Jump to content
This Site Uses Cookies. If You Want to Disable Cookies, Please See Your Browser Documentation. ×

Helene

Administrators
  • Posts

    36,234
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Helene

  1. The Bolshoi version has extra pieces that the Mariinsky version doesn't, but I am always realizing that Bessmertnova was in her late 40's when that performance was taped.
  2. Many thanks for the recommendation, bart! I just ordered a disc of his piano and vocal music from amazon.com.
  3. Quite a change from when I first saw the company in the early 1970's, where having a European or Russian, or Latin American style sold tickets, at least among the principals. Makarova put on her own shows with Nagy as a tender, thoughtful partner; seeing Fracci and Bruhn in the same roles was like travelling to another continent. Ironically, ABT is quite big for seven to make an influence, especially if the company is trying to change their style. For a smaller company, with a corps in the 20-30 range, seven dancers could have a huge influence, especially if the Artistic Director chose those students deliberately for their style and training.
  4. Festival Vancouver opened last week and continues through this week. The Festival produces a number of concerts and lectures, free and paid, across numerous venues in Vancouver, BC, from the Orpheum Theatre (one of the few full-length concerts) to Christ Church Cathedral to the front of the Vancouver Art Gallery to jazz clubs to a new outdoor park series. The theme this year is "Music of the Americas." I was on vacation last week, and saw a number of concerts. Three were exceptional. Last Monday soprano Donna Brown and guitarist Andrew Mah, appearing as "Duo Brazil", performed a program of Brazilian music, mostly vocal (with a few guitar solos by Mah), with arrangements for guitar by Mah. The composers ranged from the early 20th century (Villa-Lobos, Pixinguinha) to contemporary (Almeida, Mah himself), and there was great breadth of style. Brown has a light but rich coloratura soprano voice, and the high notes she floated in Christ Church Cathedral were gorgeous. While in general my preference is for mezzos, her caressing phrasing won out. She's an opera singer as well, but in this music, she sounded idomatic, without vestiges of crossover, and the encore, to "Girl from Ipanema" was a knockout. Mah is a superb guitarist and musician, and his rhythmically complex arrangements were the highlight of the concert. Later that day, I attended a lecture/demo by Sara Davis Buechner, who would perform a program for piano of composers she had known plus foxtrots last Wednesday. She started the lecture by saying that she expected 10 UBC students -- she's taught there since 2003 -- in the front row with their notepads and was surprised to see us all. She said that the night before she had been performing and was robbed, her wallet gone along with the speech she had written for the presentation, and gave a quick, biting visual of a junkie on Hastings Street reading her notes. She has a wicked sense of humor and was thoroughly engaging as she described the musical context and related anecdotes about the composer Ray Green and one of her teachers, the pianist Byron Janis. Janis, who resembles Mr. Burns on "The Simpsons", growled out at her at her first lesson with him -- she was in her late 20's -- "What is music?", and she proceeded to describe what she called a "UBC lecture", and he growled back, "Music...is song and dance." That was a lesson she learned well: everything she plays sings and dances. I stayed in Vancouver an extra few days -- I know, beat me, twist my arm, make me suffer -- to hear the recital itself. It opened with UBC faculty member Stephen Chatman's recent "Mountain Spirit", which she commissioned, and whose title is the name of a painting by Lawren Harris, whose work both she and the composer admire. The second piece, the short "Elegy for Daisy", written by Dorothy Chang, another member of the UBC faculty, in memory of a young student of Buechner's who died, was ravishing. Composer Ray Green was influenced by and was a friend of Aaron Copland; his wife was May O'Donnell in the Graham company. His "Festival Fugues" was a strong work that flew in the face of the classical, atonal standards of the day when he wrote it in 1949, and the "Prelude Pastorale" was especially lovely. In a program that was one highlight after another, for me the richest work was Joaquin Nin-Culmell's "Danzas Cubanas", from which Buechner played eight excerpts. (Nin-Culmell's sister was the writer Anais Nin.) I'm not trained in any way, but the fusion of dance and something that I could only intuit as structure was deeply satisfying, and I wished I had heard the missing four. Buechner ended the printed program with Four Foxtrots by Gerschwin ("Let's Call the Whole Thing Off" and "He Loves and She Loves"), Jesse Greer ("Ragamuffin"), and Dana Suesse ("The Surest Cure for the Blues"). She has performed a number of Gershwin pieces from transcriptions by Artis Wodehouse. It isn't clear from the program whether these two were by Wodehouse, but Buechner created the arrangements of the Gree and Suesse (who also wrote "You Ought to Be in Pictures"). Her encore was a soulful arrangement of "The Man I Love". One of the pieces she performed at the lecture/demo but not at the concert was one she said was an obscure piece from a 1926 Gershwin piano roll. I recognized the piece immediately from "Who Cares?", but the name of the piece on her Gershwin CD is "Maybe." However this isn't listed in the Balanchine Catalog entry. I haven't seen "Who Cares?" in a while and my VHS tape from the PBS presentation is in storage, but I know in the reprise of the melody, the women move downstage with a jump, kicking their bent leg back towards their head during each phrase, like an unassisted Biellman spin in figure skating. If I had to describe Buechner's style, I'd call it fearless, with no trappings of genre. She would make a mean pianist in "The Concert." I am very happily listening to her recording of the Gershwin now. What is remarkable about these "short" concerts is that they are performed straight through. Buechner did a short intro before the Gershwin set, as she put it, "because there's no backstage, and I needed a break." The last notable concert was one of the free outdoor concerts in front of the Vancouver Art Gallery, by the anglo-Latin group Tanga, which performed a wide range of rhythmically intricate salsa and mambo pieces, some of them originals. Another free concert was a dress rehearsal for joint performance by a choir from Argentina, Grupo de Canto Coral, conducted by Néstor Andrenacci, and the Vancouver Cantata Singers, led by Eric Hannan. They met at this rehearsal for the first time, and their first joint run-through of the first part of Brahms' "A German Requieum" wasn't fully cooked, as to be expected, but was a great treat. I wish I could have been there for the actual concert this past Sunday.
  5. Did the lack of School drive ABT's rep in the first place? Is there a specific system that would prepare a dancer for deMille or Tudor, for example, more than any other. (Maybe Cecchetti, at least for the Tudor?) Many of the ABT ballets that have survived over the years required formidable dance-actors, which I think is more emphasized and encouraged than taught. While there may not be a training academy like RDB, POB, or the Vaganova School in the US or Canada, where children are admitted at an early age and there is an expectation that these are the dancers that will fill the rank of the affiliated company, why would the training at Kirov Academy in DC be that much less of a School, for example? If an Artistic Director wanted to form a coherent style, especially in the corps, there are a number of distinct schools/programs that could be unaffiliated feeders, given the number of trained students each year vying for a small number of contracts.
  6. I loved the parts about how they met and then got together later. It was written like a featured wedding.
  7. I personally am a sap for the story of Jason Lezak, a thirty-something in his third Olympics, having missed gold in the last two 4x100 relays, pulling off a heroic swim.
  8. until
    Eissey II 5/1 at 8pm 5/2 at 2pm & 8pm 5/3 at 2pm Eissey Campus Theatre at Palm Beach Community College, Palm Beach Gardens, FL BARTOK CONCERTO Ben Stevenson DVORAK SERENADE Lar Lubovitch OUR WALTZES Vicente Nebrada http://www.balletflorida.com/index.cfm?fus...9&x=8097304 Ticket Info Ballet Florida Box Office Telephone Numbers (561) 659 - 2000 OR (800) 540 - 0172 (outside 561) FAX (561) 659-2222 HOURS: Monday through Friday: 10am to 5pm Visa, MasterCard American Express , Discover Tickets for Ballet Florida performances at the Eissey Campus Theatre and Duncan Theatre can ONLY be purchased at the Ballet Florida Box Office.
  9. until
    Duncan II 4/24 at 2pm 4/25 at 2pm & 8pm Duncan Theatre at Palm Beach Community College, Lake Worth, FL SMILE WITH MY HEART Lar Lubovitch COEUR DE BASQUE Jerry Opdenaker BAKERS DOZEN Twyla Tharp READ MY HIPS Daniel Ezralow http://www.balletflorida.com/index.cfm?fus...9&x=7459735 Ticket Info Ballet Florida Box Office Telephone Numbers (561) 659 - 2000 OR (800) 540 - 0172 (outside 561) FAX (561) 659-2222 HOURS: Monday through Friday: 10am to 5pm Visa, MasterCard American Express , Discover Tickets for Ballet Florida performances at the Eissey Campus Theatre and Duncan Theatre can ONLY be purchased at the Ballet Florida Box Office.
  10. until
    Kravis II 3/6 at 8pm 3/7 at 2pm & 8pm The Kravis Center for the Performing Arts, West Palm Beach, FL Cinderella Vicente Nebrada http://www.balletflorida.com/index.cfm?fus...9&x=2223483 Ticket Info Ballet Florida Box Office Telephone Numbers (561) 659 - 2000 OR (800) 540 - 0172 (outside 561) FAX (561) 659-2222 HOURS: Monday through Friday: 10am to 5pm Visa, MasterCard American Express , Discover The Kravis Center Box Office also sells Ballet Florida productions hels at The Kravis Center by phone or walk-up...right up to curtain. Tickets may also be purchased ONLINE through the Kravis Center website ticketing page. (After September 21)
  11. until
    Kravis I 1/30 at 8pm 1/31 at 2pm & 8pm The Kravis Center for the Performing Arts, West Palm Beach, FL A Midsummer Night's Dream Norbert Vesak http://www.balletflorida.com/index.cfm?fus...0&x=3760397 Ticket Info Ballet Florida Box Office Telephone Numbers (561) 659 - 2000 OR (800) 540 - 0172 (outside 561) FAX (561) 659-2222 HOURS: Monday through Friday: 10am to 5pm Visa, MasterCard American Express , Discover The Kravis Center Box Office also sells Ballet Florida productions hels at The Kravis Center by phone or walk-up...right up to curtain. Tickets may also be purchased ONLINE through the Kravis Center website ticketing page. (After September 21)
  12. until
    Eissey I 11/21 at 8pm 11/22 at 2pm 11/22 at 8pm 11/23 at 2pm Eissey Campus Theatre at Palm Beach Community College, Palm Beach Gardens, FL COMPANY PREMIERE - CRASH Ma Cong A HANDEL CELEBRATION Vicente Nebrada LENTO A TEMPO E APPASSIONATO Vicente Nebrada READ MY HIPS Daniel Ezralow http://www.balletflorida.com/index.cfm?fus...8&x=3454286 Ticket Info Ballet Florida Box Office Telephone Numbers (561) 659 - 2000 OR (800) 540 - 0172 (outside 561) FAX (561) 659-2222 HOURS: Monday through Friday: 10am to 5pm Visa, MasterCard American Express , Discover Tickets for Ballet Florida performances at the Eissey Campus Theatre and Duncan Theatre can ONLY be purchased at the Ballet Florida Box Office.
  13. until
    Duncan Program I 11/14 at 8pm 11/15 at 2pm & 8pm Duncan Theatre at Palm Beach Community College, Lake Worth, FL FROM FAR AWAY Mauricio Wainrot MUSETTE Lar Lubovitch SECOND BEFORE THE GROUND Trey McIntyre http://www.balletflorida.com/index.cfm?fus...8&x=5062530 Ticket Info Ballet Florida Box Office Telephone Numbers (561) 659 - 2000 OR (800) 540 - 0172 (outside 561) FAX (561) 659-2222 HOURS: Monday through Friday: 10am to 5pm Visa, MasterCard American Express , Discover Tickets for Ballet Florida performances at the Eissey Campus Theatre and Duncan Theatre can ONLY be purchased at the Ballet Florida Box Office.
  14. On September 18 from 5:30-7:00pm, Twyla Tharp will participate in a lecture demo, with some dance excerpts with orchestra. Afterwards there will be a Q&A with audience, including press. Full subscribers can order free tickets -- one per subscription -- starting today, through 25 August. All additional tickets are $15. I just called to order mine, and there is assigned seating in McCaw Hall. Subscribers to mini-subscriptions ($15) and the general public ($20) can order tickets. The box office number is 206.441.2424. http://www.pnb.org/season/lecture-demos.html
  15. The new craze in cricket is 20/20. It a fast-paced game, with 20 overs (120 bowls) for each side, and it's quite exciting. The teams with depth and stamina aren't as advantaged, and since cricket is a streak game, that can go both ways. Cricket is clearly established as a sport; ballroom dancing is not, and I think it would be more difficult to be accepted as a judged sport. However, I assume cricket has been rejected so far as being too limited geographically, although it is nearly a religion on three continents, and too identified with the British empire. I wonder if UK will put it forward as a host demo sport in 2012. My favorite parts are when the participants snark back
  16. Robert La Fosse made it a point to describe the difference between partnering the much more independent ballerinas at NYCB and the ABT ballerinas, in his experience. La Fosse describes an entire drug culture during his Studio 54 days, but his book is rarely mentioned in context with "Dancing on My Grave". He was never demonized the way Kirkland was.
  17. I couldn't resist linking to Claudia La Rocco's latest blog entry ("Culturalist"). My Indian co-workers must be thrilled though, that Abhinav Bindra won gold in the 10m Air Rifle. So why is baseball an Olympic sport but not cricket?
  18. Ahem, just a marriage between a VP Marketing and a "family wealth management adviser" with a law degree (I'll be more astonished when a plumber marrying a mail carrier make it to the NYT.) But that they can and that they did. Which man is which? The groom on the left has a fantastic smile and the groom on the right is swoonworthy.
  19. Helene

    Hi group!

    Welcome to Ballet Talk, RobH! It's never too late to love this beautiful art form. If you ever have a question that doesn't seem to have a home, please ask it in our Discovering the Art forum. We do hope you'll post about what you see and like.
  20. Helene

    Hello peeps! =D

    Welcome to Ballet Talk, jas15. As the audience site, we'd love to hear about performances you see. As a dance student, you also may like our sister site, Ballet Talk for Dancers, where you'll find many fellow ballet students. (The site requires separate registration, but we ask you to use the same board name to make things simple.)
  21. That was a lovely gesture. to Yao Wei on her promotion.
  22. Wow, congratulations to him and to Dutch National Ballet, which also snagged PNB's Casey Herd. I hope he has a wonderful time living in Europe and dancing with the company. In English we've abbreviated the company as "DNB"; the company is named "Dutch National Ballet" in the English version of the official site. In Dutch the company name is "Het Nationale Ballet".
  23. msnbc.com has live streams of many events, including those that will be "chacked" from the network broadcasts: http://www.nbcolympics.com/video/
  24. On the classics I haven't read list, the ones I have read would make a much shorter list. The big two that I started but was unable to finish are "Moby Dick" -- the bookmark is still at the halfway mark from about twenty years ago -- and "The Scarlet Letter". I've never been able to get past the first 50 pages of the first LOTR book or past the first chapter of "The Hobbit." I found "Anna Karenina" a great read, but I was shocked that they get together so quickly and so uneventfully. "Middlemarch" is my favorite novel, but "Daniel Deronda" almost killed me. It took everything I had to slog through that one.
  25. That's a great strategy, carbro. I had the same timeout issues ordering Kirov tickets.
×
×
  • Create New...