Scales of Memory at BAM

 

If you’re in NY, this looks fascinating. Recommended by Lauren Cerand. I’ve never seen Compagnie Jant B, but do so love Urban Bush Women. Unfortunately I have a crazy full week ahead (three short stories, four dance reviews and a restaurant write-up, all before I leave for Thanksgiving next Wednesday) and don’t know if I’m going to be able to make it out to BAM before then. But if anyone can go to this, I’ll be wanting a full report!

 

No!

 

Ugh, I am so disgusted with this show right now. I just watched the very end to see who got kicked off b/c I was at Complexions — If you’re in NY, do go, just for Desmond Richardson and Epatha Merkerson in I Will Not Be Broken! (Richardson dancing, Merkerson — from Law & Order — singing the slavery spirituals. Totally Alvin Ailey, totally gorgeous, totally moving, almost cried at the beginning with Desmond brushing off those shackles, mental and physical…)

But back to DWTS: I seriously have NO desire to watch the finals next week. Brooke is good but she bores me out of my mind. I’m completely uninterested in her. The other two — Lance, though I like him personality-wise, his dancing just doesn’t do it for me. I do really like Warren — both personality and dance-wise. But can I watch a three-hour show just for him? And even if he wins — it’ll just be another sports star taking home the trophy…

John Ashbery and Charles Wuorinen at Guggenheim

 

 

I guess the Brokeback Mountain opera (to be made by composer Charles Wuorinen) is on hold for the moment (hopefully, it’ll still happen eventually). But mainly over curiosity over the Brokeback-composer-to-be, I went to the Guggenheim recently for a Works & Process event celebrating Wuorinen’s 70th birthday.

The first part of the program consisted of Sean Curran Dance Company dancing to Wuorinen’s The Mission of Virgil, a deeply tense, dramatic piece for two pianos that took as its inspiration Dante’s Inferno. The dancers appropriately thrashed about in frenzy, crawled around the floor looking animalistic and like creatures from a netherworld, and stomped in unison evoking Satanic wrath — all with immense expressiveness and very good precision of form.

But of course I’ve seen dance performed to classical or modern music before. I was most interested in the second part of the program — Ashberyana — in which Wuorinin had set to operatic music (baritone with four stringed instruments, a piano and trombone) four John Ashbery poems from the poet’s book Wakefulness.

I don’t know that much about music (yet; am learning through Tchaikovsky!) but from what I’ve heard thus far (John Adams, Wuorinen), modern opera music is so harsh, so severe, to me, and it all seems so low-keyed and monotone. With Adams’s Doctor Atomic, that made sense given the intellectually dense, emotionally heavy nature of the story, but the set of poems Wuorinen chose of Ashbery’s seemed not so much so, but instead, by turns humorous, playful with words and logic, dreamy, surreal, rhythmic. And yet it seemed the intensity of the music — violins sounding like slashes of a knife, the cello a blow to the head, and the baritone’s voice so virile, powerful, menacing, almost as if he were threatening with each word — didn’t ideally mesh with the poems.

I don’t know… judge for yourself if you like: go here to read at least one of the poems in the piece (“Dear Sir or Madam”) — scroll down; and go here to hear the poems set to music and song.

I wonder if a Brokeback opera will / would sound similarly furious and damning.

Reminder: Slavik & Hanna at Columbia

 

 

Just a reminder that Slavik Kryklyvyy and Hanna Karttunen will be performing at Columbia University’s Big Apple Dancesport Challenge on December 6th! Arunas Bizokas and Katusha Demidova will dance as well. Tickets range from $30 to $85 (for front row seating), but it looks like tkts on the cheaper end are selling out. If you plan to go, I’d make your reservations sooner rather than later.

See some videos of the couple dancing here, here, and here.