Jazz at New York City Ballet.If asked, few ballet habitues would immediately associate jazz with classical ballet Noun 1. classical ballet - a style of ballet based on precise conventional steps performed with graceful and flowing movements ballet, concert dance - a theatrical representation of a story that is performed to music by trained dancers , but twentieth-century ballet choreographers have regularly found its fascinatin' rhythms a seductive prod to movement inventiveness. Jazz was born on the wrong side of the tracks in the demimonde dem·i·monde n. 1. a. A class of women kept by wealthy lovers or protectors. b. Women prostitutes considered as a group. 2. , red-light districts A list of world red-light districts. Africa Kenya
Morocco
of American cities during the naughty nineties. About four centuries earlier, ballet had grown up in the propriety-conscious palaces of kings, where manners dictated all. Yet classical ballet choreographers and composers have been interested in and influenced by jazz rhythms and phrasing from the time the sassy sas·sy 1adj. sas·si·er, sas·si·est 1. Rude and disrespectful; impudent. 2. Lively and spirited; jaunty. 3. Stylish; chic: a sassy little hat. counterculture coun·ter·cul·ture n. A culture, especially of young people, with values or lifestyles in opposition to those of the established culture. coun music muscled its way into mainstream consciousness. New York City Ballet New York City Ballet, one of the foremost American dance companies of the 20th cent. It was founded by Lincoln Kirstein and George Balanchine as the Ballet Society in 1946. during its fiftieth-anniversary celebration is perfectly comfortable presenting a new full-evening production of Swan Lake, as well as ballets to the music of the late Duke Ellington and of the very much present Wynton Marsalis. One has to look no farther than George Balanchine, the company's founding choreographer, to see why. For him, the pretext for dancing was music, and some of that music was jazz or jazz-influenced. Among the scores by contemporary composers he worked with were Richard Rodgers's Slaughter on Tenth Avenue Slaughter on Tenth Avenue is the name of a ballet by Richard Rodgers. It was choreographed by George Balanchine. It occurs near the end of Rodgers and Hart's 1936 Broadway musical comedy On Your Toes. (1936), Igor Stravinsky's Ragtime ragtime: see jazz. ragtime U.S. popular music of the late 19th and early 20th centuries distinguished by its heavily syncopated rhythm. Ragtime found its characteristic expression in formally structured piano compositions, the accented left-hand for 11 Instruments twice (1960 and 1966), Morton Gould's Derivations for Clarinet and Jazz Band (1964's Clarinade), Hershy Kay's score using Gershwin songs, entitled Who Cares? (1970), Rolf Liebermann's Concerto for Jazz Band and Orchestra (1971), and Roger Kellaway's gloss on themes by Stan Applebaum and Sid Woloshin entitled PAMTGG (1971), based on the music for a television commercial. The last mentioned was an unpronounceable acronym for "Pan Am Makes The Going Great." It was hoped that the airline would be so pleased it would offer NYCB NYCB New York City Ballet NYCB New York Community Bank dancers complimentary roundtrip tickets to make a filming date in Germany. The company didn't do so; the film sessions were a disappointment bordering on a disaster (flooring was unsprung and editting was frenetic); and the ballet' was an embarrassment--TV jingles definitely did not inspire Balanchine's best efforts. The far superior popular music of Rodgers and Gershwin did. Rodgers's On Your Toes had offered Balanchine his fast opportunity to work on a Broadway musical comedy; another first for Broadway was his use of the term choreographer to describe himself. Slaughter, considerably expanded for an NYCB 1968 gala program, found its way comfortably into the company's regular repertory, as did the glittering Who Cares? For the most part, Balanchine's other efforts remained pieces d'occasion that departed with their occasions. Other choreographers associated with NYCB have had great success with jazz or jazz-influenced scores. Jerome Robbins's Interplay to Gould's American Concertette, originally done for Billy Rose's 1945 Concert Varieties, has had a long life with the company. Similarly successful was Robbins's ballet In G Major (1975) to Maurice Ravel's jazz-influenced piano concerto of the same name. Robbins's Pied Piper (1951) won praise both here and abroad for its witty reflection of its score, Aaron Copland's Concerto for Clarinet and String Orchestra with Harp and Piano, which takes almost as long to say as the ballet runs. One wonders whether the company might not want to revive it by getting some of the original cast together for reconstruction. Ruthanna Boris and Todd Bolender both took an affectionate look at a bygone era in her Cakewalk (1951) and his Souvenirs (1955). Kay orchestrated a selection of Louis Moreau Gottschalk Louis Moreau Gottschalk (May 8, 1829 – December 18, 1869) was an American composer and pianist, best known as a virtuoso performer of his own romantic piano pieces. Although he is regarded as an American composer and musician, he spent most of his working career outside of melodies, along with older traditional minstrel show tunes, while Boris appended the exaggerated striding of the cakewalk to the ballet vocabulary with great skill and imagination. Samuel Barber composed Souvenirs as a four-hand piano score in 1953, recalling the palm court social atmosphere of the decorous dec·o·rous adj. Characterized by or exhibiting decorum; proper: decorous behavior. [From Latin dec pre-World War I period. Two years later he orchestrated it as the suite that Bolender choreographed. The result was a series of blackout scenes using jazz-flavored social dance music that was by turns romantically nostalgic and amusing. The ballet remained in repertory for a while but has not been seen since the company moved to Lincoln Center. (The students of School of American Ballet The School of American Ballet is located in New York City, in Lincoln Center. It is considered one of the most prestigious and notable ballet schools in the United States and teaches some of the most talented young dancers in the country. have danced to the score, however; NYCB soloist Christopher Wheeldon used it for his well-received Soiree Musicale, premiered last spring at SAB's 34th Annual Workshop.) For the 1972 Stravinsky Festival, Bolender choreographed a witty duet to a 1919 solo piano score, Piano-Rag-Music. The pretext was simple and obvious as soon as the curtain went up, revealing a tall, statuesque stat·u·esque adj. Suggestive of a statue, as in proportion, grace, or dignity; stately. stat u·esque woman being partnered by a considerably smaller, nimble man. The amusing part was observing how he succeeded in supporting her while still maintaining his own aplomb a·plomb n. Self-confident assurance; poise. See Synonyms at confidence. [French, from Old French a plomb, perpendicularly : a, according to (from Latin ad-; see . John Taras took Stravinsky's three-movement Ebony Concerto, 1945, for Clarinet and Swing Band and produced a theatrically savvy piece (1960) that skillfully fused the attitude of Broadway show dancing and the basic ballet vocabulary. The opening movement done in silhouette was most effective. When jazz music burst upon the world at the end of the nineteenth century, it spawned a form of dance that not only included tap but also influenced social dancing, popular musical theater, and concert-level dance. From being the marginalized expression of a group on the edge of society, it robustly moved to stage center because it spoke the language of the time. It still does! Don McDonagh is a contributing editor of Dance Magazine. He was on the selection committee for the Dance Magazine Awards '99. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||

u·esque
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion