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A five-star show when dance meets music

A file photo of Silence and Rapture. Photo: Daniel Boud

Music and Dance / Silence & Rapture. Australian Chamber Orchestra and Sydney Dance Company. At Llewellyn Hall, August 17. Reviewed by MICHELLE POTTER.

The Australian Chamber Orchestra has an admirable history of staging productions with dance companies in which both musicians and dancers perform onstage, with artists of each genre reflecting the work of the other in some way.

My first recollection of this kind of collaborative endeavour goes back to 1998 when the ACO joined with a small contingent of Australian Ballet dancers to present the Stravinsky/Balanchine ballet, Apollo. Since then there have been several collaborations between the ACO and Sydney Dance Company. Silence & Rapture is their most recent joint initiative.

Directed by Richard Tognetti, Silence & Rapture presented a series of compositions by two composers – JS Bach and Arvo Pärt — whose works on the program were so expertly curated that they fell together seamlessly.

Program notes explained the narrative that was behind the selection. It followed “the path of a Lutheran metaphor… the world as a pendulum swinging downward, from the natural world of Hope and Temptation (Garden of Eden), down to Tragedy and Passion (Garden of Gethsemane), then upward again to Resurrection and Redemption (Garden of Heaven).”  The ACO musicians were joined by countertenor Iestyn Davies and two Sydney Dance Company artists, Emily Seymour and Liam Green, who performed the choreography of Rafael Bonachela.

Every aspect of the show was superbly executed by every single artist, with a standout performance of the Prelude from Bach’s Suite for Solo Cello in C Major from ACO’s principal cellist Timo-Veikko Valve. Apart from an impeccable transmission of the sound of the music, Valve the man could scarcely be separated from his instrument so involved was he, in a bodily sense, in transmitting the notes across the stage space and into the auditorium.

The dancers also stood out for their performance of Bonachela’s highly complex movement. Bonachela needed to restrain his choreography to an extent, given the small space in which the dancers could perform. But he showed his skill and, in addition to a focus on complexity, which often reflected the complexity of the music, he had the dancers at times performing solos on two small tables on the edges of the stage space.

But the truly outstanding feature of Silence & Rapture was the theatricality that permeated the evening, especially in the use of the stage space. Apart from the two cellists and Chad Kelly, who played organ and harpsichord, all the musicians stood for the entire performance and formed a semi-circle onstage. They provided a focused performing area for the dancers and countertenor, who constantly interacted with each other, with the countertenor occasionally joining the dancers in performing Bonachela’s choreography.

Then there was the use of well-known lighting designer, Damien Cooper. His design added colour to the production, and darkness sometimes when the musicians were practically hidden but still playing. His design also highlighted certain moments, including the cello solo by Valve, and a moment towards the end when the two dancers mounted a rise at the centre back of the stage to present the “upward swing” to “Resurrection and Redemption”.

In its one-night-only performance in Canberra, Silence & Rapture was a five-star show.

 

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