Aleatoric Duet No. 2 from he/she |
Three different programs of contemporary dance by three different companies took place within days of each other in Toronto at the end of March: Dichterliebe, a revival of a 2012 suite of 16 dances set to 16 sung sections of Robert Schumann’s same titled song cycle (the lyrics are by the late-Romantic German poet Heinrich Heine) which Coleman Lemieux & Co. presented at their Citadel theatre and studio complex in Regent Park; he/she, an evening of new and revised work by Peggy Baker Dance Projects at the Betty Oliphant Theatre, and Around, a new 60-minute work by Dancemakers artistic director Michael Trent which the company, this year celebrating its 40th anniversary, performed as an ensemble at its Distillery District-located Centre for Creation.
While distinct from the other, the works, each of them ingeniously exhilarating in their own way, had elements in common. All in some way explored a theme of oppositional forces: soft and hard, slow and fast, light and dark, control and abandon. In his program notes for Around, Trent described the dramatic tension apparent in his highly playful, surrealistic work as a combination of “known worlds” in which “unexpected encounters can emerge.” In other words, a theatrical environment where predictability and surprise delightfully and imaginatively collide. Created in a collaboration with the 10 dancers who today make up Dancemakers and dramaturge Jacob Zimmer, Around, which was performed in the round, was unconventionally tinselly and haphazard, a work of controlled madness that's pungent artifice was laced with bits of reality – fragments of narrated memory, for instance. Acclaimed veteran modern dancer Peggy Baker communicated her interest in duality by calling her presentation he/she, a title drawing attention to the male/female, head/heart, concrete/abstract themes veining through each of the four works presented, two revivals and two world premieres.
stone leaf shell skin |
Baker’s fascination with doubleness was made obvious through the collaboration she instigated between music and dance, a theme dominating the program as a whole. Most of the works on the he/she program emphasized the special relationship between music and movement by presenting musicians on stage with the dancers and having the dancers, to some degree, interact with the musical instruments surrounding them during their performances. The net result was to see dancers giving vivid expression to musical motive, measure and mood while watching musicians actively inspired by the dancing and the choreography at hand.
This was an idea investigated as well by Coleman & Lemieux, whose Dichterliebe was performed with solo dancer Laurence Lemieux frequently interacting with guest singer, the thrillingly dramatic Canadian baritone Alexander Dobson, in addition to musician Jeanie Chung and the piano she passionately played in drawing out the storm clouds and tender blooms within the Schumann score. Together, musician, singer and dancer formed an inseparable unit of high artistic expression. At Dancemakers, the musicians were the dancers themselves who created sounds using hand-held microphones they swung like lassos or else wrapped in cellophane before stuffing them noisily into the all-white shirts, shorts and long pants chosen for them by costume designer Vanessa Fischer. In another segment, dancers performed to sound chips concealed under their clothes which emitted beeps, boings and a jangled fairy dust sound commonly associated with children’s toy wands: art brut for the 21st century.
Sylvan Quartet |
In the he/she program, Aleatoric Duet No. 2, a world premiere created by Peggy Baker, dance and music were also tightly aligned in a mutually respectful partnership. At the centre were two of the Baker company’s profoundly expressive dancers, Sean Ling and Andrea Nann, who performed under the watchful eye of musician and composer John Kameel Farah poised on a platform above the stage where he simultaneously improvised on an electronic piano, a synthesizer and a computer with samples while the dancers wove their bodies through a rich fabric of choreographic colour and pattern below. Chance and risk were motivating factors here, a theme underscored by the work’s title. Aleatoric, as Farah explained in a published pre-performance interview, describes the element of chance in musical performance. Baker, he continued, was here creating a series of dances rooted in chance. The process involved asking each dancer to create solos for themselves based on snippets of her own previously performed dances which she then melded together to produce a densely physical piece of choreography – movement for the sake of movement – with three distinct sections. Farah’s role, he said, was “to react to the dancers and bathe them in sound.” The results of this experiment in dance inspiring the music, a reversal of the traditional order of things, were mesmerizing. Constantly moving, every inch of their bodies busily exploring the sound-saturated spaces between them, the dancers occupied a rarified realm of serenely kinetic dance, at times pictorial as well as sculptural as they paused between bursts of concentrated energy. While not as exhaustively physical, Farah nevertheless was likewise kinetically engaged in the performance, his own body moving rapidly from keyboard to computer sampler as he strove to keep pace with the dancers.
– Deirdre Kelly is a journalist, author and internationally recognized dance critic. She has written for Dance Magazine in New York and the Dance Gazette in London (official magazine of the Royal Academy of Dance) and is a contributor to the International Dictionary of Ballet (St. James Press). She was the award-winning dance critic for Canada's The Globe and Mail and is currently the newspaper's Style reporter. She is the author of the national best-seller, Paris Times Eight (Greystone Books/Douglas & McIntyre), a Paris-inspired memoir with a chapter featuring Rudolph Nureyev. Deirdre's second book, Ballerina: Sex, Scandal and Suffering Behind the Symbol of Perfection, has just been published (Greystone Books). Married with two children, she lives in Toronto.
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