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Greetings,
How do dance and music interact? Our upcoming
performances show four very different
possibilities, from a traditional approach
(in my newest ballet) to a more experimental
one - and even dancing to no music at all.
The common thread to all of them is: what is
heard and what is seen must merge within us
to create an impression that neither sense
could achieve alone. Those moments -
dramatic, devastating or simply beautiful -
are what
makes attending a dance performance so
irresistible.
I hope you will be able to join us later this
month for some irresistible moments in our
fall program - and if
not, stay abreast of what we have been up to
with the news below!
Warmly,
Miro Magloire
Artistic Director, New Chamber Ballet
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Upcoming Performance:
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November 22nd & 23rd, 2008
The
second program of our 2008-09 season presents
four ballets by Miro Magloire, including a
world premiere.
Four Romantic
Pieces for violin and piano by Antonin
Dvorak were the inspiration for Magloire's new
ballet, a lushly danced trio for three of the
company women.
Sonatine, which
premiered in September, is a
demanding solo set to music by Karlheinz
Stockhausen in which the dance at times goes
strikingly against the music, only to find
its way back again.
The haunting
Silent Shadows evokes stirring,
mysterious images of
the underworld to Giacinto Scelsi's edgy
violin music. And the final ballet on the program
makes do with
no music at all - at least in the
conventional sense: in
Dreams, it is the dancers' vocal
sounds that
make up the score for the dance.
Don't miss this program! Tickets are
on sale already -
reserve your
seats today!
Saturday, November 22nd at 8pm & Sunday,
November 23rd at 8pm New York City
Center Studio 4 130 West 56th St, 4th floor
(betw. 6th and 7th Ave)
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Portrait: Erik Carlson
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Gestures, Flow and Phrasing...
When Miro Magloire's ballet
Silent Shadows returns to the
repertory this month, its haunting score will
be interpreted by Erik
Carlson (photo). As New Chamber Ballet's
resident violinist
since 2005, Erik's curiosity in
exploring unusual scores and his sensitivity
to the dancers have made him a key artist of
the company.
"I like playing for dancers very much," he
explains, "for me, physical movement is an
extraordinary tool to understand a piece of
music and it's gestures, flow, and phrasing."
Born in Stillwater, MN, Erik started to play
the violin when he was five years old,
emulating his older brother. After studying
with violin
teacher Jorja
Fleezanis - whom Erik calls "a
wise and compassionate guide" - he moved to
New York and completed his training at the
Juilliard School.
At New Chamber Ballet, Erik's most singular
contributions have been
expert renderings of contemporary scores
such as
Luciano Berio's Sequenza VIII (in
Magloire's ballet Lace.) "Contemporary
music interests me when composers find new
and more direct methods of expression," Erik
explains. "The best living composers have
been able to explore areas of human
expression that were untapped 100 years ago."
The music to Silent Shadows is a good
example for this, with its meditative
variations on a
single note. Performing this piece is not
without difficutlties: "The violin must be
completely restrung, so that a single pitch
can be easily played on all four strings
simultaneously. I needed to relearn where to
put my fingers in order to play each note." A
challenge Erik was only to happy to take on.
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Recent Performances (1)
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Season Opening & A New York Times Review
New Chamber Ballet's season opening weekend
in September
brought us much press attention and sold out
houses for both
performances. The program, with world
premieres by Miro Magloire, Constantine
Baecher and Lauren Toole, was reviewed
by Alastair Macaulay in the New
York Times (read
the review online.)
Macaulay pointed out that "in
matters of dance vocabulary and choreographic
method, you can see what Mr. Magloire and his
colleagues have learned, from Balanchine in
particular, while pursuing their own ideas: a
real achievement;" before adding, "I
admire its accomplishment, I'm grateful to
have been led deeper into [the music], and
I hope to
see more."
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Recent Performances (2)
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In A New Light
Bridging the unusually long gap between the
season opening in September and this month's
performances, New Chamber Ballet appeared in a
shared program, "Before the Swan Takes Flight," presented by Archer Watters LLC at the New Dance Group
Arts Center in October. The theatrical
setting offered an opportunity to see our
repertory performed
with stage lighting.
Pictured above, Elizabeth Brown, Emily
SoRelle Adams and Garnetta Gonzalez (stepping in
for Emery LeCrone) performed
Dreams in all its colorful splendor.
While the experience did not persuade us to
abandon our
trademark studio setting, it was enriching
nonetheless: the ballet's
sculptural details came to the fore, with
the light adding its own poetry. An
experiment to be repeated occasionally!
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New at NCB
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Victoria Tzotzkova
In the absence of our resident pianist Melody
Fader, who is in San Francisco until the end
of the year, we welcome Victoria Tzotzkova to
join us for our upcoming performances.
Victoria, a Bulgarian-born pianist and music
theorist, has appeared as recitalist and
chamber musician in Europe and America,
notably at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie
Hall, Steinway Hall, the Tsai Performance
Center in Boston, Salle Cortot in Paris,
and other
prestigious venues across Europe.
Victoria has worked with Alexis Weissenberg,
Philippe Entremont, Peter Takacs, and other
world famous artists at
international festivals and master classes.
In our performances, she will be
performing alongside Erik Carlson in
Stockhausen's Sonatine for violin and
piano and Dvorak's Four Romantic pieces.
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The Buzz!
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News From Our Artists...
Here's what New Chamber
Ballet's artists have been up to
since the
last show:
Company member Emery LeCrone is
choreographing a new ballet for the Columbia
Ballet Collaborative, to be premiered later
this month... Emery
also appeared in the Metropolitan Opera's
production of La Gioconda,
choreographed by Christopher Wheeldon,
alongside Emily SoRelle Adams... Emily
continues to dance at the Met in this month's
new production
of La Damnation de Faust...
Maddie Deavenport (photo, in
Sonatine) just
returned from
Philadelphia where she danced with
Pennsylvania Ballet in Twyla Tharp's Push
Comes to Shove... Violinist
Erik
Carlson is currently touring
Mexico and
Peru... And pianist Melody
Fader is spending the fall in San
Francisco, where
she gave her first concert last month. She
will be back performing with us in early 2009.
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An Always Urgent Matter...
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Keeping the Wheels Turning in 2008-2009
Yes, the economy, the economy, and always the
economy - and here we are
asking for your money! Why? Ticket
sales still cover only about 20% of the costs
of each
performance. Since long before the current
financial woes we have aimed to keep our
costs as low
as possible. But some costs are unavoidable:
rehearsal
studio fees (a big item here in the
city),
performance space fees, music royalties,
performer
fees, printing costs, costuming and costume
maintenance, sheet music costs, stamps, banking
fees, advance ticket sale fees, PR costs...
All of these items are just bare necessities
to produce
our no-frills performances. Instead of cutting
back, we try to perform more to keep
our art
alive and you, our audience, happy. Not an
easy task,
and we can only do it with your help!
Please take a
moment to go to our website and find out how
you can
support our work...
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