Saturday, 1 September 2012
review lanza
"....the children remained engrossed throughout the whole show, imaging the dangers and challenges faced by Perseus and Andromeda in a crowded theatre full of tenderness, creative symbolism and exquisite beauty"
LANZA 23 rd July 2012
Friday, 17 August 2012
Story fragments
Phineus, is upset that Andromeda does not want to marry him. Not because he loves her so much but simply because it was planned for a very long time, and kings like to have everything its in place. They do not like it when things do not go to their plan. They are so ordered.
But unbeknown to Phineus, Merope, Andromeda's beautiful older aunt has fallen head over heels in love with him. It is a perfect match. They like the same things. They are roughly the same age but she loves him in secret, and can not tell him how she really feels, because he is supposed to marry Andromeda.
How much trouble this thing called love can be. It makes everyone confused and not think straight.
It would be so much easier things if every one stopped pretending and being scared and just followed their hearts.
Love is love and Love takes its own pathways.
But unbeknown to Phineus, Merope, Andromeda's beautiful older aunt has fallen head over heels in love with him. It is a perfect match. They like the same things. They are roughly the same age but she loves him in secret, and can not tell him how she really feels, because he is supposed to marry Andromeda.
How much trouble this thing called love can be. It makes everyone confused and not think straight.
It would be so much easier things if every one stopped pretending and being scared and just followed their hearts.
Love is love and Love takes its own pathways.
It has no logic. It is just Love.
Accept it and be loved...
But with matters of love to one side, the real problem at hand, (at least for every one else in the country), is how to solve that plague of monsters that the gods have unleashed on the land as punishment for the Queen's vanity?
Tuesday, 24 July 2012
Thursday, 14 June 2012
Monday, 7 May 2012
Kenneth Homstad (NO, 1982) graduated from the Theater school in
Amsterdam in 2006. Since then he has been working as an actor in several
theatre houses and groups in Norway and The Netherlands, besides
playing in short films presented in different film festivals.
Homstad is also one of the house directors of Hetveem Theater in Amsterdam. This has resulted in amongst others Is There Anybody Out There (2009) and Come With Us (2011) which both got nominated for the Dutch VSCD Mime Prize. He was also nominated for the Dutch BNG New Theater Maker Prize 2011.
During fall 2012 Homstad will be acting in A Midsummer Nights Dream in The National Stage in Norway.
Natalia Domínguez Rangel
(Spanish language)
Natalia Domínguez Rangel (Bogotá 1981) composer resident in Amsterdam. Graduated from her Bachelor and Master in composition at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam (2010). Winner of the Tera de Marez Oyensprijs (Amsterdam 2009). Participant in Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival (UK), Young Composers Meeting (Apeldoorn) and Gaudeamus Music Week (Amsterdam). Has taken lessons from Louis Andriessen, Brian Ferneyhough, Richard Ayres, Julia Wolfe, Theo Loevendie , Wim Henderickx and Fabio Nieder. Has worked with several ensembles such as the Nieuw Ensemble, Asko Schoemberg, trio7090 (Amsterdam) and Adapter ensemble (Berlin). To notate important collaborations with Mediamatic and DNK (Amsterdam) and Stedelijk Museum de Lakenhal (Leiden).
http://www. nataliadominguezrangel.com/
Sunday, 1 April 2012
Educational Workshops
Music
and Vision
We
can offer as compliment to the performance a workshop examining the
performance from the different perspectives, music, dance and vision,
all different ways to tell and share a story, introducing the
participants to the performing arts and the world of the Baroque.
They will be given an overview of the story which is being told in
the performance afterwards, in combination with general information
on opera and early music.
To
start, we will welcome the children and their parents to briefly
explain the world, which they are going to enter. The world of the
Baroque, the world of myths and fairytales, where nymphs and
seamonsters, gods and heroes do exist.
Initially
the musicians will speak about the music: they will show and
describe the various instruments, concerning the differences from
their modern equivalents, their history and their use in music. They
will play together with the singers in order to clarify standard
terms and elements of opera, such as overture, aria, recit and scene
etc, in order to prepare the young audience for the performance.
The
workshop participants are then asked to visualize the story
themselves. They will be guided and given the tools of the different
creative disciplines behind the performance. They will be asked to
visualize their own stories, working with movement and objects to
create there own shadow plays, encouraging the young people to
develop their own creative universe.
The Creative Team - the performers
Lene
Stenseth - director and performer
Lene Stenseth works and lives in Oslo, Norway. She has her dance education from Laban Centre for Movement and Dance in London ( 1 year) and Modern Theatre Dance School in Amsterdam (4 years). She also has a Bachelor in Aesthetics with art history and media as main subjects from the University of Oslo. Lene has worked as a dancer and performer in Scandinavia, Europe and New York. In Amsterdam she worked with choregraphers such as Martin Butler, Jennifer Hanna, Kriztina de Châtel, Wim Kannekens, Karin Post, Paul Selwyn Norton and Michael Schumacher. The last years she has been working as a choreographer in own projects , solo film projects and projects with performance artist Marthe Ramm Fortun and dancer Kristin Ryg Helgebostad. Some projects have been performance based, site spesific and colloborations with artists from the field of visual arts and shown in galleries or outdoors. Most of her work combine photography and film with dance. As a dancer Lene has worked with Inger-Reidun Olsen/Kompani iRo and Linda Birkedal/Molitrix Scenekunst on numerous projects. This year Lene has worked with Martin Butler and Maximilian Ehrhardt on the opera Perseus and Andromeda, premiering a pilot at the prestigious theatre festival in Almagro, Spain. Later this year she is going to participate in the new work of Molitrix Scenekunst, premiere at Tou scene in Octobre.
Andrea
Fagarazzi - performer
Andrea
Fagarazzi
is a performer, visual artist and choreographer born in Vicenza,
Italy. He started his dance training from the age of eighteen in
Vicenza. He graduated [BA, Fine Arts] at the Accademia
di Belle Arti di Brera - Milano
in 2006 with Francesca Alfano Miglietti (FAM), theorist of the
mutations related to the visual languages. In 2002, he graduated with
a scholarship in performing arts at Professione
MAS Academy
directed by Susanna Beltrami, in Milan. In 2005 he was selected for
the danceWEB
Scholarship Programme
directed by David Zambrano at the ImPulsTanz
Festival
in Vienna. He attended dance, voice, butoh and joga research projects
with Vera Mantero, Ko Morobushi, Marten Spangberg, David Moss,
Charmaine Le Blanc, Martin Kilvady, DD Dorviller, Mathilde Monnier,
Wim Vandekeybus, M. Abbondanza e A. Bertoni, Mariah Maloney (Trisha
Brown Company),
Ananda Leone, Anat Geiger, and masterclasses at the Atelier
de Paris Carolyn Carlson.
As performer, he has collaborated for several choreographers and directors such as Emio Greco & Pieter C. Scholten, Sasha Waltz & Guests, Matanicola, Frédéric Flamand/ Cherleroi Dance, Micha Van Hoecke and Cristina Muti Mazzavillani, with Studio Festi in Tokyo, among others, joining prestigious venues as "Edinburgh International Festival", "TanzIm August Festival" in Berlin, "Norderzoon Festival" in Groningen, "Civitanova Danza", "Italia in Giappone", "Ravenna Festival".
From 2000 his work has been presented in Italy,
Argentina, Nederlands, Belgium, Spain trough different exhibitions
and festivals such as es.terni
- International Festival Of Contemporary Arts,
Inequilibrio.08
- Armunia Festival
di Castiglioncello (IT), Contemporanea/Colline/Festival
08
di Prato, Primavera
Teatri 08
(IT), 2008
Culturas Exhibition & Awards for the Intercultural Dialogue
(ES), OperaEstate
Festival 2007
in Bassano del Grappa, Festival
Lavori in Pelle 2007
(IT), Festival
F.i.a.e.s. 2003
(Argentina), Corpo
e Anima,
Ultrasegno.
As well, some of his photographical works have been selected as
promotional images for the Festivals Body
Stroke '05
in Brugge (B), Something
Raw '05
iin Amsterdam.
I-Chen
Zuffellato – performer
I-Chen
Zuffellato was born in Taiwan in 1979 but grew up in Italy. In 2004
she graduated at the Amsterdam University of Arts, the TheaterSchool.
In the years 2000 and 2001 she was invited by the choreographer
Carolyn Carlson to attend the Accademia Isola Danza, promoted by La
Biennale di Venezia, where she studied with important personalities
of the dance field such as Carolyn Carlson, Caterina Sagna, Jean
Cebron, Ivan Wolfe, Malou Airaudo, Bill T. Jones, Frey Faust, Nigel
Charnock, Larrio Ekson, Jennifer Muller, Janet Panetta among others.
During this time she collaborated as a dancer for Michele Abbondanza
and Antonella Bertoni in the performance Argonautika and in the
performance by Simona Bucci for the closing Galà of the Leone D'Oro
Prize (Biennale di Venezia). She attended dance, theatre research
projects with Motus, Andrew Morrish, Frey Faust, Benoit Lachambre.
From 2002 till 2006, she mainly worked in Holland, collaborating as a
performer with the Dutch company De Meekers of Arthur Rosenfeld, with
Sarah Manya, Marie-Cécile de Bont and the company Piet Rogie &
Co.. In the year 2006 she participated to improvisation events such
as Mad Sunday - Muiderpoort Theater in Amsterdam and Partiture
Improvvise curated by Laura Moro in Castelfranco Veneto. In the
summer 2006 she danced in the opera The Magic Flute of W.A. Mozart
directed by maestro Riccardo Muti and choreographed by Min Tanaka for
the Salzburg Festival 06. She has recently collaborated with theatre
director Martin Butler for the avatar-interactive project The
Girlfriend Experience. Since 2007 she is working with theatre
director Michael Laub.
The Creative Team - The Singers
Lukas
Zeman- Baritone
Lukáš
Zeman studied at Gymnázium Jana Nerudy in Prague singing, bassoon
and conducting. He attended the University Mozarteum in Salzburg with
Gudrun Volkert. Since 2008 he has been working with Sasja Hunnego and
Andrew Schroeder at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague. He gave
solo recitals in Japan (Yokohama), New Zealand (Auckland), India
(National Center for Performing Arts), Germany, Switzerland (Geneva)
and Holland, sang a Priester in Idomeneo at the Salzburger Festspiele
2006 under musical direction of Sir Roger Norrington and was a guest
at Komische Oper Berlin, where he sang Scandor in Telemann´s opera
Miriways. He is a member of Claron McFadden Madrigal Ensemble and
performs with barock orchestra De Swaen and Collegium 1704.
In
2008 Lukáš joined Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival choir academy
on tour to Russia, China and Japan and performed staged version of
Bach´s Johannes passion directed by Robert Wilson at Theater Kiel.
Lukáš
further performed the role of Lesbo in Agrippina at Handeljaar
festival 2009 in Den Haag, which was coached by Michael Chance and
appeared at International Opera Festival Montepulciano singing
Wigmaker in Ariadne auf Naxos under direction of Roland Boer. He
participated at Festival Heures Romantique 2010, which was coached by
Udo Reinemann.
Kadri Tegelmann – Mezzo-Soprano
The Estonian mezzo soprano started her music studies in Estonia and in 2006 moved to Holland for her studies.
Kadri has given many solo concerts in Estonia, Finland, Holland,
Belgium, Slovenia, Germany. She performed the roles of: L'enfant
(M.Ravel "L'enfant et les Sortileges"), Ixion (M.A.Charpentier "La
descente d'Orphee aux enfers"), La Marchande de journaux (F.Poulenc "Les
Mamelles de Tiresias"), Giannetta (G.Donizetti "L'elisir d'amore").
Kadri sang the solo parts in Stabat Mater, G.B.Pergolesi, Krönungsmesse
W.A.Mozart, Requiem W.A.Mozart, Christmas Oratorio C.Saint Säens.
In 2012 she will finish her master degree at the Dutch
National Opera Academy with the role of Ramiro in La Finta Giardiniera
by W.A.Mozart.
From September 2012, she will be a member at the Opera Studio Nederland.
Vera
Milani- Soprano
Vera
Milani, Soprano, graduated from her classical singing studies at the
“Conservatorio di Musica G. Verdi” in Como under the guidance of
Adriana Maliponte, where she also attended the course of composition
with Luca Francesconi and Vittorio Zago. Subsequently she took for
several years singing classes with the soprano Fiorella Prandini. She
received her diploma from her Baroque singing studies with Roberto
Balconi from the Early Music Department of the “Civica Scuola di
Musica di Milano”, where she also participated in Masterclasses of
Evelyn Tubb , Patrizia Vaccari, Dr. Franco Fussi and has deepened her
knowledge of the 17th
century vocal repertoire with Mara Galassi. In 2010 she was awarded
the “Fiammetta Semenza” scholarship.
She
regularly collaborates with different ensembles, being espescially
active in the sacred and baroque repertoire; she worked amongst
others with the directors R.Balconi, F. Fanna, A. Frigè, P. Gelmini
(“Orchestra Sinfonica del Lario”), A. Odone, A. Moriya
(Matelier), S. Molardi (I virtuosi delle Muse), Ruben Jais (LaVerdi
Barocca) and Gianluca Capuano (Il canto d’Orfeo). She performed the
role of Filia in the oratorio “Jepthe” (G. Carissimi) at the
“Festival dell’Aurora” (Crotone) under the direction of Stefano
Molardi, Bellinda in “Dido and Aeneas (Purcell) and Dalinda in
“Ariodante” (Händel) directed by Roberto Balconi. She sung the
Stabat Mater of Pergolesi at the Castello Sforzesco (Milan) under the
baton of L. Ghielmi.Recently she has participated in performances
during the “Festival Internazionale di concerti per organo” in
Aosta, at the “Festival Internazionale Musica negli Horti” in Val
D’Orcia (Tuscany), as soloist and ensemble member of “Il canto
d’Orfeo” (G. Capuano) and in the “Internationaler
Gottfried-Silbermann-Orgelwettbewerb” (Germany), where she
collaborated with “La Divina Armonia” (L. Ghielmi).
Emilio
Aguilar- haute - tenor
Emilio
Aguilar, born in 1989. He started his musical education at the age
of 9, playing the piano at the Conservatory Gilardo Gilardi in
Argentina. He began singing lessons at 15, after which singing became
his main focus.
Upon
finishing high-school, Mr. Aguilar studied "Choir conducting"
at the University of Bellas Artes, Argentina.
In
September 2009, he became a student of Valerie Guillorit in the
Classical Department at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam. Their
technical progress is monitored regulary by Margreet Honig.
Mr
Aguilar is working with different choirs in The Netherlands (Bach
Choir of The Netherlands, Nederlands Kamerkoor), and gaining
experience as a soloist in concerts of diverse repertoire.
Wednesday, 28 March 2012
The Creative Team - direction
Martin Butler - Director
Martin
Butler is a British born Choreographer , Performance Director and
Art Director.
He
was trained in Drama at Manchester University, and than later
Choreographry and Perfromance at Amsterdam School of the Arts, in the
Netherlands.
On
graduating he won the Prince Bernhard prize for most promising
graduate, the year later he received the Amsterdam Encouragement
prize for Choreographry for his short piece with the Dutch
National Ballet, and came first in the NL/ NRW competition for new
Dutch and German choreographers. Since 1998 he has been staging dance
and performance work, at various theatres and festivals in europe.
His work always bridged and combined various disciplines, dance,
theatre, music, film, performance, new media, and fashion, and
through this interdisciplinary approach his work explores the new
dramatic that the combination of different genres facilitate.
He
has collaborated in the past with the Dutch National Ballet,
Dansgroup Kriztina de Chatel, Yoyoi Kusama /Andrea Crews, Wiels
Museum in Brussels, Hochschule for Neue Media Köln, Masahiro Miwa
and
Annimax
Multimedia Theater Bonn, David Linton, New York , The Drama Academy
of Cluj- Napoca, Romania, Renée Coraij (Jan Fabre), Flora and fauna
visions, Berlin, and Chen Shi Zheng and Paul Daniel, Bregenz
festival in Austria, amongst many others next to developing his own
productions with the Liminal Institute that he was artistic director
of until 2012.
His
New media and installation work has been shown in the European
Media arts festival in Osnabrück, Fondacion Telefonica in Lima,
Pixxelpoint festival in Slovenia, the Museum of Modern Art in Arnhem,
Marres, Masstricht, Salon Amsterdam and Mediamatic, amongst many
others. In 2009 he created a flash mob performance for the 20th
anniverary of the fall of the Berlin wall, where 10,000 people remade
the path of the original wall route .
From
2004 - 2012 he has been working on the creative and curatorial team
of Mediamatic, Amsterdam, developing exhibitions and events,
including the Amsterdam Bienalle and the IK, IK, I K series of
exhibitions dealing with self representation.
In
2010 -2012 he collaborated as researcher and writer, for a project of
Delft University and Prof. Caroline Nevejan, examining performance
presence and trust in the internet age, the book will be published
in Summer 2012.
Since
1993 he has also been working as a commercial Art Director for
fashion related events, and has collaborated with Diesel, Diesel
Black Gold, Moshino, Lee jeans, Harmont and Blaine, Aliveshoes,
Camel active, FILA, And Beyond, Andrea Crews, and Elle, amongst many
others.
Apart from creating a shadow play version of Lully's Baroque Opera, “Persée” for children, together with the Italian Baroque
Ensemble L'aura Rilucente premiering this summer at the
International Theatre Festival of Almagro, Spain, and he will premiere
two new short films at the Istanbul Modern Art Museum, Turkey in
Fall, and is developing a new opera based on the Aldus Huxley's "Brave New World" for 2013/2014.
online portfolio
The Creative Team - the ensemble
Ensemble L'aura Rilucente
The Ensemble L’Aura Rilucente came to life in the historical halls of the Renaissance Villa Simonetta, home to the Accademia Internazionale della Musica, Italy’s most reknown school of Early music, located in the city of Milan.
Coming from four different countries in order to perfect their knowledge of historical performance practice with internationally acclaimed musicians such as: Mara Galassi, Stefano Montanari, Lorenzo Ghielmi and Gaetano Nasillo, the young members of this group met at the academy during their course of chamber music in 2009.
The fixed member of the ensemble are
Sara Bagnati (Violin),
Heriberto Delgado Gutiérrez (Violin),
Silvia Serrano Monesterolo (Cello),
Maximilian Ehrhardt (Baroque Harp),
and Giorgio Dal Monti (Harpsicord).
The element that sets this ensemble apart is the fruitful interaction of different personalities and temperaments. United by their passion for early music they found an instinctive and emotive way of interpretation of the Italian musical repertoire of the 17th and 18th century.
They performed during several concert series such as “Il clavicembalo a San Marco” (Brera, Milano), “I Concerti di San Girolamo” (Bagnacavallo, Ravenna) and “I Concerti Dell’Accademia” (National Museum, Ravenna).
They also were featured as a young upcoming ensemble in a concert series by the Accademia Bizantina, and have recently been asked to perform at the "Altemusiek Tagen" in Berlin in October 2012.
A world of light and shadow
Giving life to the Canvas
The sense of awe, peculiar to baroque art, resulted from a revolution in the style and manner of representing space. The artists of the seventeenth century inherited from the Renaissance the idea, perhaps best expressed by Leonardo da Vinci, that "the first object of the painter is to make a flat plane appear as a body in relief and projecting from that plane"; or, in other words, to give the painted object a three-dimensional reality. Baroque artists extended the idea of giving life to the canvas still further. The object was meant not simply to exist in three dimensions but to move. Just as seventeenth-century science introduced motion into our understanding of the physical universe , artists introduced motion into their work, so that space extends into the fourth dimension of time.
Baroque art produces an illusion not only of presence but of motion in the sense that a physicist would understand it: the displacement of a body with mass through three-dimensional space over time. In this sense, baroque art is theatrical: the illusion of motion produces an effect that is both figuratively and literally dramatic. The theater, too, is a visual art. At the same time as painters were experimenting with novel effects that suggested movement on canvas, the use of perspectival scenery became common in Europe. Both art forms rely on trompe l'oeil devices, on illusion, tricks of light and the clever placement of drapery, for example, to heighten the viewer's sense of the reality of what is depicted.
The space of baroque art is projective. Within the picture, everything recedes toward a vanishing point, plunging into the depths of the pictorial space with exaggerated velocity. The represented objects simultaneously invade the space of the onlooker. Baroque art unites the painting and the viewer in a single space, creating the illusion that the image is as real as its beholder and that the pictorial space extends infinitely.
By the second half of the seventeenth century, most people knew that the universe was infinite, containing a multitude of suns around which revolved countless planets, and stars. The concept of infinite space generated great excitement and equally great anxiety. Art historian John Rupert Martin suggests that this sense of pictorial space is analogous to the broader, cosmologic concept of infinity that was gaining hold during the seventeenth century .
A world of light and shadow, and in baroque art more generally, the effect of movement and action was more important than the effect of symmetry and balance that had dominated the art of the Renaissance. Baroque artists aimed to undo the classical unity of form and function, to unbalance the composition and achieve the impression of movement and space that the new age demanded.
Contrast is the primary tool through which baroque art prompts a sensation of the infinite in the mind of the beholder. The infinite cannot of course be shown. It must be suggested or implied. What baroque art conveys is an impression, an illusion of infinite space, of movement into boundless depths, by suggesting the existence of what finally remains unseen. Contrast of light and dark, or chiaroscuro, gives space particular qualities. It accentuates the illusion of depth, giving the objects depicted a greater sense of mass and weight while simultaneously heightening their three-dimensionality, making them appear to jump out of the picture frame, or in the case of sculpture or decoration, out of the immediate space that "contains" them. It gives the image dramatic possibilities that steady, even illumination precludes. Like the lighting in films, chiaroscuro in painting works directly upon the spectators' emotions.
It is possible to look at theater in the seventeenth century, particularly its embodiment on the stage, as a branch of the visual arts. The scene was framed and the actors were often described as "painting" their characters.And yet the success of the depiction depends in some sense on our believing in that being's presence. It hinges upon a painting's ability to get us to believe, not in the reality, but in the presence of what it depicts--the presence, for example, of a three-dimensional body within the surface of the painting, or of the infinite extensibility of the illusory pictorial space--if only in ghostly form.
At this, the baroque excels.
Jean Baptiste Lully
Jean
Baptiste Lully
Italian
born Jean-Baptiste Lully came from modest origins. After being
introduced to music by the Franciscan friars of his hometown
Florence, he was chosen to become the Italian tutor to the cousin of
Louis XIV in 1646 and left his homeland for Paris, where he continued
his musical education. Also known to have been an oustanding dancer,
his first works were Mascarades. In 1652, age 20, Lully entered the
service of the king, where he was immediately appointed compositeur
de la musique instrumentale,
possibly for his dancing skills, which he continuously showcased in
the ballets performed at court. He was to become the king's favourite
musician and started also the composition of vocal music. His
collaboration with Molière enriched Lully's theatrical knowledge,
particularly of the French dramatic repertory, and helped him to
perfect, after initial doubts of the genre, his operatic composition
techniques. In 1672 he became the director of the Académie Royale de
Musique, where he premiered his first tragédie
en musique in
the following year which was even attended by the king himself. The
king appointed him conseiller
secrétaire du roi,
for his outstanding performance skills, a distinction which meant he
could be immediately ennobled. Lully died in 1687. As a violinist,
dancer and actor himself he was able to control the accuracy of the
instrumental ensemble, demonstrate the steps of ballets, show how a
performer should make an entrance and move on stage, and display the
attitudes they should adopt.
Lully
created a new operatic genre in 1673 with Cadmus
et Hermione.
For the libretto the composer had turned to Philippe Quinault who
devised an excellent solution to the major problem of the recitative.
In the first place, he simplified and tightened the plot, stripping
it of unnecessary episodes so as to keep the audience's interest
constantly alive. Most of the verses, were written before being set
to music, in particular all the texts for the recitatives; Lully used
melodic, rhythmic and harmonic procedures to make them expressive. A
rising or falling interval, a melisma or a dissonance judiciously
underlining certain words could suggest an image or express an idea
or sentiment.These passages were intended to drive the dramatic
action forward, and superfluous ornamentation was excluded since it
would have been detrimental to comprehension of the sung text,
something to which the logically minded French audiences of the time
were particularly attached. The vocal ensembles, most of them duets,
show equal sensitivity, allowing the hearer to appreciate both words
and music. Dances also can be found in the operas mainly Minuets and
gavottes, surely in greater number than bourrées, canaries, gigues,
loures, passepieds, rigaudons and sarabandes.
The
influence of Lully's work was considerable. The model of his tragédie
en musique,
the most successful in French opera under the ancien régime, was to
inspire many composers for over a century. Lully's operatic works
remained alive in the public's memory until the eve of the
Revolution, inside and outside of France. Lully, regarded throughout
Enlightenment Europe as the leading figure in French music, created a
style which was truly his own, drawing on many sources which he was
probably better able to assimilate than anyone else in his time. The
language he forged, and to which he sometimes brought exceptional
breadth, could leave no one indifferent, and it still attracts
audiences today with its power, clarity, equilibrium, coherence,
poetry and exquisite sensitivity.
Every star tells a Story
Every star tells a Story
Andromeda is the daughter of Cepheus and Cassiopeia, king and queen of the kingdom Ethiopia. Perseus and Andromeda love each other, but Andromeda is betrothed to her uncle Phineus.
Cassiopeia boasts that she is more beautiful than the Nereids, the Nymph daughters of the sea god, Nereus. To punish the Queen for her arrogance, Poseidon, brother of Zeus and god of the sea, sends a sea monster to ravage the coast of Ethiopia including the kingdom of its vain Queen. The desperate King consults the Oracle of Apollo, who announces that no respite would be found until the king sacrifices his daughter Andromeda to the sea monster. She is chained to a rock on the coast line of the kingdom.
The drama is resolved only through Perseus’ triumph over supernatural obstacles. In a series of elaborate spectacles he is supplied by the gods with armour and weapons and slays the Gorgon Medusa of whose blood monsters were born.
Perseus returns from having slain the Gorgon, when he finds Andromeda tied to the rock as a sacrifice for the sea monster, which he slaughters, approaching invisible with Hades' helmet. He sets her free and marries her in spite of Andromeda having been previously promised to her uncle Phineus. At the wedding a quarrel takes place between the rivals, and Phineus is turned to stone by the sight of the Gorgon Medusa's head.
After their deaths, Andromeda and Perseus are placed by Athena amongst the Constellations in the northern sky, theire love to be immortalized for ever in the heavenly skies.
Friday, 23 March 2012
Project Description
The Project
To
celebrate the 400
year anniversary
of the discovery of the Andromeda Galaxy by Simon Marius, Martin
Butler and Ensemble L'Aura Rilucente are planning to create a new
work based upon extracts from libretto and music of the popuar
baroque opera, "Persée"
by the 17th century composer, Jean Baptisite Lully, which tells the
story of Andromeda and Perseus.
Working
with a
live
ensemble of five baroque musicians, (two baroque violins, baroque
cello, harpsichord, and baroque harp) and four singers (soprano,
mezzo-soprano, haute – tenor and tenor ), Butler will tell the
story of Perseus and Andromeda using the form of
shadow play. They will
combine live dancers/performers with objects and puppets, to create a
visually strong and easily accessible form of performance for both
children and adults to enjoy and discover.
By seperating on stage the musicians and the performers, Martin
Butler is inspired by the English theatre tradition of the dumbshow
(15th to 17th centuries), which is a masque-like interlude of silent
pantomime/actions usually with allegorical content. Dumbshows were a
moving silent spectacle, accompanied by music.
The
story of Perseus and Andromeda will be divided between a narrator and
the shadow play accompanied by the singers. They explain the world,
which the audience is going to enter. The world of the Baroque, the
world of myths, where nymphs and sea monsters, gods and heroes exist.
The arias will be song in the original French of Quinault, while the
narrator will recite in the local language of the performance,
accompanied by instrumental interludes.
The original score of Lully will be abbreviated to a 75 minute performance.
The original score of Lully will be abbreviated to a 75 minute performance.
Perseus with the head of Medusa
stage
construction behind
stage construction behind
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