Music of the Spheres - This Crazy Show - Noam Gagnon's Autobiography
Friday, October 21, 2016
Noam Gagnon - This Crazy Show - Scotiabank Dance Centre - October 20 2016 |
Music of the Spheres
Musica universalis (literally universal music), also
called Music of the spheres or Harmony of the Spheres, is an ancient
philosophical concept that regards proportions in the movements of celestial
bodies—the Sun, Moon, and planets—as a form of musica (the Medieval Latin term
for music). This "music" is not usually thought to be literally
audible, but a harmonic, mathematical or religious concept. The idea continued
to appeal to thinkers about music until the end of the Renaissance, influencing
scholars of many kinds, including humanists. Further scientific exploration has
determined specific proportions in some orbital motion, described as Orbital
resonance.
Wikipedia
At last night’s performance of at the Scotiabank Dance
Centre of Noam Gagnon’s Vision Impure – This Crazy Show I had the luck to be
sitting right next to retired (not quite) arts critic Max Wyman and his wife.
With me, hovering in my head was the memory and ghost of the designer of the
Dance Centre, Arthur Erickson.
All three of us, (Wyman and Erickson and yours truly)
would have agreed that every once in a while you have someone who has a talent
that cannot be explained except by a quirk of spirit that the Spaniards call “a
fenómeno”. They used to use the term for virtuoso Jai-Alai players. Belmonte the bullfighter was one. Wyman would
add Evelyn Hart (so would I). To a short list I would include former Ballet BC
dancer Lori Stallings. And of course Arthur Erickson himself was a fenómeno.
There are some that equate the fenómeno as someone with
inspiration by the devil himself such as Nicolò Paganini. Others cite divine
inspiration. Whatever it is Noam Gagnon is one.
Some years past you might have had a heated discussion on
19th century classical ballet versus modern dance. When John Alleyne
took the helm of Ballet BC he brought us the works of then Frankfurt Ballet
fenómeno director William Forsythe. Vancouver audiences wondered about
performances that included dancers talking. Then Crystal Pite choreographed
theatrical production of The Electric Theatre Company’s Studies in Motion – The Hauntings of Eadward Muybridge. It was
perhaps then that theatre and dance became one in our city.
Any Greek scholar would affirm that the ancient Greeks
did not separate art into modern parts like visual arts, music, theatre,
sculpture, poetry.
Noam Gagnon’s This Crazy Show is such an example of a
performance that was all that and more. Bryan Kenny (the Set Designer) and
Stéphane Ménigot (Lighting Designer) gave us a set that was spectacular and reminded me of the
Music of the Spheres. Darryl Milot (Creature Designer) made it scary when it had to be.
But it was Gagnon’s performance that struck a nerve in me
as it was a tender, very intimate autiobiography on how he came to be a dancer.
This included a treatise on how our interior organs help us dance and how the
lungs (his father’s failing ones) and the heart (his mother’s failing heart)
created a pathos (the Greeks knew of that) that led to his catharsis to become
the dancer that he is today.
As a dancer (this amateur dance critic) can cite that
Gagnon is one of the few dancers in Vancouver that can dance on one spot. He
did not quite do this on Friday night. But this style of his makes him as
unique as Lori Stallings was from the ankles down.
The show began in a light-hearted way but it all led and ended almost scary. The whole show (about one hour and ten minutes of it with sweat and almost constant movement) finished with a five seconds of a big metallic sphere swooshing by Gagnon’s slim but washboard chest in what will be for me one of the most memorable events of Vancouver Dance.
The show began in a light-hearted way but it all led and ended almost scary. The whole show (about one hour and ten minutes of it with sweat and almost constant movement) finished with a five seconds of a big metallic sphere swooshing by Gagnon’s slim but washboard chest in what will be for me one of the most memorable events of Vancouver Dance.
Gagnon’s gentle low key voice, reminded me of Arthur
Erkickson who had exquisite taste. Parts of Gagnon’s show may have not
projected that because of their rawness but I can only hope that Gagnon will
again entertain us, shock us in the House that Erickson built.
I cannot end this with comments on James Coomer
(Composer, Sound Designer and Accordionist). I absolutely hate the accordion and
yet…Listening to his playing and using the bellows to suggest
that last whispers of breath of Gagnon’s dying father was extraordinary.
Addendum: As I was watching Gagnon dance I was thinking
about Nanaimo Bars. How can that be? The spring floor of the dance centre was
designed with the help of dancer Cornelius Fischer-credo and set
designer/dancer Jay Gower Taylor. The floor is made of a sandwich of white and
black rubber that resembles a …