« Fun at Galapagos Art Space | Main | Breaking: Brooklyn County Committee and Tish James Team Up to Demand Voter Referendum »
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Music by Steve Reich, Dance by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker
I have always been a fan of Steve Reich's music so this caught my eye. His piece, Distant Trains, is a fave. I also like Tehillim. This dance work by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker uses Four Orgns and Eight Lines. It's at BAM.
Choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker returns to BAM with a program that celebrates her evolving relationship with the music of Steve Reich, one of our most inventive and iconic modern composers. Working from a divine logic—often expressed as exalted permutations on a single theme—they each invest their work with an emotional heart, creating pieces that transcend definition as they challenge our notions of sound and movement.
Reich's globally-inclusive mix of Western vernacular, classical, and non-Western influences, performed live by Brussels' percussion ensemble Ictus, dovetails perfectly with De Keersmaeker's formal, richly expressive choreography. Two new dance works, set to Reich's Four Organs and the subtle, harmonically intriguing Eight Lines, shimmer with the choreographer's signature rigor and appetite for space. Every step, every phrase, reflects De Keersmaeker's delicate mix of minimalism and sensuality; a transfer of weight from one foot to the next feels both matter-of-fact and momentous. The effect is of great suspense, a slow build rife with drama.
Also on the program are Piano Phase from the four-part Fase, a riveting women's duet performed along an invisible, unwavering line, and Part 1 of Drumming, a rush of semaphoring limbs, frenetic pairings, and rapid shifts of direction.
The Where and When
Oct 22—25 at 7:30pm
BAM Howard Gilman Opera House
Running time: 105min, no intermission
Ticket: $20, 40, 55
October 21, 2008 in Postcard from the Slope | Permalink








