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MYTHOLOGY PERMEATES DANCE LANDSCAPE.


KALI
BEHNKE CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY
PERFORMANCE
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON
JUNE 1-4, 2000


The world premiere, presented by Seattle's On the Boards, of Kali, an experimental opera using stories and images from Hindu mythology, brought together a world renowned international cast. Kali is based on a libretto libretto (ləbrĕt`ō) [Ital.,=little book], the text of an opera or an oratorio. Although a play usually emphasizes an integrated plot, a libretto is most often a loose plot connecting a series of episodes.  by the famed Indonesian writer Goenawan Mohamad, with music by Jarrad Powell and Tony Prabowo. It was produced via a series of collaborative exploratory workshops in Indonesia and the United States. The title comes from the Hindu goddess Kali, a figure in Hindu mythology who embodies torment and transformation.

Both the music and the movement for the opera were inventive. The piece opened with the musicians producing sounds with rocks that resembled a gurgling Gurgling is a characteristic sound made by unstable two-phase fluid flow, for example, as liquid is poured from a bottle, or during gargling.  stream. Onstage, two sets of musical instruments flanked a black, angled platform. Fine-mesh panels made of lustrous lus·trous  
adj.
1. Having a sheen or glow.

2. Gleaming with or as if with brilliant light; radiant. See Synonyms at bright.



lus
 filigree filigree (fĭl`ĭgrē), ornamental work of fine gold or silver wire, often wrought into an openwork design and joined with matching solder and borax under the flame of the blowpipe.  draped the stage. All the elements of the scenic and lighting design worked well together. The sidelights were positioned to project shadows on the walls to resemble the fighting armies that the singers spoke about. The operatic prose, delivered expertly by tenor John Duykers, mezzosoprano Kathryn Weld and vocalists Jessika Kenney and Musliwardinal, advanced the story about death, gods and slaughter.

Kali is rich with texture--from complicated rock sounds to the breathing of the dancers to the bowing of the gongs--all of which were considered part of the music structure.

Originally planned to be a collaborative effort with an Indonesian choreographer until supporting grant money fell through, Mary Sheldon Scott from Seattle saved the day and choreographed all the movement for the opera. Still, she was able to represent appropriate contemporary and traditional choreography for the piece.

The four dancers, Corinna Befort, Amy O'Neal, Juliet Waller Pruzan and bakira j.a.r., moved in utterly believable shapes, resembling birds as they skittered across the stage with hyperflexed upper bodies and super-arched feet, or clanspeople as they charged across the stage, then hovered in the wings in martial arts-like poses.

The dance was highly gestural (frantic, almost) and suggestive of suggestive of Decision making adjective Referring to a pattern by LM or imaging, that the interpreter associates with a particular–usually malignant lesion. See Aunt Millie approach, Defensive medicine.  primordial animals and landscapes. The atonal a·ton·al  
adj. Music
Lacking a tonal center or key; characterized by atonality.



a·tonal·ly adv.
 string pieces, played by American violist Stephanie Griffin as a member of the New Jakarta Ensemble, used a heavy downbeat down·beat  
n.
1. Music
a. The downward stroke made by a conductor to indicate the first beat of a measure.

b. The first beat of a measure.

2. Informal A period of stagnation or inactivity.
 creating eerie feelings.

Musical instruments consisted of gongs, drums, cylinders and bells--percussion that gave a disturbing off-balance amplified sound, as the two stage groupings played off each other, delivering many starts and stops. Clearly the big challenge was for the musicians and dancers to move together on each note, something the entire cast did very well.

Characterization by the musicians, vocalists and dancers was brilliant, with all performers showing great control and tremendous range (for the vocalists, from a high falsetto-moaning scream to a breathy breath·y  
adj. breath·i·er, breath·i·est
Marked by or as if by audible or noisy breathing: a breathy voice.



breath
, heady utterance)--the voices were strong, sustained and focused. The ending of the piece also was very powerful, with the performers appearing downstage down·stage  
adv.
Toward, at, or on the front part of a stage.

adj.
Of or relating to the front part of a stage.

n.
The front half of a stage.

Noun 1.
, chanting "fire," representing the culmination of the profoundly disturbing narratives presented throughout.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Review
Author:BERARDI, GIGI
Publication:Dance Magazine
Article Type:Opera Review
Date:Sep 1, 2000
Words:482
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