Tag: Ballet

  • Sibelius’s Surprising Ballet Connection

    Sibelius’s Surprising Ballet Connection

    EIGHT DAYS OF SIBELIUS – DAY 2

    Sibelius is not exactly the first composer anyone would associate with ballet.

    So I was astonished to learn, quite recently, that a couple of his (non-dance) scores were picked up by London’s Sadler’s Wells Theatre Ballet and choreographed in the late 1940s. Specifically, the suite “Belshazzar’s Feast” was used in “Khadra,” choreographed by Celia Franca, and the tone poem “En saga” was used in “Sea Change,” choreographed by John Cranko. Both were early in their careers. In Franca’s case, it was the first ballet she ever choreographed. She went on to found the National Ballet of Canada. Likewise, “Sea Change” was the first major project for Cranko, who would soon achieve world fame. Later, he would direct the Stuttgart Ballet. You can learn more – a lot more – about both ballets, with photos, here:

    Khadra and Sea Change: Sibelius’s music at Sadler’s Wells

    Sibelius did actually compose music for a ballet-pantomime, “Scaramouche,” in 1912-13. When he agreed to the project, on scenario by the Danish playwright Poul Knudsen, it was with the understanding that he would only be supplying a few dance numbers. When he learned that he was expected to compose a full hour of music, he despaired. Furthermore, he detected immediately that the libretto had basically been cribbed from Arthur Schnitzler’s “The Veil of Pierrette,” a recent success with music by Ernst von Dohnanyi. Attempts to annul or even alter the contract proved to be futile. Sibelius, a meticulous composer, feared that his international reputation was on the line. At one point, in frustration, he smashed a telephone.

    In the end, he was able to complete the work to his satisfaction and the music was met with acclaim; the ballet-pantomime, not so much. It was revived in Copenhagen about ten years later and was savaged by the critics, who had not forgotten about Schnitzler. Sibelius’ music, however, was again praised. That said, the fact that the individual cues are tied so closely to the action have caused the score to be dragged into the depths of obscurity. It has, however, been recorded several times.

    Of course, one of Sibelius’ best-known pieces, “Valse triste,” also happens to be a dance – a “sad waltz.” Originally one of six numbers that comprise the incidental music for a 1903 play, “Kuolema,” or “Death,” by the composer’s brother-in-law, Arvid Järnefelt, the work underscores the opening scene. A son attends his dying mother, who is swept up in a dream of the dance. At the end of the scene, she is claimed by Death in the form of her late husband. Its morbid origin aside, the work proved to be what is now known as an ear-worm and became an international hit. The composer encountered it everywhere, arranged for every conceivable instrument, played in cafes and by salon orchestras.

    Unfortunately, Sibelius had essentially sold the work to his publisher outright, and he received few royalties. He would spend many fruitless hours, in between symphonies, crafting the occasional piece of light music, hoping to recapture lightning in a bottle. Alas, it proved to be a will o’ the wisp. Works like the “Suite mignonne” and “Suite champêtre,” while unquestionably charming, were not a patch on the maddening ubiquity of “Valse triste.”

    “Valse triste” itself was to be choreographed a number of times, including, in tandem with “Scenes with Cranes” (also distilled from “Kuolema”), by Peter Martins for New York City Ballet.

    Trip the light fantastic with Twinkletoes Sibelius!


    “Valse triste”

    “Suite mignonne” and “Suite champêtre”

    “Belshazzar’s Feast”

    “En saga”

  • Opera Ballet Scandals Wagner Verdi

    Opera Ballet Scandals Wagner Verdi

    In the 19th century, when your opera was accepted in Paris, it meant you definitely needed a ballet. It was tradition. It provided a danced divertissement for French audiences, who were accustomed to a little light entertainment in the middle of an evening heavy on singing.

    Richard Wagner bemoaned the fact, when “Tannhäuser” was accepted there, and he ruffled quite a few feathers when he frontloaded his ballet, essentially “getting it out of the way,” by including it in the first act as a bacchanale – which makes perfect dramatic sense in the Venusberg, the sensual realm of Venus.

    Nevertheless, Parisian aristocrats were none too happy, as this conflicted with their dining schedules. (There’s a reason they call it “fashionably late.”) French soldiers too were accustomed to arriving with full bellies and light spirits to ogle dancers during their traditional appearance in a later act.

    For this, among other reasons, “Tannhäuser” was met with whistles and catcalls. By the third performance, the backlash had become so intense, with interruptions of up to 15 minutes at a time, that Wagner finally withdrew the opera.

    Giuseppe Verdi wasn’t crazy about the whole ballet idea either. Nevertheless, when he was invited to submit “Macbeth,” originally composed in 1847, for performance in Paris (first in 1852, and when he didn’t follow through, for a second time in 1864), he acquiesced. Of course, Verdi being Verdi, it became a much more involved undertaking than he had anticipated, and he wound up revising the entire opera.

    Privately, he expressed reservations about the inclusion of ballet in opera, but unlike Wagner, he figured out ways for it to suit the drama AND at the accepted place in an evening’s entertainment. In short, when life gave him lemons, he made limoncello.

    Verdi was a canny enough showman to know to give the public what it wanted: cavorting witches!

    You go, Joe! Happy birthday!


    Totally Goth witches’ chorus from “Macbeth”:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7b4tKhV5mcg

    Act III Witches’ Dance from Taiwan:


    “The Three Witches from Macbeth” (1827) by Alexandre-Marie Colin

  • Stravinsky’s Agon A Ballet Masterpiece

    Stravinsky’s Agon A Ballet Masterpiece

    Forget Balanchine’s “The Nutcracker,” with its insipid candy cane hula hoops. This is the one to beat!

    Stravinsky’s “Agon” was first staged by Balanchine’s New York City Ballet (co-founded with Lincoln Kirstein) on this date in 1957. The first performance of the music alone took place at UCLA’s Royce Hall earlier in the year, on June 17th, on a 75th birthday concert for the composer, less than two months after Stravinsky completed the work. Stravinsky’s assistant, Robert Craft, conducted. The next day, the composer himself led the sessions for the work’s first recording.

    “Agon” is Greek for “contest,” but it also implies “anguish” or “struggle.” The ballet has no story, but consists of a series of dance movements. Groupings of dancers interact in pairs, trios, quartets, etc. A number of the movements are based on 17th-century French court dances – sarabande, galliard, bransle – but Stravinsky reinterprets them in his own distinctive up-to-date manner. The twelve-tone music is as flirty as anything displayed in the choreography.

    I’m no balletomane, but the first time I saw it danced, I knew it was genius.

    Stravinsky conducts an excerpt from “Agon”

    Some danced selections

    Maria Kowroski shares her insights

    The complete ballet, seen from a fixed position. Suzanne Farrell, a Balanchine muse, founded her own company at the Kennedy Center in 2000.

    A 1960 performance with the New York City Ballet

    Of course, watching it on video is not the same as experiencing it in the theater.

    I love “The Nutcracker,” but I can’t stand this: it takes a lot to spoil the “Russian Dance,” but Balanchine found a way!


    PHOTO: Balanchine and Stravinsky, center, during rehearsals for “Agon”

  • Copland’s Vampire Ballet Secret

    Copland’s Vampire Ballet Secret

    I would venture to guess that most admirers of Aaron Copland are unaware that, as a young man in Paris, he wrote a vampire ballet.

    That’s right, the composer of “Billy the Kid” and “Rodeo,” who basically codified the sound of the American West, first tipped a toe into the world of dance by way of the undead.

    It was Copland’s teacher, Nadia Boulanger, who suggested he undertake a ballet to cash in on the success – or notoriety – of recent Ballets Russes premieres like the riot-inducing “The Rite of Spring.”

    It was F.W. Murnau’s new film, “Nosferatu,” freely based on Bram Stoker’s “Dracula,” that provided just the inspiration he was looking for. Just as Murnau tweaked Stoker’s novel – enough, he thought, to skirt the possibility of a lawsuit from the author’s estate (he was wrong) – Copland and his scenarist, Harold Clurman, jettisoned most of Murnau, but hung on to the Expressionist elements and some of the Gothic iconography.

    It’s been observed that the ballet’s narrative shares more in common with another German Expressionist classic, “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.” Either way, Copland’s first ballet is very far away from high-kicking buckaroos and Appalachian springs.

    Copland and Clurman created as their antihero Grohg, a necromancer, a “sorcerer who loves the dead and vainly seeks affection among them. He can make them dance in so far as he does not touch them.”

    Like Nosferatu, he bears a hooked nose and bulging eyes. He is a figure of desperate yearning. The four dead he calls forth to dance for him are an adolescent, an opium-eater, a streetwalker, and a beautiful young girl.

    When he loses control and gently kisses the latter, she awakens from her trance and repulses him, and he’s set upon by his servitors. Grohg hurls the streetwalker into the mob and then wanders into the shadows gloomily. It seems like a scenario that Béla Bartók would have loved. (Bartók was already at work on “The Miraculous Mandarin,” but his ballet would not receive its premiere until 1926.)

    Copland’s ballet, composed between 1922 and 1925, was never produced. He and Boulanger played through the score at the piano, and he cannibalized portions of the music for other works (including the even more obscure ballet “Hear Ye! Hear Ye!”).

    Eventually, the score was lost, and the only bits that could be heard were those recycled in Copland’s concert pieces “Cortège macabre” (1923), which the composer withdrew, and the “Dance Symphony” (1929). “Grohg” was finally rediscovered, miscatalogued at the Library of Congress, and given its first performance in 1992, two years after the composer’s death.

    The original title of the piece was “Le Nécromancien.” According to Copland, the spelling “Grohg,” with the peculiar inclusion of an “h,” was “to avoid an alcoholic connotation.”

    So the first orchestral work by a figure who came to be known as the “Dean of American Composers” was inspired by a vampire movie released 100 years ago.

    This year, for its centennial, special showings of “Nosferatu” abound. This weekend, organist Brett Miller will accompany a screening at The Colonial Theatre in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania.

    The Colonial gained notoriety for its use in the 1958 film “The Blob,” when the title menace oozes into the theater, setting off a panic, which is reenacted every summer during Phoenixville’s Blobfest. (FUN FACT: the film-within-a-film, shown during that sequence, is “Daughter of Horror,” also known as “Dementia,” which features a demented film score by Trenton’s own George Antheil.)

    The Phoenixville showing of “Nosferatu” will take place this Sunday at 2 p.m. On Saturday, Miller will accompany a showing of the film at the United Palace, 4140 Broadway, in Washington Heights, New York City, at 5:56 p.m. (sundown!).

    For more information, follow the links.

    In NYC

    https://unitedpalace.boletosexpress.com/nosferatu/66149/

    In Phoenixville

    https://thecolonialtheatre.com/events/theatre-organ-performances/nosferatu-1922-with-live-theatre-organ-accompaniment/

    Aaron Copland’s “Grohg”

    Happy 100th, “Nosferatu”!

  • Jerome Moross Frankie and Johnny Rediscovered

    Jerome Moross Frankie and Johnny Rediscovered

    Wow! Here’s a neat discovery. An actual performance of Jerome Moross’ ballet, “Frankie and Johnny.”

    You probably know the bluesy song, inspired by one or more sensational crimes of passion, in which a betrayed woman shoots her lover. (“He was her man, but he done her wrong.”) There are now so many variants that it’s taken on the quality of a folk song. Elvis sang it. Johnny Cash sang it. It’s been covered by innumerable jazz artists.

    Moross uses it as a kind of Greek chorus (sung by a trio Salvation Army sisters) in his brash and jazzy dance piece, which created a sensation at its premiere in 1938. The work predated Leonard Bernstein’s “Fancy Free” by six years and sent the censors into a moral panic.

    Though Moross was adept at writing music in many forms – including concert pieces (a symphony for Beecham), musical theater (the cult classic “The Golden Apple,” including the evergreen “Lazy Afternoon”), and opera (“Sorry, Wrong Number”) – he is best known for his classic film scores. He spent much of his career ping-ponging back and forth between New York and Hollywood.

    When “Porgy and Bess” concluded its New York run in 1935, George Gershwin invited Moross to join the show, on tour, as a pianist. It was while on a bus trip to Los Angeles to participate in “Porgy’s” west coast premiere that the 23 year-old made a stop in Albuquerque.

    “[A]s we hit the Plains I got so excited,” Moross recollected. “. . . [T]he next day I got to the edge of town and then walked out onto the flat land with a marvelous feeling of being alone in the vastness, with the mountains cutting off the horizon. The whole thing was just too much for me . . . it was marvelous, and I just fell in love with it.”

    The experience served him well. Moross drew on the memory of that trip in the writing of some of his most famous music, the Academy Award-nominated score for “The Big Country,” with its sense of wide-open excitement in the face of sweeping vistas. Western high-spirits and American jazz color most of Moross’ output.

    Happy birthday, Jerome Moross. You tackled everything with exuberance and vitality.


    One of the most thrilling credits sequences of all time?

    Surely one of the greatest film scores ever written

    Rare historic radio broadcast of the Symphony No. 1, with Moross himself at the piano

    “Lazy Afternoon” from “The Golden Apple,” sung by Kaye Ballard from the 1954 original cast recording

    Theme to “Wagon Train”

    Sonata in G major for Piano Duet and String Quartet

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