Eliot Feld Ballet Company.Eliot Feld keeps churning out dances with the formula he's evolved over the years of hanging inventive motifs, involving tricky physical coordination, on canvases of textural music. He has a gift for finding odd, unexpected, and surely uncomfortable shapes to bend and twist the human body into, as this season's two new ballets demonstrate. In contrast to its title, Paean Paean (pē`ən), Paean was an epithet for Apollo, the healer. The paean, a hymn of praise to Apollo and often to other gods, was sung as a prayer for safety or deliverance at battles and other important occasions. (a song of praise) has dancers trudging in deep lunges with arms slicing the air in an arcane semaphore semaphore (sĕm`əfôr'), device for the visible transmission of messages. The marine semaphore, used by day between ships or between a ship and the shore, consists essentially of a post at the top of which are two pivoted arms. . Feld devises cleverly shifting patterns, which substitute for moves that carry dancers broadly through space. In the blink of an eye four couples transform into one quartet of men and one of women. A circle opens into two parallel lines which then splice, becoming two rows of three men, ringed by the women. Henry Cowell's music for strings provides a lush, dynamically neutral rhythmic canvas, on which Feld paints his intricate repetitions. But the dancers' slogging persistence projects dutiful obedience to their choreographic taskmaster task·mas·ter n. 1. One who imposes tasks, especially burdensome or laborious ones. 2. A source of burden or responsibility: The profession of medicine is a stern taskmaster. rather than joy. In the second premiere, Paper Tiger, Leon Redbone's carefully cultivated eccentricity meets Feld's calculated zaniness. The gravel-voiced singer stretches a canvas of bluesy popular songs, on which Feld doodles with fifteen picaresque pic·a·resque adj. 1. Of or involving clever rogues or adventurers. 2. Of or relating to a genre of usually satiric prose fiction originating in Spain and depicting in realistic, often humorous detail the adventures of a roguish characters, togged out in Willa Kim's fabulously motley wardrobe: Dickens by way of Threepenny Opera. Loose-jointed gamines in wacky hats and midi skirts sashay; bereted chaps in overalls cartwheel; everybody saunters in syncopation syncopation (sĭng'kəpā`shən, sĭn'–) [New Gr.,=cut off ], in music, the accentuation of a beat that normally would be weak according to the rhythmic division of the measure. , like a New Orleans jazz New Orleans Jazz can refer to:
Armature That part of an electric rotating machine which includes the main current-carrying winding. , just out of reach. Tiger is lightweight fun with a sardonic edge and an especially stylish look, thanks to Kim's costumes and Allan Lee Hughes's novel lighting design that includes a bank of instruments head-high behind the dancers. |
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