799

    Above: from Andonis Foniadakis’ Echo, Lloyd Mayor, PeiJu Chien-Pott, and Lloyd Knight; photo by Brigid Pierce

    The evening then soared to its conclusion with Andonis Foniadakis’ myth-inspired masterwork, Echo. It’s more a mood piece than a literal re-telling of the ancient tale of Narcissus and Echo, and as such it flows gorgeously upon Julien Tauride’s atmospheric score. The Graham Company’s beautiful pair of Lloyds – Mayor and Knight – create the illusion of Narcissus and his refection in deeply-enmeshed duets, their movement enhanced by their long sheer skirts (costumes by Anastasios Sofroniou) as caught in shadowy swirls by Clifton Taylor’s lighting design. PeiJu Chein-Pott is simply gorgeous as Echo, her dancing radiant and her creation of the character’s unspoken love and frustration literally becoming poetry in motion. In a supporting ensemble (as if such dancers can ever be thought of as merely ‘supporting’!) Tadej Brdnik, Ben Schultz, Abdiel Jacobsen, Natasha Diamond-Walker, XiaoChuan Xie, Charlotte Landreau, and Lauren Newman all wove into the marvelous mythic tapestry that Mr. Foniadakis has created.

    002_MG_8527

    Above: from Andonis Foniadakis’ Echo, Lloyd Mayor and PeiJu Chien-Pott; photo by Brigid Pierce

    So nice to see many dancer-friends among the crowd: Wendy Whelan, Mariya Dashkina Maddux, Jere Hunt, Justin Lynch, Jonathan Breton, and Alexandre Balmain; and of course my delightful companion of the evening, Roberto Villanueva. Special thanks to Janet Eilber, the dance world’s most gracious hostess, and to publicist Janet Stapleton for sending me the production photos with perfect timing. 

    11018652_10152754243055749_7393396627905223554_n

    Afterglow: Tadej Brdnik and Blakeley White-McGuire basking in the affectionate admiration of friends and fans after the performance. Photo courtesy of Karen Brounstein.

  • YCA Young Composers Concert @ Merkin Hall

    ComposersConcertslideSW_edited_output..fw_1

    Tuesday February 17th, 2015 – Young Concert Artists presenting an evening of chamber music by young composers at Merkin Hall. I invited my choreographer-friend Claudia Schreier to join me, as she is always in quest of music to set dances to.

    It was a cordial and wonderfully satisfying evening of music, the four composers showing an expansive range of styles and influences, and a fine mastery of writing for the chosen instruments. The level of playing was high and mighty, and how lovely to re-encounter Ursula Oppens, who throughout her career has been a champion of new music.

    3f573b6e43ae27169d0dd8cde6c2d7f6

    Things got off to a shining start with BENJAMIN C.S. BOYLE‘s Sonata-Cantilena (NY premiere) performed by pianist Charles Abramovic and flautist Mimi Stillman (above). This four-movement work opens with a Debussyian shimmer; it wends its way thru melodious passages – sometimes doleful and sometimes evoking the warblings of exotic birds – with some sprightly, witty cascades of impetuous coloratura added to the mix. Ms. Stillman, in a fetching pale-violet frock, played beautifully and Mr. Abramovic was a congenially artful partner. 

    Ursula oppens pianist

    Ms. Oppens (above) was then joined by violinist Paul Huang and clarinetist Narek Arutyunian for DAVID HERTZBERG‘s Orgie Céleste (Premiere), a fantastical evocation of heavenly delights. Complex and ear-tingling in its textures, much of the music has an ethereal quality as the piano and violin linger in their high registers; meanwhile the clarinet murmurs a two-note motif endlessly, like a subtly pulsing heartbeat. Mr. Huang showed extraordinary technical control as he met all the composer’s demands with alacrity, including some ironic glissandi. The intermingling of the three voices kept everything in a constant state of freshness, Ms. Oppens was wonderfully vivid in her silvery filigree and Mr. Arutyunian seizing melodic opportunities his mellow, expressive tone. The audience responded enthusiastically to both the music and the musicians.

    The only one of tonight’s composers previously familiar to me was KENJI BUNCH, who I had met several years ago while I was working at Tower Records. Since then I have heard quite a bit of his music, but I had not had the pleasure of hearing him play live. He’s a superb violist, with a marvelous mastery of the instrument, making it sing for him is two very contrasted works.

    Bunch (Kenji)--Monica Ohuchi(sm)

    Above: Kenji Bunch and pianist Monica Ohuchi

    In I Dream in Evergreen, Kenji revealed the viola’s depth of lyricism in a poignant reflection on the sundering aspects of death, when mortal friendships end and are transformed into memory. Ms. Ohuchi’s gently shimmering opening theme is soon joined by the viola intoning its poetic recollection of past affection and regret. Together the two musicians provided a reflective interlude, impeccably played.    

    Kenji’s Étude No. 4 (from a set of twelve études he composed for his wife, Ms. Ohuchi, under the title Monica’s Notebook) is a brief and brilliant piece. Lasting all of 90 seconds, it sends the pianist’s hands rippling up and down the keyboard in a delightful display of dexterity. Ms. Ohuchi nailed it, and she was rightly given sustained applause which wouldn’t quit til she returned for a solo bow (personally, I was hoping for an encore of the piece!)

    In Étouffée for solo viola, Kenji’s panoramic exploration of the viola’s possibilities was truly impressive and enjoyable; his playing is mesmerizing – there’s no other word for it. Inspired by a favorite dish from the Cajun culture, the work opens with a hazy, out-of-focus quality as if the viola was drunk on Southern Comfort. This evolves into a big country dance-tune, captivating in its combination of rhythmic drive and sexy rubato. Bravo, Kenji! His entire set was really impressive.

    OpusOne

    Having musicians of the caliber of the Opus One quartet (above) play the New York premiere of your work must have given composer CHRIS ROGERSON a thrill. His Summer Night Music for Piano Quartet is full of musical marvels and how superbly it was played tonight by the Opus One artists: Ida Kavafian, violinist; Steven Tenenbom, violist; Peter Wiley, cellist; and Anne-Marie McDermott, pianist.

    In four movements, Summer Night Music opens with a sense of quietude at Twilight. First the cello, then viola, and then the violin introduce themselves in gentle motifs. Ms. McDermott reaches inside the body of the Steinway to pluck the piano’s strings as the cello murmurs plaintively and the violin plays high and pensive. In Fireflies, the piano spins forth with fluttering restlessness and sparkling little interjections. There’s a dense passage from all four players until, until – with a high fade-away from violin and piano – the memory of a Summer night slips away.

    The third movement, Evening Prayers, sounds like a gentle lullabye; the violin lingers on high and the viola and cello blend thru the music in simpatico phrases. The concluding Sleep Music commences with a gently vibrant quality, soft and high; a mellowness of cello and viola evoke deepening night. There is a broad melody for unison strings – and a passionate piano theme – before the music finally vanishes into thin air on Ms. Kavafian’s violin strings.

    10885560_575110625952729_3334037620464024949_n

    In researching some of the participating artists, I came upon the above quote from the young violinist Paul Huang. He has expressed something here that I have always felt.

  • Gallery: Graham @ The Joyce 2015

    001_MG_6565

    Above: Blakeley White-McGuire in Martha Graham’s CHRONICLE; photo by Brigid Pierce

    Here are some images from the Martha Graham Dance Company‘s 2015 season at The Joyce. Read about the first of three programmes the Company are presenting here.

    Click on each production photo to enlarge:

    002_MG_6695 (1)

    Above: the women’s ensemble in CHRONICLE, photo by Brigid Pierce

    001_MG_4839 (1)

    Above: Abdiel Jacobsen as Adam and Carrie Ellmore-Tallitsch as Lilith in Graham’s EMBATTLED GARDEN; photo by Brigid Pierce

    003_MG_2240

    Above: Tadej Brdnik (at the right) in Nacho Duato’s RUST; photo by Brigid Pierce

    There are new additions to the Graham company’s on-going LAMENTATION VARIATIONS project this season: 

    006_Christopher.Jones_003 (2)

    Above: from Sonya Tayeh’s LAMENTATION VARIATION, an ensemble work; photo by Christopher Jones.

    002_MG_3010

    Above: from Kyle Abraham’s LAMENTATION VARIATION, as danced by XiaoChuan Xie and Ying Xin, photographed by Brigid Pierce 

    004_MG_3037

    005_MG_3075

    Kyle’s Variation is being performed by alternating casts of two women (Ying Xin and XiaoChuanXie, above, in two more Brigid Pierce images)…

    150107_MGDC_KyleAbraham_LamenatationSeries_LLoydKnight_LloydMayor_SunyPurchase_Christopher.Jones_001

    …and two men: Lloyd Knight and Lloyd Mayor, photographed by Christopher Jones. [Note: the Lloyds are wearing shirts in this photo; in performance they danced bare-chested.]

    Peter Arnell’s marvelous photo-montage of the Graham dancers, which is being shown at every performance during the current Joyce season, may now be viewed here, at VOGUE. A couple of stills, below, will give you an idea of what this ‘moving picture’ is like:

    Image001

    Image004

    Catch these fabulous dancers thru February 22nd at The Joyce. Details here.

  • New Chamber Ballet: Gallery

    Entangled ncb

    Images from New Chamber Ballet‘s February 2015 performances at City Center Studios have come my way. Read about the evening here. Above, from Miro Magloire’s ballet ENTANGLED; the dancers are Sarah Atkins and Traci Finch. The above photo and the following images from Miro’s ballet RAW are provided by courtesy of New Chamber Ballet:

    IMG_6772_edited

    From RAW: the dancers are Traci Finch and Amber Neff

    IMG_6804_edited

    RAW: Traci Finch, Amber Neff

    IMG_6819_edited

    RAW: Amber Neff, Traci Finch

    IMG_6836_edited

    RAW: Amber Neff, Traci Finch

    IMG_6983_edited

    From Miro Magloire’s RAW: Amber Neff, Traci Finch

    The costume designs for both RAW and ENTANGLED are by Sarah Thea. She provided the following photos from ENTANGLED, used with permission:

    DSC_0571_edited

    Traci Finch, Sarah Atkins

    DSC_0926_edited

    Traci Finch, Sarah Atkins

    10987575_821115211937_7307417082433706898_n

    Above: pianist Melody Fader; photo by Cherie B

    Live music is a key element at all New Chamber Ballet performances. Pianist Melody Fader has been Miro’s collaborator for several seasons and, along with violinist Doori Na, she makes the music an integral factor in the audience’s enjoyment of NCB evenings. Melody is currently in the midst of a Kickstarter campaign to develop funding for her chamber music project, something that’s dear to her heart. You can find out all about it – and help make it happen – here.

    New Chamber Ballet‘s next performances will be April 17th and 18th, 2015. Information about repertory and tickets will be forthcoming.

  • First Breath: Photography by Travis Magee

    Image1

    On January 31st, 2015, photographer Travis Magee opens a solo show entitled First Breath, at the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Frieda and Roy Furman Gallery. The gallery is adjacent to the Walter Reade Theater, on the upper tier of the north side of the Lincoln Center campus.

    “Travis Magee’s photographs are like compelling choreography. There seems always to be an implied narrative, but it is up to the viewer to decipher and to decide for themselves what the hell is going on!” says acclaimed dancer and choreographer Sean Curran.

    I first met Travis thru his work as a dancer with Cherylyn Lavagnino Dance. He recently produced a vivid portfolio of images from a rehearsal of Parsons Dance for Oberon’s Grove, and I’m looking forward to working with him again in the near future.

    Check out Travis’s striking photographs at the Frieda and Roy Furman Gallery where the show – in conjunction with the Dance on Camera Festival – runs thru February 11th, 2015.

  • Ax/Robertson @ The New York Philharmonic

    Emanuel Ax

    Above: Emanuel Ax

    Thursday January 29th, 2015 – The esteemed pianist Emanuel Ax, enormously popular with New York Philharmonic audiences, was warmly cheered tonight after his performance of the Chopin piano concerto #2. David Robertson was on the podium for a programme that proved highly enjoyable and that allowed several of the individual players of the orchestra to shine.

    5377c09f319dd.preview-620

    Above: David Robertson

    As a brief and savorable prelude, the Vocalise of Sergei Rachmaninoff was rendered in full romantic bloom by Mr. Robertson and the orchestra. Originally a wordless composition for soprano, the Vocalise was written in 1915; the composer went on to orchestrate the work which is perhaps his best-known melody, whether performed in the arrangement for soprano and orchestra or for orchestra alone. So many of Rachmaninoff’s best-loved works are in a minor key, giving the music a mood of melancholy and gentle regret. The orchestra played it with distinction; the melodic familiarity of the piece has the poignant effect of encountering an old friend one has not seen for many years.

    Mr. Ax then appeared for the Piano Concerto No. 2 of Frédéric Chopin. In the summer of 1829, the 19-year-old Chopin, recovering from the breaking of an unhappy romantic attachment, sketched out the F-minor concerto and when he returned to Warsaw for the winter season, he performed this new concerto at the National Theatre the following March. The concerto gained Chopin the public exposure and audience acclaim that his numerous private salon performances could not have achieved.

    As the years passed, musicologists began to denigrate the Chopin concertos as being inferior to much of his writing for solo piano. Tonight’s superb performance made an emphatic stand in the concerto’s favor: it’s simply a beautiful piece of music.

    A contemporary account from the concerto’s premiere in 1830 records: “How beautifully (Chopin) plays. What fluency! What evenness!” And the same could be said of Mr. Ax’s performance tonight. In a refined partnership with Maestro Robertson, the pianist let the music flow with grace and charm, allowing us to savour the thematic generosity of Chopin in an illuminating performance. The unfortunate ringing of a phone just as the concerto’s first movement ended prompted a witty exchange between pianist and conductor. But order was immediately restored as Mr. Ax commenced the Larghetto, a movement full of lyricism in which the pianist’s glowing tone captivated the audience. With flourishing agility, the pianist then took wing in the final Allegro vivace. Near the end, trumpet calls herald the concerto’s final rippling cadences; it all ends with Mr. Ax striking a single low note as the orchestra takes the final chord. The audience’s warm expressions of admiration drew Mr. Ax to offer us a Chopin encore, summoning up visions of the Jerome Robbins ballet DANCES AT A GATHERING.

    The Firebird (Suite/1919) – Igor Stravinsky arranged three suites from the full score of The Firebird, in 1911, 1919 and 1945. It is the second of these which is most frequently played today, containing as it does approximately half the music of the complete score. This suite follows the narrative of the original ballet scenario, so familiar to admirers of the Balanchine/Chagall incarnation often seen across the Plaza at New York City Ballet. The atmospheric score – Stravinsky at his most colorful  and melodious – casts a spell of enchantment. It includes themes from two Russian folk songs: one a lyrical melody danced by the captive princesses, and the second the regal anthem which closes the ballet.

    Maestro Robertson and the Philharmonic players reveled in this extraordinary music, with oboist Sherry Skylar particularly impressive in her plaintive theme. The conductor drew forth some ravishing, shimmering piani as well as the lulling tenderness of the Berceuse; and the nightmarish Infernal Dance of  Kastcheï’s ghoulish slaves was given the full, brilliant treatment.

    The Miraculous Mandarin (Suite) is drawn from Bela Bartók’s pantomime-ballet of the same title. The original theatrical setting of the piece (written 1918-1919) was considered too vulgar in its portrayal of lurid sex, violence, and the macabre. After its 1929 premiere at Cologne, it was banned after a single performance. But Bartók, perhaps foreseeing that the ballet would not survive as a stage work, had already arranged the Suite, which we heard tonight in a thoroughly engrossing performance.

    Opening with a big, noisy clatter of sound, the score employs a wide range of instrumentation to ear-tingling effect: piano, flute, harp, xylophone, and celeste all play a part in this sonically intriguing piece. Ms. Skylar’s oboe artistry and Anthony McGill’s remarkable clarinet playing were especially clear and colourful. And a broad, dancing passage with drums near the end served as a reminder of the Suite’s balletic beginnings.

    I at first wondered how the Stravinsky and Bartok would play back-to-back, but the cumulative effect was indeed rewarding: both works have a similarity of texture at certain points, and there’s even some over-lapping of effects – trombone glissandi and frequent interjections of solo winds – which made second half of tonight’s concert every bit as satisfying as the first half.