|
CALENDAR | LOGIN | VIEW ORDER | EMAIL SIGN-UP | DONATE |

|
|||||
Arctic Song The music for Arctic Song by Einojuhani Rautavaara combines a recording of arctic birdsong with an orchestra. I was intrigued by this remarkable piece of music because it is unusual and very beautiful. It is melodic while its deep structure is conceptual in a very contemporary way. This allowed me to make a dance combining the classical ballet vocabulary with many other influences and to organize group movement that draws upon nature for inspiration. Typically when eleven women are dancing together they are all doing the same movement at the same time facing the same direction. In Arctic Song this is rarely the case. I used images drawn from nature as a way to create both harmony and individuality for the group. When animals engage in the same activity, such as flying, they are each doing it in their own way in their own rhythm. I wanted to bring this shared intention and freedom to the stage. Each dancer is doing the same dance step in their own, unique way. This becomes like a forest of movement - each tree has its own unique shape and can be seen from every angle. All are beautiful. This spills into a democratic way of seeing the world as it alludes to the fact that all of the dancers are interesting in their own way. Nature is deeply rooted in the Japanese aesthetic upon which I draw, but the balance in Rautavaara’s work is exceptional. The music has very strong bursts of sound and great intensity as well as gentle lyricism. The movement reflects this by combining a lyrical flow with intense, almost violent accents. The rawness and beauty mirror our own experience. Tennessee Williams used the image of man as a bird without wings. The music allows us to fly. - Notes by Karole Armitage
|
PHOTO CREDITS |
||||
Home | Contact Us | Site Map | Credits | Privacy Policy © 2010-2012 Kansas City Ballet. All rights reserved. |
|---|