Showing posts with label Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reviews. Show all posts

Friday, February 4, 2011

Movement Museum, talking about dance in Montréal 98: Manon Oligny, BJM Danse, Pigeons International, Mayday Danse, Gabrielle Martin, Hi Wood,dumb type, Bouge D'ici

Howdy!

Our show from February 3, 2011
(Download: MP3 71MB, Flac 579MB, Ogg Vorbis 38MB or Stream)

In this show Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Bettina Forget and Jenn Doan talk about and review Icônes, À VENDRE by Manon Oligny, BJM Danse Montréal's Rossini Cards, Zero in On, & Zip Zap Zoom, Grace à Dieu, Ton Corps by Pigeons International, Junkyard Paradise by Mayday Danse, Infractions by Gabrielle Martin, True by Hi Wood and dumb type, and Bouge D'ici's Common Space.

The theme song of the week is a Japanese version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is Poet to a Ballerina by Robert Lowell, This Week in Dance History highlights Glen Tetley, and the music played during the show is from the CD Signature: Live from the Egg Farm by Masahiko Satoh, Joelle Leandre and Yuji Takahashi.

Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montreal, and podcast Friday mornings at 8h at http://movementmuseum.com/. Co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Jenn Doan and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montreal.

Listen

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Notre émission du 3 février, 2011
(Télécharger : MP3 71MB, Flac 579MB, Ogg Vorbis 38MB or Stream)

Dans cette emission Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Bettina Forget et Jenn Doan parlent de Icônes, À VENDRE par Manon Oligny, Rossini Cards, Zero in On, & Zip Zap Zoom par BJM Danse Montréal, Grace à Dieu, Ton Corps par Pigeons International, Junkyard Paradise par Mayday Danse, Infractions par Gabrielle Martin, True par Hi Wood et dumb type, et Common Space de Bouge D'ici.

La chanson theme de la semaine est une version Japonais de Do You Wanna Dance, le poeme de danse de la semaine est Poet to a Ballerina par Robert Lowell, l'Histoire de la Danse Cette Semaine marque Glen Tetley. La musique joue pendant l'emission est du CD Signature: Live from the Egg Farm par Masahiko Satoh, Joelle Leandre et Yuji Takahashi.

Movement Museum une emission de radio diffusee le jeudi a 14h sur les ondes de CKUT 90,3 FM a Montreal, et podcast vendredi matin a 8h a http://movementmuseum.com/. Co-animateurs Chris Hand (aka "Zeke"), Jenn Doan et Bettina Forget parler de la danse a Montreal.

Écouter


Jenn Doan, Bettina Forget and Chris 'Zeke' Hand

Friday, December 17, 2010

Episode 91: Inertia Productions, The Art of Ballet, Maria Kochetkova, Out of Grace, Lynda Gaudreau

Howdy!

Our show from December 16, 2010
(Download: MP3 66MB, Flac 567MB, Ogg Vorbis 37MB or Stream)

Mouvement Musee une emission de radio diffusee le jeudi a 14h sur les ondes de CKUT 90,3 FM a Montreal, et podcast vendredi matin a 8h a http://movement-museum.blogspot.com/. Co-animateurs Chris Hand (aka "Zeke"), Jenn Doan, Kallee Lins et Bettina Forget parlent de la danse a Montreal.

Dans cette emission Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Jenn Doan et Bettina Forget parlent sur Inertia Productions et The Art of Ballet coffret DVD, fait jouer une entrevue avec Maria Kochetkova, et critique Out of Grace; a project by Lynda Gaudreau.

La chanson theme de la semaine est la version par T-Rex de Do You Wanna Dance, le poeme de danse de la semaine est Of Dancing par Alan Brownjohn, l'Histoire de la Danse Cette Semaine marque Dan Dailey et Charles Laskey. La musique joue pendant l'emission est du CD Zoomin par la Joost Buis et les Astronotes.

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Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montreal, and podcast Friday mornings at 8h at http://movement-museum.blogspot.com/. Co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Jenn Doan, Kallee Lins and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montreal.

In this show Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Jenn Doan and Bettina Forget talk about Inertia Productions and The Art of Ballet DVD box set, play an interview with Maria Kochetkova, and review Out of Grace; a project by Lynda Gaudreau.

The theme song of the week is T-Rex's version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is Of Dancing by Alan Brownjohn, This Week in Dance History highlights Dan Dailey and Charles Laskey, and the music played during the show is from Joost Buis and the Astronotes's CD Zoomin.

Listen


Jenn Doan, Bettina Forget and Chris 'Zeke' Hand

Friday, December 3, 2010

Episode 89: Fortier Danse-Création, Red Bull Flying Bach, Coleman Lemieux & Sun Ra Arkestra, Tribune 840

Howdy!

Our show from December 2, 2010
(Download: MP3 72MB, Flac 591MB, Ogg Vorbis 39MB or Stream)

Mouvement Musee une emission de radio diffusee le jeudi a 14h sur les ondes de CKUT 90,3 FM a Montréal, et podcast vendredi matin a 8h a http://movement-museum.blogspot.com/. Co-animateurs Chris Hand (aka "Zeke"), Jenn Doan, Kallee Lins et Bettina Forget parlent de la danse a Montréal.

Dans cette emission Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Kallee Lins et Bettina Forget parlent et critique des performances recentes par Fortier Danse-Création, Red Bull Flying Bach, Coleman Lemieux & Sun Ra Arkestra, et le table ronde Tribune 840 n°8 sur Y a-t-il quelque chose à comprendre à la danse contemporaine?

La chanson theme de la semaine est la version par Cliff Richard & The Shadows de Do You Wanna Dance, le poeme de danse de la semaine est Les Bayadères par Sacheverell Sitwell, l'Histoire de la Danse Cette Semaine marque le 21eme anniversaire de la mort de Alvin Ailey et la musique joue pendant l'emission est du CD Space is the Place par Sun Ra and his Intergalactic Solar Arkestra.

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Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montréal, and podcast Friday mornings at 8h at http://movement-museum.blogspot.com/. Co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Jenn Doan, Kallee Lins and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montréal.

In this show Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Kallee Lins and Bettina Forget talk about and review recent performances by Fortier Danse-Création, Red Bull Flying Bach, Coleman Lemieux & Sun Ra Arkestra, and the round table discussion Tribune 840 n°8 on Y a-t-il quelque chose à comprendre à la danse contemporaine?

The theme song of the week is Cliff Richard & The Shadows' version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is The Bayadères by Sacheverell Sitwell, This Week in Dance History highlights 21st anniversary of the death of Alvin Ailey, and the music played during the show is from Sun Ra and his Intergalactic Solar Arkestra's CD Space is the Place.

Listen


Kallee Lins, Bettina Forget and Chris 'Zeke' Hand

Friday, November 26, 2010

Episode 88: Les Imprudanses, Gravel Works, The Sadari Movement Laboratory, Michael Trent, Dancemakers

Howdy!

Our show from November 25, 2010
(Download: MP3 76MB, Flac 600MB, Ogg Vorbis 40MB or Stream)

Mouvement Musée une émission de radio diffusée le jeudi à 14h sur les ondes de CKUT 90,3 FM à Montréal, et podcast vendredi matin à 8h à http://movement-museum.blogspot.com/. Co-animateurs Chris Hand (aka "Zeke"), Jenn Doan, Kallee Lins et Bettina Forget parlent de la danse à Montréal.

Dans cette emission Jenn Doan, Kallee Lins et Bettina Forget parlent et critique des performances récentes par Les Imprudanses, Gravel Works, Woyzeck by Sadari Movement Laboratory, It's about time : 60 dances in 60 minutes by Michael Trent and Dancemakers.

La chanson thème de la semaine est la version par The Ramones de Do You Wanna Dance, le poème de danse de la semaine est Danse Russe par William Carlos Williams, l'Histoire de la Danse Cette Semaine marque le 74eme anniversaire de Trisha Brown et la musique joué pendant l'émission est du CD The Gods Must Be Smiling par Barry Romberg's Random Access.

Listen


Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montreal, and podcast Friday mornings at 8h at http://movement-museum.blogspot.com/. Co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Jenn Doan, Kallee Lins and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montreal.

In this show Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Jenn Doan and Bettina Forget talk about and review recent performances by Les Imprudanses, Gravel Works, Woyzeck by The Sadari Movement Laboratory, It's about time : 60 dances in 60 minutes by Michael Trent and Dancemakers.

The theme song of the week is The Ramones' version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is Danse Russe by William Carlos Williams, This Week in Dance History highlights Trisha Brown's 74th birthday, and the music played during the show is from Barry Romberg's Random Access' CD The Gods Must Be Smiling.

Jenn Doan, Bettina Forget and Chris 'Zeke' Hand

Friday, October 29, 2010

Episode 84: Sankai Juku, National Ballet of Canada, Les Grands Ballets Canadiens, Sylvain Émard Danse

Howdy!

Our show from October 28, 2010
(Download: MP3 73MB, Flac 576MB, Ogg Vorbis 39MB or Stream)

Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montreal, co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Jenn Doan and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montreal. In this show Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Bettina Forget and Jenn Doan review Sankai Juku's performance of Hibiki, Resonance From Far Away, The National Ballet of Canada's performance of 24 Preludes by Chopin and Emergence, and Les Grands Ballets Canadiens' performance of Léonce & Lena. Bettina talks about the 20th anniversary of Sylvain Émard Danse. Elizabeth Seyler discusses on the annual colloquium for tango research held at Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières by Professor France Joyal.

The theme song is the Fabulous Wailers version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is Hibiki, Resonance from Far Away by Ushio Amagatsu, and the music played during the show is from Anna Webber's CD Third Floor People.

Listen


Jenn Doan, Bettina Forget and Chris 'Zeke' Hand

Friday, October 22, 2010

Episode 83: Solid State Breakdance, Isobel Cohen, Maria Muñoz, Dominique Thomas, Andrée-Anne Ratthé, Thierry Huard, Peter Jasko

Howdy!

Our show from October 21, 2010
(Download: MP3 89MB, Flac 704MB, Ogg Vorbis 47MB or Stream)

Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montreal, co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Jenn Doan and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montreal. In this show Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Bettina Forget and Jenn Doan review Solid State Breakdance's Reunion and Solo Cello, Isobel Cohen's The Great Escape, Maria Muñoz's Tous les noms, Dominique Thomas' Nocturne pour femmes oubliées, Andrée-Anne Ratthé's Le déterminant un and Thierry Huard's The Goddess' Return, and interview Peter Jasko.

The theme song is an unknown version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is The Daunce of the Shepheards by Edmund Spenser, and the music played during the show is from the Pierre L'Abbe +12 CD Tremblement de Fer.

Listen


Jenn Doan, Bettina Forget and Chris 'Zeke' Hand

Friday, September 17, 2010

Episode 78: Jeanne Renaud, Estelle Clareton, Créa­tion Ca­féine, S'Envoler, The Duck Wife

Howdy!

Our show from September 16, 2010
(Download: MP3 68MB, Flac 581MB, Ogg Vorbis 38MB or Stream)

Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montreal, co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Allison Elizabeth Burns and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montreal. In this show Chris 'Zeke' Hand and Allison Elizabeth Burns talk about The Duck Wife in Edmonton and Estelle Clareton / Créa­tion Ca­féine's S'Envoler, along with playing part one of the Jeanne Renaud interview from Visages de la Danse.

S'Envoler Photo by Ben Philippi

The theme song is the Glenn Miller Orchestra's version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is An Ode to a Dance (Isadora Duncan) by Witter Bynner, and the music played during the show is from the CD Papasoff Live by Charles Papasoff.

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Allison Elizabeth Burns and Chris 'Zeke' Hand

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Onde de Choc by Ginette Laurin at the Festival TransAmériques

Howdy!

OK I'm a little bit late. I saw Onde de Choc back at the end of May and it is now August, I'm two months late - or if you prefer to put a positive spin on things - I contemplated her work for more than 60 days. It didn't help. If you want to cut to the chase and avoid the rest of what I write about the performance, no matter how hard I tried, I didn't like it. If you don’t want to avoid my writing (thanks!) then continue making your eyes move left to right and top to bottom as they are doing now.

Let's start with the easiest and simplest; The show is called Onde de Choc, or if you prefer in English, Shock Wave, and there is a big-ass box in the middle of the stage that I presume had some contact microphones in it. Or there is some other kind of technological stuff that turns the big-ass box into a really big-ass resonator. Trust me, you. When you just so much as stroke it it could be heard all the way in the nosebleed seats (although to be honest, Usine C, where I saw it, doesn't really have any nosebleed seats) but more to the point when one of the dancers banged on it, it banged, and it banged really well. When one of the dancers stroked it, it stroked really well, too. It went pretty much from one side of the stage to the other, left a little crawl space in between it and the back wall of the stage, and filled about half the stage (I told you it was big-ass). It appeared to be made of simple plywood that I would have thought was unfinished, but given how everyone ran and slid on it, either they liked getting splinters, or it had a finish that enabled everyone to do their business without getting hurt.

Now given the title of the performance, it seems pretty much self evident that there would be something loud involved. Personally I was hoping for something a little better able to present the scope and concept. Banging on a box is fine and dandy, running on and around a box that is miked for sound is kind of cool. But if you're going to be calling your show Shock Wave, I'd prefer something that at least has the potential for knocking me on my ass, or out of my seat. Remember Todd Rundgren's song Bang on the Drum? or Volker Schlöndorff's version of The Tin Drum? This big-ass box was not quite as good as they were in presenting and performing the idea of banging on something. Maybe instead of being called Shock Wave, it could have been called Trojan Horse Masquerading as a Big-Ass Resonating Box.

But the banging on the box wasn't the only noise being made. Besides the obvious sounds made by the dancers (panting, feet hitting the floor and the box, etc.) there was stuff coming out of the speakers which I wrote in my notes sounded like "fake Phillip Glass." Except for the fact that in was Real Michael Nyman. Now I'm not certain if I am supposed to be embarrassed for me or for Mr. Nyman. Obviously the music was serial in nature, but also, obviously did not do a darn thing for me other than occupy the space between bangs.

In the press folderoll that got handed out, phrases like "Long fascinated by the fantastic and multifaceted machine that is the human body, choreographer Ginette Laurin penetrates here into its innermost depths. With Onde de choc, she aims to render visible or audible the forces that move within it, casting an inquisitive eye on the infinite possibilities of the body and its poetic power." Umm... not to burst anyone's bubble, but that reads real nice and pretty-like, but Ms. Laurin did not penetrate anything. Nor did she make anything really visible or audible in the human body not in the human body or anywhere else that I could see (although towards the end all the dancers get kind of semi-naked in a cool for 14 year-old boys sort of way). All I ended up with after the fact was a bunch of dancers running around and banging, which like playing in mud puddles and sleeping in late, is a lot of fun. But as far as making some sort of statement on the body, and its inner workings. Nope, nada, nothing. Obviously I'm not a 14 year-old boy.

But I'm getting ahead of myself, I'm still on the noises made, we haven't even begun to talk about the movements made by the performers - and this would be as good a place as any to mention all of their names: Marianne Gignac-Girard, Rémi Laurin-Ouellette, Chi Long, Robert Meilleur, James Phillips, Gillian Seaward-Boone, Audrey Thibodeau, Wen-Shuan Yang. As far as I could tell they all executed the moves that they were supposed to, and executed them well. There was nothing that they did that looked like an obvious mistake. But as this was a world premiere, I would venture a guess that there were some, I just wasn't able to see them.

Some of the words in my notes used to try and describe the movements made by the performers are: Writhing, yoga poses, slow movement with emoting, spinning, fighting, gymnastics, running, swaying, walking, herky jerky movements, throwing, sliding, martial arts, tap dancing, Indian dancing, and vogueing. Or in other words a bunch of different types movements but nothing that connects one to another. Overall there was a lot of running, and some walking. Which might have accounted for my inability to notice any mistakes.

As an aside; I'm never quite certain how I feel about watching dancers walk during a performance. One side of me says that walking is as valid of a movement as anything else. On the other side, I hear some voice telling me that the choreographer is slack and can't quite come up with any other more evocative movement to get the performers from here to there. And don't get me started about the red M&M's or the one 'shy' dancer.

Going over my notes after the fact makes me think that perhaps Ms. Laurin was trying out a bunch of stuff. Unfortunately beyond the big ass box, after more than 60 days there isn't much that stuck with me. This lack of cohesiveness in the movement could have been due to any number of reasons, front and center could have been my moving my head up and down to write notes in the dark while trying to watch the performance. Although I am more inclined to think that it has to with the structure of the movements than my ability to write in the dark. I also presume that all the dancers did their moves correctly. But as I got no real sense of cohesiveness in the dance, it was similar to the idea of "Hey! let's throw it up against the wall and see if it sticks." Which sort of made it impossible or perhaps just really difficult for me to ascertain if they were doing it good, bad or indifferently. Kind of like trying to follow a conversation that starts in English, but then quickly moves to French, Italian, Turkish, Arabic and then seven other different languages. Yeah, there is some polyglot out there who can do it, but it sure as shooting ain't me.

I don't really want to, but I guess I have got to at least mention in passing the lighting. In a nutshell, they were alright for most of the show, but at one particular point Ms. Laurin tried to blind me by aiming her lights towards the audience. I don't understand why she would want to do something like that, I thought she wanted us to be able to see the performance. Needless to say, I did not like being blinded. Not in the least bit. Nope. Un-uh.

And while I recognize that Ms. Laurin has had an extremely long career here in Quebec which in certain cases might give her a free pass, Onde de Choc was the first piece by her that I had ever seen, and as a consequence makes me think that either everyone else who has been raving about her work up the wazoo is completely and utterly out to lunch or that in fact Onde de Choc is not up to par with the rest of the body of her work, or I am completely and thoroughly wrong, or as a fourth possibility as I have said before, Montreal is the place where you can fail and get away with it. Or more succinctly, the modus operandi for dance performances here is to have 'world premiere' then take it on the road for something like three years before returning home, by which point the performance has changed so completely and thoroughly that the only thing that remains is the name (and the lack of ability to say it is another 'world premiere' - imagine how wild things would be if it was possible to have more than one 'world premiere.') which then initially suckers you into thinking that you're going to see a repeat, when in fact what you end up seeing is something completely different (and so road tested as to be better than great) that you wonder why you bothered going to the 'world premiere' in the first place.

So in a nutshell; I think Onde de Choc is like a 2002 premier cru burgundy and is fine on the ears, has overtones of Kodo drumming and a visit to your doctor. It has some extremely strong hints of future promise but should not be consumed until 2013 at the earliest.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Episode 72: Step Up 3D

Howdy!

Our show from August 5, 2010
(Download: MP3 74MB, Flac 609MB, Ogg Vorbis 39MB or Stream)

Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montreal, co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Allison Elizabeth Burns and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montreal. In this show Chris 'Zeke' Hand and Bettina Forget talk with Rhonda Meier and Greg 'Krypto' Selinger about Step Up 3D.

The theme song is the Parasites's version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is A Dance Song by Burkhard von Hohenfels, and the music played during the show is from disc four of Oscar Peterson's Dimensions

Listen


Bettina Forget and Chris 'Zeke' Hand

Thursday, July 22, 2010

The Merce Cunningham Dance Company at the Festival TransAmeriques last month

Howdy!

This was the 4th FTA which to my eyes kind of was a government cost cutting measure, as there used to be FIND, but then they stopped funding FIND, and at the time the FTA was called the Festival de Theatres des Ameriques. And somehow theatre and dance got combined and it became the Festival TransAmeriques which this year (as an aside, had more dance companies from Africa than from South America, so much for the name…) But anywhows, the organization for this year's edition did not strike me as being particularly well done. Now I don't follow the movement, trades or free agency of performance festival bureaucrats with the same attention that I do to NASCAR (or your average Montrealer does to the players on les Canadiens) but in retrospect I'd guess that someone from last year got offered a better contract someplace else, just from my entry into the opening night show.

Now I recognize that for Opening Night in Montreal for a government funded festival it is imperative to a) pack the house and b) make sure that every last seat is full. But you'd figure that despite the never-ending construction at Place des Arts someone would know how to get the 25 hundred people (or however many theatre Maisonneuve seats) in to the place without too much difficulty - well someone didn't. It was shoulder to shoulder and elbow to elbow before anyone even got so far as to be able to tear your ticket - and looking back I think it has all to do with the FTA wanting to pack the house, so there you had 25 hundred people all getting on the VIP line, actually probably less as there had been some sort of swanky cocktail party beforehand which either I hadn't been invited to, or someone forgot to tell me about my invitation. Remind me next time to buy my tickets for an opening night performance, a) I would have received my tickets more in advance b) probably gotten better seats and c) not had to wait on line with all those VIPs, yuck. There were other logistical problems throughout the FTA but they aren't relevant to the performance of Nearly 902 by The Merce Cunningham Dance Company (when saying it out loud, is it "nearly 92?" Or "Nearly 90 squared?" Or something else? These are the kind of questions I end up asking when seeing something by Merce Cunningham.

When the lights finally get dark about 15 to 20 minutes late, and the curtain rises, the stage is completely bare. But your intrepid reviewer noticed in the dark that the orchestra pit is open, which normally means that there's live music being played. But I can't see anyone in there (I'm sitting towards the back and on the side) and when the music starts it's loud, like REALLY LOUD and very electronic, so I second guess myself and then once the dancers start showing up promptly forget about it. Until it gets loud again, or glitchy or goes backwards, or quotes the only song by Yes that I can stand, or starts moving around Theatre Maisonneuve in some sort of annoying multi-channel thing. I realize while watching that despite the fact that it was composed by the keyboard player for Led Zeppelin and the music director of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company and played by one of my favorite musicians, John King with the music director of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, it is in fact just there to keep your ears occupied.

In one of the many things I read about Merce Cunningham, actually discovered I was that his dancers practiced in silence and did not know what the music they would be performing with was like until dress rehearsal. Kind of cool as a concept, but as this was not the premiere I presume that the dancers were quite comfortable with the music. I for one can't remember a gosh darn thing about it (except for the quote from Roundabout) which makes me think it was meh.

Now you'd think that with all this moaning and complaining that I up and walked out of the performance after something like 2 minutes. I have been known to be hot-headed, intransigent and opinionated... But in fact I wasn't there to hear the music, and the silly and useless lineup at the beginning wasn't enough to even come close to putting me in a foul mood. In short it was glorious, wonderful, amazing, awesome, awe inspiring and pretty gosh darn good as well.

This is the kind of performance where I wish I had been a dancer at some previous point in my life, or paid attention when someone explained what a jeté was or a pirouette. Because I have absolutely no vocabulary when it comes to describing dance, and say things like "they swung their arms around," or "they took really really long steps almost in unison" doesn't really cut the mustard when I am trying to explain why my notes read, and I quote: "O Mi Gawd!!!" a bunch of times. Suffice it to say that all 13 dancers possess some kind of supernatural gracefulness. Or let me try to put it another way. You know how Superman has Super Powers? And Spiderman has Spidey Powers? Well the dancers in the Merce Cunningham Dance Company have powers that are even stronger than those of Superman and Spiderman combined, and it all has to do with how absofuckinglutely graceful they were, are, and will continue to be. I would give my right nut (actually a lot more than my right nut) to be half as graceful as they are. And they make it look as easy as falling out of bed. Just thinking about it makes me wish I could move just one part of my body like that.

I think that this might be the appropriate time to give you some sort of backgrounder on who Merce Cunningham was, and why his dance company is so important - but this is the 21st century, between the web site for the company, Wikipedia and Google you can find out for yourself - and if you don't know already this is the seventh paragraph, why the heck are you still reading? I don’t think that my writing is that compelling.

There was a lot of turning, but there was also tons of twisting, a bunch of bending, and some spinning. For the most part the performance was an almost endless set of variations on a theme. Duos, trios and larger groups combining together and then separating, using their bodies to make forms in space. Their leverage and balance was a wonder to watch, I was consistently left slack-jawed by how (and where) they held each other and how easy and simple they made it all look. Contrary to what you might think from reading this, they did not all move at the same speed. Not only were there innumerable variations in the forms that they created on stage, but their pacing was extremely powerful. A slow, fast, ,slow, slow fast, slow, slow, slow, kind of thing, if you know what I mean.

There were a couple of times when I noted that I found it hard to concentrate because of the slowness of the movement. But in retrospect being freed from having to focus on one dancer, or a specific gesture enables a larger view that while at the time might not be as thrilling as watching someone jump a gazillion feet in the air ultimately becomes a jillion times more satisfying when sitting back in a brightly lit room two weeks afterwards ruminating and thinking about what I had seen and experienced.

The costumes (designed by Romeo Gigli) initially surprised me, because I thunk that given such an abstract performance that what the performers wore, while important, would be considered as secondary. There were numerous costume changes, nothing too too dramatic, but like the choreography itself, variations on a theme. All based on unitards with stripes that grew larger as the performance progressed until the stripes themselves became separate entities more like dorsal fins on a dolphin. I’m certain that there was something similar going on with the lighting, but unfortunately my notes don’t shed any light on the subject.

Overall I was left with an impression that they can all jump a little higher than folk I am used to seeing in Montreal. That they all can hold their leg a little straighter than folk I am used to seeing in Montreal. Which is not to say that Montreal dancers can’t jump or hold their legs straight, just that I got the sensation that I was in the presence of some seriously kick-ass performers. But they are not as tight as I would have imagined, when they were moving in unison there were multiple thumps - this could have been a “design feature” of the choreography, but I don’t think so, otherwise I probably would not have bothered writing anything down.

It was obvious that like uni, tripe or other challenging food, choreography by Merce Cunningham is not exactly something that all Montrealers appreciate, while at the end of the show there were a bunch of curtain calls - during the show there was no applause anywhere, at anytime despite some extremely spectacular momements. I have seen much worse performances (read: simplistic) here where each solo got its own ovation. But like a combination of a riptide and a Hoover vacuum Nearly 902 no matter how you pronounce it, just sucked me in and held me riveted from beginning to end - I can only hope that I am that good when I am that old.

Friday, July 2, 2010

Episode 67: Projet in situ, Sylvain Émard Danse, Saburo Teshigawara, and Greg 'Krypto' Selinger,

Howdy!

Our show from July 1, 2010
(Download: MP3 82MB, Flac 636MB, Ogg Vorbis 50MB or Stream)

Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montreal, co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Allison Elizabeth Burns and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montreal. In this show Chris 'Zeke' Hand and Bettina Forget discuss and review. A piece of: My Heart (Breaking) by Greg 'Krypto' Selinger from the Montreal Fringe Festival, and Tu vois ce que je veux dire? by Projet in situ, Le très grand continental by Sylvain Émard Danse, and Miroku by Saburo Teshigawara of Karas from the Festival TransAmériques.

The theme song is the Romantics' version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is The Daffodils by William Wordsworth, and the music played during the show is Aki Onda's Bon Voyage and The Arboreal Quartet.

Listen


Bettina Forget and Chris 'Zeke' Hand

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Movement Museum Episode 61: Les Grands Ballets Canadiens, Toronto Dance Theatre, « WE ARE ROBOTS », Margie Gillis

Howdy!

Our show from May 13, 2010
(Download: MP3 75MB, Flac 311MB, Ogg Vorbis 47MB or Stream)

Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montreal, co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Allison Elizabeth Burns and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montreal. In this show we review Les Grands Ballets Canadiens' Minus One, Toronto Dance Theatre's Dis/(sol/ve)r, « WE ARE ROBOTS » and Margie Gillis' Filature / Thread.

The theme song is Attaque 77's version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is Tarantella by D.H. Lawrence, and the music played during the show is from Geordie McDonald's Time/After Time.

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Allison Elizabeth Burns, Bettina Forget and Chris 'Zeke' Hand

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Movement Museum Episode 59: International Dance Day, La Otra Orilla, Wen Wei Dance, Marie Chouinard, Pas de Danse Pas de Vie

Howdy!

Our show from April 29, 2010 - International Dance Day.
(Download: MP3 79MB, Flac 329MB, Ogg Vorbis 49MB or Stream)

Movement Museum a radio show broadcast Thursdays at 14h on CKUT 90.3 FM in Montreal, co-hosts Chris 'Zeke' Hand, Allison Elizabeth Burns and Bettina Forget talk about dance in Montreal. In this show we review La Otra Orilla's El12 and Wen Wei Dance's Cock-Pit, have a round table discussion about upcoming Festival TransAmériques shows, Les Grands Ballets Candiens' Minus One, briefly report on the talk that Marie Chouinard gave on her personal library and sources of inspiration at the Grande Bibliotheque and the book sale at the Bibliothèque de la danse Vincent-Warren along with discussing some of the events taking place in Montreal as part of International Dance Day / Pas de Danse Pas de Vie.

The theme song is the Laurent Voulzy's version of Do You Want to Dance, the dance poem of the week is The Dance by William Carlos Williams, and the music played during the show is from Jean Luc Fillon's On the Reed Again.



Allison Elizabeth Burns, Bettina Forget and Chris 'Zeke' Hand