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Two weeks ago I went with my music hum class to see the Merce Cunningham memorial at the Park Avenue Armory. Apparently Daniel is passionate about "the visual" as well as "the sonic," and apparently there's this famous man in dance circles named Merce Cunningham, and apparently he died this past July, and apparently I am the biggest ignoramus when it comes to modern dance.

We took our pleasant time taking the bus there because Daniel envisioned taking the bus---not the subway---as part of the complete experience. Once we got there, we proceeded to wander between three un-elevated stages where different short performances were taking place simultaneously. I managed to see Changing Steps, Scramble and Un jour ou deux, Totem Ancestor, and Back Exercises before sitting down on (ouch!) badly-splintered hardwood floor for Second Hand and Event

One night of Merce Cunningham did not, in all honesty, cultivate my modern dance sensibilities. Even now I feel that I am butchering the art by not talking about it in the right way. But it was worth it. I don't regret sacrificing a Wednesday evening of watching the World Series opener while feeding on free junk food to watch men and women in spandex make intricately slow movements across a stage. Not a bit. In fact, I quite enjoyed watching the performances and making the important realization that I could hold my laughter in when some of the male dancers started sweating profusely about the crotch. My laughing at awkward moments---that uncontrollable immaturity---had always been my modern dance phobia. It's so terrible I could slap myself for it. But 'twas happily conquered that night! I did not laugh at all and managed to snap a hazy picture before a scowling security guard came over to shake his finger at me.

Furthermore, I felt that I actually understood some of it. Yes, I noticed some interesting stuff in the dancing. At one point when all the dancers were perfectly still, holding their poses, I noticed something move in the corner of my eye and turning, realized it was a shadow. I traced the shadow to its source: one of the dancers in the back was slowly lifting his arm. And THEN, it occurred to me that shadows play an important part in the performance. After all, it's called "Second Hand," suggesting imitation and shadowing. And the dancers' costumes, too, with the dark bluish-gray and light bluish-gray were like shadows + light! Tada!

So although I did not become a Merce Cunningham fanatic in one night, I might---just maybe---one day go see another modern dance performance.

Filed under: merce cunningham

lichtconlon says...

Chance Conversations: An Interview with Merce Cunningham and John Cage
Walker Channel
April 06, 1981
Walker Art Center

Filed under: Merce Cunningham

lichtconlon says...

... MUSIC/Listen :: voyageacoustique one :: Music for Merce Cunningham I (2000)

archive.org :: "Music for Merce Cunningham I" composed in 2000 for double bass (bowed and plucked) and live-tape with pre-recorded seep, dropping water sounds, marker (felt tip pen) sounds, and (mirror reflex) camera release sounds.

"Music for Merce Cunningham I" [33:53] © Ralph Lichtensteiger

The piece represents a "sound track" for an imaginary dance choreography. I see the stage in clear, bright light. No dramatic turnarounds, no expressivity, no impatience, just sound, light, motion and independency. [Run time: 00:33:53] ...

“You have to love dancing to stick to it. It gives you nothing back, no manuscripts to store away, no paintings to show on walls and maybe hang in museums, no poems to be printed and sold, nothing but that single fleeting moment when you feel alive.”

— Merce Cunningham

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.

Filed under: Merce Cunningham

lichtconlon says...

Revolutionary choreographer Merce Cunningham dies at 90

Merce Cunningham refused to interpret music, tell stories, depict characters or even to accept the idea of the choreographer as a kind of all-knowing god.

Filed under: Merce Cunningham

satnam13 says...

Merce Cunningham, the American choreographer who was among a handful

of 20th-century figures to make dance a major art and a major form of theater,

died Sunday night. He was 90 and lived in Manhattan.  Continue.....

Merce Cunningham

Andrea Mohin/The New York Times

Merce Cunningham in his company’s studio in the West Village in 2008.

Filed under: Merce Cunningham