The most striking tableau of the evening came in James Kudelka's choreography Almost Mozart (pictured above), made for Oregon Ballet Theater, where it was premiered in 2006. The Kennedy Center Opera House Orchestra was in the pit but had little to play, because Kudelka has taken just shreds of Mozart's music -- from the Masonic Funeral Music (K. 477) and slow movement of the A major piano concerto (no. 23, K. 488) -- and had them played mostly at intervals between the dance segments, most of which were performed in silence (watch excerpt). This was maddening on one hand, because when one knows the music that is being chopped up it can be exceedingly annoying, especially when applause at the ends of dances obscured much of the music leading into the next segment. On the other hand, the provocation of the musical gesture -- not including any of the concerto's iconic piano solo part (!) -- bore fruit in the meaning and intensity of the silences that followed. You found yourself focused on the sounds the dancers made, their labored breathing as the dance continued, but eventually it seemed clear that too much was sacrificed by removing music quite so much. The most effective vignette was the Duet of Grace Shibley and Brett Bauer, which did have some music to accompany it, and evoked the man as a sort of puppet-master moving the woman-puppet, sometimes frozen and sometimes in motion -- Kudelka imposed on himself the limitation that the dancers, in groups of two or three, had to remain "attached to one another by hand" most of the time.
Sarah Kaufman, ‘Symphony in Three Movements’ makeover retains Balanchine ballet’s transcendence (Washington Post, June 6) |
This program is repeated tonight (June 5, 7:30 pm) in the Kennedy Center Opera House. The Ballet Across America festival continues through June 9.
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