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Music in motion.


Byline: Fred Crafts The Register-Guard

There's nothing like lilting music by J.S. Bach to keep Eugene Ballet The Eugene Ballet Company (EBC) is a ballet company based in Eugene, Oregon. It is a resident company of the Hult Center for the Performing Arts.

Under the Artistic Direction of Toni Pimble and Technical Director Jim Bradford, this 20-member ensemble performs a blend
 choreographer Toni Pimble in a playful mood while she creates two new ballets this summer.

"It's such wonderful music to choreograph to. There's a simplicity to it, yet it is complex in its layout and layering," the Eugene Ballet choreographer and artistic director says. "It gives you a lot as a choreographer to play with."

Pimble has been preparing seven members of her company - Juan Carlos Juan Car·los   Born 1938.

King of Spain (since 1975) who acceded to the throne on the death of Francisco Franco and helped restore parliamentary democracy.

Noun 1.
 Amy-Cordero, Jonathan Guise, Petr Orlov, Neysa Fulsome, Stephanie Parker, Phyllis Rothwell Armes and Frank Affrunti (who returns to the company after a stint with Charleston Ballet Theatre) - for the premiere of two new ballets at the Oregon Bach Festival The Oregon Bach Festival is an annual celebration of the works of Johann Sebastian Bach, held in Eugene, Oregon in late June and early July. It was co-founded by German conductor Helmuth Rilling and the former president of the American Choral Directors Association, Royce Saltzman,  on Friday.

The festival commissioned Pimble to create ballets to Bach's Concerto in D Major for Three Violins and Orchestra (BWV BWV Backwater Valve
BWV Bachwerkverzeichnis (cataloging prefix for works of composer J.S. Bach)
BWV Board Walk Villas (Disney resort)
BWV Borderless World Volunteers
 1064) and his Orchestral Suite No. 1 in C Major (BWV 1066).

Both will be performed with the festival chamber orchestra Noun 1. chamber orchestra - small orchestra; usually plays classical music
orchestra - a musical organization consisting of a group of instrumentalists including string players
, led by concertmaster con·cert·mas·ter  
n.
The first violinist in a symphony orchestra.
 Kathleen Lenski.

The project is the brainchild of the festival's founding executive director, Royce Saltzman.

"I wanted very much to try to do this because I've always felt - based on Helmuth (Rilling) saying that so much of Bach's music is so usable - we should try to do this."

Although the festival has had dance components before, never before has it commissioned a ballet. Or two.

The orchestra will open the concert by itself, playing Bach's Orchestral Suite No. 2 in B Minor (BWV 1067) with flautist Leslie Newman, followed by Concerto in C Minor for Oboe, Violin and Harpsichord harpsichord, stringed musical instrument played from a keyboard. Its strings, two or more to a note, are plucked by quills or jacks. The harpsichord originated in the 14th cent. and by the 16th cent. Venice was the center of its manufacture.  (BWV 1060) with oboist Allan Vogel.

During intermission, the chamber orchestra will move to the rear of the stage, where it will perform behind a scrim scrim  
n.
1. A durable, loosely woven cotton or linen fabric used for curtains or upholstery lining or in industry.

2. A transparent fabric used as a drop in the theater to create special effects of lights or atmosphere.
 - a sheer curtain - while the dancers are out front on a bare stage.

First up for Pimble will be the three-movement violin concerto A violin concerto is a concerto for solo violin (occasionally, two or more violins) and instrumental ensemble, customarily orchestra. Such works have been written from the Baroque period, when the solo concerto form was first developed, up through the present day. , featuring violinists Kathleen Lenski, Elizabeth Baker and Jacqueline Brand.

"I'm going to work that piece as a piece that's pure dance," Pimble says. "The first movement is going to involve the whole company - introducing everyone, as it were. The second movement is a quintet, with three women and two guys. The finale is the whole company. It's very joyous, very lively."

The second work - a jaunty jaun·ty  
adj. jaun·ti·er, jaun·ti·est
1. Having a buoyant or self-confident air; brisk.

2. Crisp and dapper in appearance; natty.

3. Archaic
a. Stylish.

b. Genteel.
, multi-movement orchestral suite - begins with an overture played by the orchestra. Then, the dancers will return for the brief remaining sections: Courante courante

(from Latin currere, “to run”) Court dance of the 16th century, fashionable in European ballrooms into the 18th century. It was originally performed with small back-and-forth springing steps, which later became stately glides.
, Gavotte gavotte (gəvŏt`), originally a peasant dance of the Gavots in upper Dauphiné, France. A type of circle dance characterized by lively, skipping steps, it was introduced at the court of Louis XIV and was used by Lully in his ballets and , Forlane, Menuett, Bourree bour·rée  
n.
1.
a. An old French dance resembling the gavotte, usually in quick duple time beginning with an upbeat.

b. The music for this dance.

2. A pas de bourrée.
 and Passepied passe·pied  
n.
1. A spirited dance in triple meter, popular in France and England in the 17th and 18th centuries, resembling a minuet but faster.

2. Music for or in the rhythm of this dance.
.

Each movement will be performed by one or two dancers, with references to paintings of the period, just because Pimble "thought that would be fun."

Because the ballets will be in contemporary style, the dancers will be dressed in loose-fitting clothing, adorned with miscellaneous costume pieces (turbans, scarves, etc.) suggested by the famous paintings.

Assembling these two works has been a logistical challenge. Pimble conceived her ballets at home in Eugene but rehearsed them in the company's studios in Boise, beginning June 24.

Meantime, concertmaster Lenski worked up the orchestral parts at her home in Morro Bay, Calif., then shipped them around the world to musicians who will begin working with the dancers just this week.

To hold these parts together, all hands have been referring to Rilling's recordings of the works for style pointers.

Lenski, who will conduct the orchestra from her violin stand, says she will "stick to the tempos in Helmuth's recordings and to the timing for ends of phrases and that sort of thing. The dancers are using those recordings to prepare their dance.

`When we come together at the last minute (this week), we have at least that much in common to start with. And then we'll just have to play it by ear and see how it goes at the rehearsals."

Pimble appreciates this kind of artistic freedom, because it reflects the freedom she finds in Bach's music.

``I've been sitting here working on the violin concerto and mapping it out a little bit,'' Pimble says. ``I do a little map on the computer where I write down phrases so that I have a reference point. But you could actually interpret the phrasing many different ways. That, in a sense, gives you a great deal of freedom, choreographically.''

By freedom, Pimble means ``the phrases of music are not so specific that you feel choreographically that you have to end at a specific time. There's so much layering that goes on, where he's written one phrase, then he adds another phrase on top of that, then he adds another phrase on top of that.

`These long, arching lines of solo instruments above repetitive orchestral music are really pretty.''

And very dancelike, she says, in their playful, joyful, skipping, happy, energetic way.

"Bach just rolls along," she says. "That's really wonderful."

Fred Crafts can be reached at 338-2575 or fcrafts@guardnet .com.

DANCE PREVIEW

What: Eugene Ballet Company and the Oregon Bach Festival's chamber orchestra premiere two new ballets by Toni Pimble

When: 8 p.m. Friday

Where: Silva Concert Hall, Hult Center, Seventh Avenue and Willamette Street

How much: $27, $39 and $49, through the Hult Center box office (682-5000)

CAPTION(S):

Neysa Fulsome and Jonathan Guise bring to life a tender moment in the new ballets.
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Title Annotation:Entertainment
Publication:The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Date:Jul 6, 2003
Words:872
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