Archive for the ‘Music’ Category

Rehearsing Crossroads

Friday, June 24th, 2011

Listening to Luca Silvestrini  Listening to Luca Silvestrini

crossroads 12 Crossroads 14c

Waves were created by passing cases and dancers overhead

crossroads 16

Children and adults practicing together  

Crossroads 2

Rehearsing on site at the Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich

Crossroads 3 Crossroads 20

The musicians, led by Andy Pink created evocative music

Crossroads final  The end  

Aomori Project: Of Landscapes Remembered

Friday, April 15th, 2011

Aomori Project: Of Landscapes Remembered created by Sioned Huws in collaboration with visiting artists from Japan and a cast of non-dancers from London and beyond.

“…a landscape transformed, the heart beat slows down, the body is overwhelmed by a desire to rest, to lay horizontally on this blanket of white. A desire to be resisted, to move and be moved…”

Greenwich Dance, Greenwich

Aomori Project: Friday 15 April 7.45pm and Saturday 16 April 3.30pm

tickets: “pay what you can afford”

I will be at Greenwich Dance tonight to draw the performance and publish the drawings on my blog, why not come too? Watch and enjoy this magical dance with generosity and curiosity, introduce yourself to me at the end of the show and see my drawings.

Javier De Frutos and The Pet Shop Boys

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

The Most Incredible Thing is a modern ballet choreographed by Javier de Frutos with music by the Pet Shop Boys. It opened at Sadler’s Wells 17th March. Based on a fairy story by Hans Christian Anderson the King offers his daughter’s hand in marriage and half his kingdom to the person who can create the most extraordinary object anyone has ever seen. Not surprisingly his spirited daughter is resistant to this rather authoritarian concept. The opening scene is one of my favourites in the ballet, the dancers dressed as Russian workers dance around a huge table, it has echoes of early expressionist dance and is so visual it is as if a painting comes to life. Meanwhile isolated behind transparent screens, Princess (Clemmie Sveaas) dances alone in true teenage anxt to the wonderful pounding beat of the Pet Shop Boys.

The Most Incredible Thing.1

The Most Incredible Thing.3

The two suitors show up, dreamy artist Leo, and ruthless soldier, Karl (Aaron Sillis and Ivan Putrov). Both dance in turn with Princess. The competition to design the most incredible object begins. Leo, creates a little clock which magically comes to life, it is agreed by the panel of judges shown on video that his is the best design and so wins the girl and half the kingdom.

The Most Incredible Thing.4

The Most Incredible Thing.5

Bad loser Karl, fired up with envy crushes the clock and is pronounced the winner for doing The Most Incredible Thing by destroying such an extraordinary work of art (no I don’t follow that line of thought either… but all is not lost). So Baddy and Beauty are to marry while Sad Artist is pining for his lost love. Suddenly, low and behold, the clock rebuilds itself, destroys the evil soldier and dreamy artist is reunited with his true love and they live happily ever after for ever and ever just like in real life.

Except I missed the last act so didn’t see them reunited because my princess texted me to say she wasn’t feeling well so I left for home. I hope one day I’ll have the opportunity to watch and draw the ballet again, the energy was fabulous and the imagery beautiful.

Greenwich Dance. Spring Cabaret

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

The Spring Cabaret at Greenwich Dance last Friday was the chosen venue for Lisa Stubbs to celebrate her birthday. Her friends filled three tables to watch an evening of innovative dance and later surprisingly to participate in. As always I drew a few sketches of the dances as they unfolded before me.

Greenwich DAnce 1

Tamzen Moulding                           Matthew Hawkins 

The first dance of the evening, Tamzen Moulding‘s It Started at The End combined dance and acrobatics. Matthew Hawkins followed with a solo inspired by spending time in a sculptor’s studio in China to an interesting trak sound track of the voices and activity in the studio.

Avant Garde

Avant Garde                                         Barn Dance

Avant Garde danced a preview of their multimedia production, Illegal Dance. During the interval Rosie Davis led some of the audience in a barn dance.

Wendy HoustounWendy Houstoun 

Wendy Houston performed ‘a short monologue for a tongue tied citizen’. I have drawn Wendy’s work before, she choreographed a dance for the Yorke Dance Project called Home on the Range, which I drew last October, see

https://blog.sallymckay.co.uk/2010/10/

Accompanied by the fabulous Squirrel Hunters: Steve Blake, Freddie Gottlieb and Peter Gibson. Dance Caller Rosie Davis encouraged the Cabaret audience to grab a partner and take part in a barn dance!

Sketch book abandoned, as friend Gill and I danced the night away. Another very successful and enjoyable Cabaret at Greenwich Dance.

American Ballet Theatre

Sunday, February 6th, 2011

My first time watching/drawing The American Ballet Theatre who were performing at Sadler’s Wells last week. Two programmes, I chose the first over the second to see Twyla Tharp‘s Known By Heart. The first dance of the evening, danced by three couples to Scarlatti, was Alexei Ratmansky‘s Seven Sonatas.

I loved Twyla Tharp’s  Known by Heart performed by Gillian Murphy and Blaine Hoven to Donald Knaack‘s Junk Music. Known by Heart. Twyla Tharp

Twyla Tharp. Known By Heart

Another entirely different duet, Duo Concertant, followed, choreographed by George Balanchine.

Duo Concertant

Duo Concertant. George Balanchine

The final work, Everything Doesn’t Happen at Once choreographed by Benjamin Millepied had a 6 piece music ensemble on stage playing music by David Lang, performed by 24 dancers.

Everything doesn’t happen at once

 Everything doesn’t happen at onceBenjamin Millepied. Everything Doesn’t Happen at Once 

CitytoCity Cabaret at Greenwich Dance

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

On Friday night Greenwich Dance held their first Cabaret night of the year with dance from Croatia, Bulgaria, Greece and the UK. It was wild!

I sat with the dance and drama students from Lewisham College who I’ll be drawing in a couple of weeks time and my friends Lisa Stubbs (Head of Dance and Drama at Lewisham College) and musician Carl Marsh.

Here are some of my sketches of the night

Ognjen Vucinic & Aleksandra Misic, Randevu

Ognjen Vucinic & Aleksandra Misic, Randevu 

Elvis McGonagall/Milen Petrov

Compere Scottish poet, Elvis McGonagall. Milen Petrov, Apartment

Nigel Charnock. Them There Exes

Nigel Charnock. Them There Exes 

Levantes Dance Theatre. Canape Art

Levantes Dance Theatre. Canape Art 

Nigel Charnock. Cold Tongue

Nigel Charnock. Cold Tongue 

It was a great night. The next cabaret will be the Spring Cabaret 11th March. I shall be there with my sketch book to draw hip hop from Avant Garde and others.

Youtube, Chasing Shadows

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

In May 2009 I had a 6 week solo show Chasing Shadows in the West End gallery, GV Art in Marylebone. Martin Smith and Alex May of Quadratura were commissioned to create an audio/visual composition of dancer, Alessandra Ruggeri, responding to my work.

On Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evening Alessandra Ruggeri will be dancing at Dancing The Decade, the 10 year celebration of The Wapping Project, with Andrew Graham in the duet, In One Breath.

Matthew Bourne’s Cinderella

Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

Prokofiev wrote the score to Cinderella during the Second World War, premiered by the Bolshoi in 1946. Matthew Bourne was intrigued and inspired by this discovery, he explored the possibility of setting Cinderella during this period, saying “…it seemed to work so well in the wartime setting. Darkly romantic in tone, it speaks of a period of time when time was everything, love was found and lost suddenly and the world danced as if there was no tomorrow.”

New Adventures Cinderella. 2 Cinerella, 3New Adventures Cinderella 4 New Adventures Cinderella 7New Adventures Cinderella 8 New Adventures Cinderella 9

Cinderella in this setting made sense to me. I grew up with stories of London in the Blitz. My mother was a physiotherapist at The London Hospital in Whitechapel (now The Royal London Hospital) during the Second World War. Stories of leaving the hospital on nights off to dance and returning to find the walk ways to the hospital bombed and impassable; treating survivors after many were horrifically crushed to death attempting to enter Bethnal Green Tube Station during an air raid; her friend, never to love another, after her boyfriend was killed soon after signing up.

New Adventures‘ production of Cinderella is performed at Sadler’s Wells until 23rd January and then goes on tour.

Russell Maliphant at Laban Theatre

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

The work of dancer and choreographer Russell Maliphant was showcased at Laban Theatre on 24th and 25th November. The programme contained three works, opening with a film-screening of an early duet, Critical Mass; Maliphant himself dancing the solo, Shift; followed by the most recent AfterLight (Part 1) performed by award winning dancer Daniel Proietto.

 Russell Maliphant in Shift

A collaboration between Russell Maliphant and lighting designer, Michael Hulls, with haunting cello music by Shirley Thompson. Shift is in essence a solo, but shadows appear, vanish and reappear on the back screen multiplying the dancer, so he is never alone until the last phrase of movement when each column of light fades,  leaving Maliphant a silhouette, seeming to dissolve with the light as it slowly fades away.

Russell Maliphant in Shift

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Shift 

 

AfterLight (Part One) is inspired by the photographs and geometric circular drawings of Vaslav Nijinsky which he drew to describe his descent into psychosis. The solo is performed to piano music of Erik Satie. Michael Hulls has designed exquisite lighting, the audience are in complete darkness, (my pencil couldn’t locate my sketch book, no drawings). The dappled light falls on the dancer seeming to trap him in the shadows, as he moves he starts to spin as if casting off the darkness that enveloped him, the movement flows in spirals and circles, pools of light partially illuminating him as he moves. The climax is the dancer spinning so fast in an arc of dappled light, it is impossible to tell where his limbs end and the shadows take over. A collective sigh rose from the audience as the dancer slowed, the light faded and shadows enveloped the audience once more.

Simon Mulligan Quartet at the 606 Club

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Simon Mulligan 2 Simon Mulligan 1

Last night I watched the Simon Mulligan Quartet at the 606 Club in Chelsea, it was the most beautiful jazz piano I have ever heard.

Thank you and Happy Birthday Simon Mulligan.