Tag Archives: love

Friday Night’s Music Selections at City Arts Fest

Friday night holds the promise of the weekend in its hot little hands, so it’s no surprise that some of City Arts Fest’s choicest musical offerings surface tonight.

Wristbands for the Fest are now sold out, but single tickets for some of the events can still be purchased at the respective venues. As always, zip on over to the City Arts Fest website for purchase details. Here’s what’ll rule musically tonight.

The Swearengens, Land of Pines, Cody Beebe, Ravenna Woods @ The Crocodile. Show at 8:00pm.

It’s another great all-local bill at City Arts Fest, and a varied one to boot. The Swearingens and Cody Beebe hold up the roots end: The former provide the party music, while the latter serves as the soundtrack for that last-call sob into your beer. Land of Pines, contrary to their rustic-sounding moniker, bash out great (and decidedly non-rootsy) guitar pop, but the evening will definitely belong to Ravenna Woods, who play live with the jumpy, desperate energy of guys facing their last night on earth.

The Good Sin, Key Nyata, Kingdom Crumbs, Fresh Espresso @ Neumos. Show at 8:15pm.

Someone out there’s surely clucking on about the hip-hop renaissance that Seattle’s experiencing right now, and if they’re not, someone (maybe even me) probably will after this evening of homegrown crews. That mantra of early show arrival really, really applies here: Opener The Good Sin is flat-out terrific, a tersely-effective lyricist with resonant, deep delivery and expansive melodies to back up his rhymes. Key Nyata’s barely old enough to vote (18), but he’s on to a seriously addictive mix of trippily-sluggish beats and jet-black verse. Kingdom Crumbs’ vividly-imaginative jams mix experimental electronics with sometimes surreal stream-of-consciousness rhymes, and they’re energetic as hell onstage. Last but surely not least, Fresh Espresso shall surely bring the house down with their established and fervent party-down agenda.

Reignwolf @ The Laserdome. Doors at 10:45pm, show at 11:15pm.

The current fave rock rave of every rational human who’s seen him, Reignwolf delivers such an astonishing show all by his lonesome that throwing him into a laser show seems almost superfluous. Here’s hoping the set-up accommodates that.  Rumor has it that this one’s sold out, but there may be some single tickets at the door. 

Prism Tats, Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound, Fox and the Law, Howlin Rain @ Barboza. Show at 6:30pm.

Headliners Howlin Rain are pretty damned awesome–think an unlikely but pretty magical amalgam of Bruce Springsteen, Wilco, and Love–but again, get there early. Prism Tats have formed from the ashes of the late, great Koko and the Sweetmeats, and they play very cool garage-rock laced with minimalist indie-pop beauty. San Franciscans Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound sport a name almost as cool as Prism Tats and a gently psychedelic sound. Second-to-the-last but not least on the bill is Fox and the Law, a great, growling rock combo who sound like electric blues on a Queens of the Stone Age head trip. 

 

 

Byrd’s LOVE May Not be Supreme, but It is Full Spectrum

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The Spectrum Dance troupe in Love (Photo: Nate Watters)

Shadou Mintrone and Ty Alexander Cheng (Photo: Nate Watters)

Jeroboam and Vincent Michael Lopez (Photo: Nate Watters)

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I was made curious by our SunBreak review of Spectrum Dance Theater‘s last show of the season, LOVE. A world premiere from choreographer Donald Byrd, the work left our critic impressed but asking, “But what had this to do with love?” As it happens, a lot. Still, after trundling down to Daniels Recital Hall for the last performance, I could understand the bewilderment. Byrd’s choreography is almost always as heady as it is kinetic, but here he’d reached new heights, and folded in a sort of muscle-memoir besides.

At a pre-performance talk, Byrd had addressed the idea that it was “all about him,” saying more or less that while he’d drawn from personal experience, it wasn’t a danse à clef–that’s just the material he had to work withWhile it does help, I think, to be familiar with Byrd’s biography in watching the piece, there other, jaw-dropping moments where the bravura physicality of Spectrum’s dancers is matched to an equally surprising conceptual pivot.

Keeping in mind, for instance, that Byrd is the bad-boy choreographer who thrust a heroin-addled Cobain jonesing for fix in an audience’s faces, it was unexpected to watch Rodin’s The Thinker appear off bias, or realize late in the evening that an allegorical Amor (in the breathtakingly limber form of Jade Solomon Curtis) had just flown in. In his Seattle Times review, Michael Upchurch describes the scene:

In the third suite, the degree of trust — a mix of abandon and utter self-control — that Jade Solomon Curtis displays in her fellow dancers is awing. With their help, she’s caught, propelled, flung, inverted and sent soaring, occupying the air as if it’s her natural element.

Byrd’s polysemous choreography embraces both a loveliness that catches in your throat, and supports a colder-eyed analysis; City Arts‘ Rachel Gallaher noted the way Curtis is “tossed, supported, lifted up and passed between the men in the company—perhaps a comment on male-controlled society or relationships….” Perhaps. If that is Amor up there, you’re also watching men in her thrall. Many things are true of this scene.

Poetry is thought by some a series of weak-minded, airy effusions, and bad poetry certainly can be. But the task of, say, a metaphysical poet is far too specific for someone with a feeble mental grip on the yoke they’re using to bind two things not normally bound. In the mind, they want to spring apart, back to their usual categorical associations.

In dance, similarly, Byrd is something of a metaphysical choreographer. Here we see Amor, but the metaphor is applied to the mechanics of movement: The dancers are, of necessity, as rapt as someone in love, focused intently on every move Curtis makes, every breath, even, that she takes. They have to be–otherwise she’d fall. Byrd’s choreography frequently uses the real risks of dance (falls, injury, missteps, awkward catches) to communicate an emotional reality, one that operates as a field you’ve unwittingly stepped into. So the risks of the dancers rhyme with those of the lovers.

In this way, Byrd can have his choreographic cake, and eat it, too: His vocabulary of abstract movement impresses with its internal coherence. Words don’t, descriptively, capture what’s going on, any more than “red and purple paint splatter” gives you an idea of what seeing a Pollock is like. But nonetheless you see things emerge between the dancers, the gestures they trade and react to. Whoever Ty Alexander Cheng and Shadou Mintrone are in this piece, it’s not because either has a name, or can easily be given a label, but you’re invested in their danced relationship and its discontinuities.

If there’s a narrative thread to LOVE, I think it’s in its furious attempt to make art from love, and more specifically, from love that’s gone missing. Set to Benjamin Britten’s three Cello Suites, played with an almost inhuman dynamic variety by Wendy Sutter, the work begins with the soulful Vincent Michael Lopez stepping into it–stepping through his clasped hands, a move he’ll repeat at the finish.

He’s the Stephen Hero of LOVE, someone whom we see formed both by his own relationships and by the ones he simply witnesses (Byrd has Lopez at one point run across the stage, staring into faces as if he’s trying to discern which is “the one” for him). He’s torn between a woman and a man with daimonic presence. Lopez all but shakes in his presence; Jeroboam Bozeman picks him up like a toy, arranges him into shapes, is maternally tender with a head on his breast. It’s a passionate meeting of minds (Byrd has the dancers touch foreheads repeatedly, as a kiss, as a benediction, as an epiphany that catapults one away). Lopez’s character flees, but his heart is clearly restless.

I can’t shake the feeling that it is not coincidence that people say they see more of Merce Cunningham’s choreographic influence in this work. In the mid-section of the evening-length dance, Byrd interpolates a Mercian twitching that would also suggest, having seen his Cobain, drug addiction–which also makes it, in this context, Byrdian. It’s in this part that the relational world blooms across the two bare stages, everyone partnering up, whether in ballroom dance attitudes (Cheng, Shadou) or sweaty beddings (Kate Monthy, Donald Jones, Jr.) or perhaps misplaced infatuations (Bozeman, Amber Nicole Mayberry). Feet are stamped. By the end, two of the women have seem to have had enough, and embrace each other.

It’s striking to me that the last cello suite quotes from the Russian Orthodox Hymn for the Dead. It’s here that Amor appears, transcendent, but also vanishes, and in her wake, so does Bozeman. Lopez, bereft, retraces his steps from the opening. Daniels Hall used to be a church, and I watched the dance take place beneath the nave, stained glass in the dome glowing with sunset. With the hymn in my ears, I found it impossible not to think, again, of Cunningham’s death in 2009. In love, you’re out on a sea of emotion; when someone dies, it’s suddenly a ship in a bottle. How could that immense experience fit into time, have an end?

I take Byrd’s cue not to read LOVE as autobiography, but as a story about the kind of titanic love that, if you are blessed and cursed in equal measure, comes along just once in a life. And leaves, even years later, with as great an impact as it arrived.

What’s Love Got to Do with Spectrum Dance’s LOVE?

Spectrum Dance Theater’s LOVE (Photo: Nate Watters)

How would you describe love? Some ideas might include perhaps a yearning for close companionship, an irresistible attraction, tenderness, touching, feeling, warmth, affection, closeness, sharing, embraces and kisses.

Looking for these in Donald Byrd’s new work, Love, in performance this and next weekend at Daniels Hall, I saw some, usually in fleeting moments and a few longer, such as the sequence with five couples attached mouth to mouth but without apparent warmth. Indeed the only facial expressions of warmth I saw came from the eloquent dancer Jereboam Bozeman, the tenderness in a head dropping on a partner’s shoulder, a brief embrace, an occasional caress.

Mostly, it’s a work of non-stop movement for first one dancer, then two, then in varied groupings of up to the entire complement of eleven dancers on two connected square stages. One is slightly higher than the other, with most of the church pews pushed aside in what used to be the Methodist Church at Fifth and Marion. Pews for the audience ranged around three sides of one square, but it was possible to see every dancer from anywhere.

The men were in white stretch briefs and sometimes an open longsleeved white shirt which obscured lines and seemed to get in the way; the women in one- or two-piece swimsuits or long shifts and at the end, incongruous long, thin tutu skirts which bunched up, also all white.

The work was mostly about superb athletes in abstract movement, dancers in their fluidity and the way one movement flowed into the next, at times almost reaching pure acrobatics with many leg lifts and somersaults. At others, the movement verged on contortionism, saved by the extraordinary smoothness, apparent ease and beautiful control displayed by all the dancers and epitomized by Vincent Michael Lopez and Ty Alexander Cheng.

In the third section, six men lifted Jade Solomon Curtis high overhead, twisting, turning, swooping, and arching her in a myriad shapes, the most absorbing sequence of the performance. Had she not been so strong and so flexible, and had the supporters’ hands not all been in the right place at the right time, some moves could have been seen as downright dangerous in terms of breaking her back.

But what had this to do with love?

Similarly, Benjamin Britten’s solo Cello Suites Nos. 1-3 were music for Love, played live by Denise Djokic. She draws a warm resonant sound from her instrument and gave a fine performance. However, the dance seemed to have no connection to the music and vice versa.