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Kalasam
See Kalasam Quicktime video excerpt
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"
a rich and absorbing dance
.. the work of a single vision:
congruent, integrated, and authentic." Sima Belmar, The San
Francisco Bay Guardian
"
resounding focus and visual purity." Marilyn
Tucker, The Contra Costa Times
Choreography by Nancy Karp
Music by Paul Dresher
Lighting and visual décor by Jack Carpenter
Costume design by Sandra Woodall.
Kalasam, an evening-length work for eight dancers and two musicians,
integrates dance, music, slide projection, color, and light. It was inspired
by Nancy Karp and Paul Dreshers long-time association with the performing
arts of India.
Nancy Karp and Paul Dresher share an affinity with Indian culture, having
both immersed themselves in its dance and musical forms more than twenty
years ago. In the 1970's each artist independently worked under great
performing artists from India, and immersed themselves in learning what
for them were new forms, structures and approaches in composition. Dresher
studied with Hindustani sitar virtuoso Nikhil Banerjee, while Karp studied
Carnatic music and Bharata Natyam from T. Viswanathan and T. Balasaraswati,
both of whom were at the Center for World Music in California. By 1980,
each had found it essential to move beyond these formative experiences
and to discover their own artistic vocabularies. In this process, both
avoided any direct reference to the surface or techniques of the arts
of India, and over the past two decades each has developed a body of work
not identifiably related to these years of study. In recent years, both
Dresher and Karp felt a need to return to India and to look again at the
deep traditions that have influenced their artistic processes.
Kalasam, is named after the punctuating pure dance patterns of
Kathakali dance from the state of Kerala in South India. However, the
choreographic and music material for Kalasam is neither derived
from nor directly referential to the music and dance of India. The work
is in three sections: Cochin, Jaisalmer, and Chennai (Madras) - impressionistic
snapshots of three very different Indian cities. Kalasam is a one-hour
work and is performed without an intermission. The creation of Kalasam
was made possible through the support of the Rockefeller Foundation MAP
Fund and the San Francisco Arts Commission.
The Dance
Kalasam is an evening-length work that explores the complex culture,
terrain, and language of India. Through the generosity of a Fulbright
Fellowship, I was given the opportunity to spend half a year in South
India. I lived in Trichur, an hours train ride from the harbor town
of Cochin in the state of Kerala. Visiting Cochin often, I was drawn to
the mesmerizing visual canon of the Chinese Fishing Nets over the harbor.
The vocabulary for Cochin, the first section of the work, has been distilled
from the quality of the movement of these voluminous cantilevered nets
counter balanced at the water's edge. The second section, Jaisalmer has
been choreographed for a quartet of dancers. The vast space surrounding
this Rajastani town and its intricate, spiky buildings silhouetted against
the desert inspired the movement for this section. The third and last
section entitled Chennai is danced by the full company, and contains several
core phrases of layered rhythmic intensity and is contrasted by solo and
group segments of tranquil stillness. Chennai is a city of crowded streets,
lush parks, and vestiges of colonial empire. It is also the center for
Carnatic music.
I have always considered my choreographic style to be formed by the convergence
of three distinct aesthetic traditions: the Bauhaus in Germany, Russian
Constructivism of the 20's, and the classical dance and music traditions
of India. What these influences have in common is a concern for the unity
of form and content. I work with small units of movement vocabulary, exhausting
their potential through combination and variation; the dances are abstract
explorations of pure movement, spatial design, and complex rhythmic patterning.
Nancy Karp
The Music
The music was composed at three distinct times between May of 1999 and
November of 2000. I've taken a different approach to the musical construction
of each of the three sections. However, all three sections were composed
working closely with Nancy, both in the details of the sequence and progression
of the specific musical ideas. Throughout the work, Nancy and I shared
the goal of exploring aspects of our mutual experience with the performing
arts of India.
The music for Cochin is primarily a recorded score with live music added
at a later time. The score mixes ambient/environmental recordings made
by Nancy or myself in India with purely musical material. Much of this
musical material, which is heard after significant editing, sound processing
and re-composition, is derived from recordings of improvisational sessions
done with multi-woodwind performer/composer Ned Rothenberg between 1996
and 1998. Ned and I are involved in a long-term collaborative composition
and performance project that shares some of the same focus on world music
as a source for ideas and inspiration. While the shape and development
of the score is "my" work, many of the raw ideas and material
have been created collaboratively.
Jaisalmer, composed in May and July of 2001, is entirely (with the exception
of a synthesizer sound in one section) composed of sounds derived from
a musical instrument I call a Quadrachord. Invented in collaboration with
instrument designer Daniel Schmidt, this instrument has 4 steel strings,
each 14 feet long. It has a bridge at either end of the instrument with
electric bass pickups associated with each bridge. Because of the length
of the strings and the low fundamental pitches of the open strings, the
instrument is remarkably effective at playing the overtones of the harmonic
series. This offers the resource of experimenting with non-equal tempered
tunings. The instrument can be played with a large variety of techniques
including bowing, plucking, hammering with mallets and with preparations
like a prepared piano. It is part of a large-scale music theater work
called SoundStage that I am creating for the ensemble Zeitgeist and the
Walker Art Center. I have become so fascinated with this instrument that
I am starting to use it as one of my regular instruments. The score was
originally created as a tape work but with the idea that certain key parts
are performed live. In this case, the sounds we are using are samples
of the Quadrachord.
Chennai, the final section, combines elements from the first two sections,
using materials generated from further collaboration with Ned Rothenberg,
the sounds of the Quadrachord and recordings from India. In Chennai, live
performance is integral to the shape and realization of this section.
The score contains recorded material that mixes through-composed and improvised
parts developed in rehearsal with percussionist Joel Davel.
Paul Dresher
The Composer
Composer Paul Dresher is known worldwide for his ability to integrate
diverse musical influences and media into his own unique, personal style.
He is one of the foremost internationally active composers of his generation.
Dresher has received commissions from the Library of Congress, the Spoleto
Festival USA, the Kronos Quartet, and the San Francisco Symphony, among
others. He received one of his first commissions for dance from Nancy
Karp + Dancers in 1981 for the dance Passing By.
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