The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, February 21, 2007 - 5A Let's try to talk about dance Dance is hard to talk about. We don't often need to talk about movement in the first place, especially the movement of bodies, because explaining what we mean is usually as easy as doing it. "I was like...." usually suffices. But when you try to describe or to discuss dance, imitation is sometimes impossible and so we need some sort of ABIGAIL B. specialized vocabulary COLODNER to describe it, right? One way to describe something to someone who hasn't experienced it directly is, of course, through comparisons. Things sound or look like other things. But this only makes the job easier if you've experienced the original reference - and sometimes that's assuming a lot. Works of art can cut that dis- tance using humor, which provokes a visceral response that brings with it a sense of understanding. In a neat way, sometimes humor gets to us so fast that we're in on the joke without doing much work at all. We take pleasure from both the experience of watching and the experience of understanding. That sense of being included in the action makes us more receptive to whatever comes next. Even orchestral music, a more abstract art form than dance, can engage audiences this way, as in a performance by the Kirov Orches- tra in Ann Arbor earlier this year. In a piece that was steadily paced for the most part and full of low tones, a sudden higher, twittering sound elicited actual laughter from the audience. They laughed at the first instance of the sound - and it was people throughout the audito- rium who chuckled, not an enlight- ened few on the main floor. The appearance of a spontaneous reac- tion at all suggests they were in on something composer Shostakovich wanted them to be. And judging by the immediacy and breadth of the reaction, they were making sense of it without first perusing the pro- gram notes. The Kirov Orchestra created humor by juxtaposing types of sound we recognize, a little twit- ter in the midst of a dirge or a march. (How a steady tempo and low sounds indicate "somber" to us so definitely is a related question). Humor doesn't need to be built on understanding if it can get by on recognition. If there's one thing we'll pay attention to when it enters our awareness, it's a human body. It's a semi-guilty pleasure to have it exposed to our eyes, and witnessing the extremes of how it can bend or hurtle or shiver fascinates us, easily. But our fascination wearies if we have nothingto relate it to other than acrobatics. Modern dance companies can often be character- ized by how much they go beyond pure movement and dip into storytelling. One middle-ground approach, used brilliantly bythe companythat had their University debut this weekend, is to temper stretches of pure movement with gestures. Gestures in dance are versions of what we do every day - movements that somehow carry social meaning. In life the smallest motion can be eloquent - touching someone's wrist as they talk to you, leaning in to speak. Momentary gestures that have a more explicit implication - either because they're a familiar social gesture or because they suggesta narrative - reference the kind of social cues audiences will be very sensitive to, regardless of their familiarity with performance. We're familiar with people, so drawing on our sensitivity to the drama of human interaction engag- What's in a gesture? Everything. es all audience members at once. It's a unifying moment. The Stephen Petronio Company, a modern dance company made up of eight electrifying dancers, was all movement all the time. The only narrative came through in gestures that instantly created a social dynamic. The dance, at once a stunning display of balletic disci- pline and virtuosic abandon, barely paused to give these moments space. But they were so well-cho- sen, so specific and so weighted that their inclusion allowed the company to hold tight our attention while around them the company flew to the extremes of speed and sound. Justbefore throwing his body dangerously around his part- ner's form to be caught, a dancer brushed his partner's hand with his cheek, cat-like and adoring. New Yorker dance critic Joan Acocella once said of performances, "If I don't get it, it isn't there." Although it might sound like a boast of her scrutinizing critic's eye, Acocella meant it as an evalu- ation of a performance's effective success. A great concept on paper or a succession of seven rather than six difficult turns are of little more than academic interest unless they're woven with moments that flash straight to our most reactive selves. - Colodner gets it. She knows it's there. E-mail her at abigabor@umich.edu. The 'Moon' is so bright FOLK CHARMER DAISY MAY GETS IT RIGHT By ANNA ASH Daily Arts Writer Walk to School Kids Records, find Mother Moon and consider yourself a better person. And don't even worry, because when you start to wonder how you were able to survive with- ****C out Daisy May's music in your life, you'll still have plenty Daisy May of time to buy tickets for her April 6 show at The Ark. Mother Moon What's happened inthe four years between May's debut Earthworks album Sleepless and her fourth album Mother Moon isn't real- ly a transformation, but a growth of sorts. Her music is still rooted in the simplicities of folk and country traditions, but it has moved away from unembellished, acoustic guitar accompa- niment and toward full-bodied instrumentation that complements her soul-baring voice and breathes a new sound into an old style. In addition to Seth Bernard on lead guitar and Drew Howard on pedal steel guitar, May is joined by Breathe Owl Breathe's Andrea Moreno-Beals on cello, Steppin' In It's Domi- nic Suchyta on bass, Millish's Mike Shimmin on x7 With that smile (and her music), Daisy May is going to conquer the world. drums and a host of other musicians. Although her earlier, unadorned tunes held a certain charm in their uncomplicated sparseness, the collaboration with other musicians is a refresh- ing change for this songwriter. The strongest example of both the lyrical and instrumental developments in May's music is "Rise Up Singing." Not only is May accompa- nied by five other musicians, she's also backed by a choir, and it's nearly impossible not to clap your hands and sing along. The result is stunning - the type of song that reminds you just how poignant folk music can be. But it's on the fourth track, the unabashedly sentimental "Carefully," that May firmly estab- lishes her preeminence as a songwriter. With Rachael Davis's harmonies, Howard's pedal- steel skills and Bernard's delicate acoustic work, the tune is so damnbeautiful even the most cyn- ical listener will forget he once claimed to dis- like country music. While the word courageous seems somewhat inappropriate, it's accurate in regard to tunes like these - songs shamelessly about hope and love without hiding beneath obscurity. Yes, your mother would probably love this woman, but Daisy May's wholesomeness isn't something to be tossed off as truistic and banal. For May, a little can say an awful lot, her vocal qualities enhanced by her lyrical brevity. What she, and many of the other Earthworks musicians are doing with their "simple folk music," is preserv- ing as well as developing the folk tradition. So maybe there aren't any obscenities, and maybe there aren't any synths, but there are a few waltzes and there are a few glimpses of dobro and banjo. What sets this woman apart from her con- temporaries is her voice. Comparisons to Loret- ta Lynn, Patsy Cline or Allison Krauss would be erroneous. Daisy May sings like no one else. Her voice is her own, unmistakable on every track (except for the instrumental "The Barn Swal- low"). From the endearingly sanguine "We Are" to the humorous, gospel-blues of "Big Mama Brown," May's pristine voice speaks from a place all her own. And this alone puts her and her music far beyond the ordinary. A difficult'Tale'told with Roman ease By CATHERINE SMYKA DailyArts Writer If someone told you to check out a play about an ancient Roman Tales myth using 16 from actors and pieces Ovid of colored cloth as the only props and Last Friday scenery,you might and Saturday hesitate. But the At the Walg Department of DtamCereen Musical Theatre rama er had no apparent trouble holding its audience's atten- tion with such a pared-down prem- ise. Last weekend, the department performed Ted Hughes's "Tales from Ovid," a collection of Roman myths by the poet Ovid, in its first studio performance at the Walgreen Drama Center's Towsley Studio. Students incorporated lyrical monologues, a cappella chanting and interpretive movement to act out such familiar childhood tales as King Midas and his golden touch and Narcissus's self-infatuation. Despite a notably bare set, the stage never looked empty. Tree nymphs and clusters of observers constantly occupied the stage, even if merely sitting. Flowing, shapeless pieces of colored cloth made up the bulk of the set, playing more roles than the performers themselves - as infants, trees, water and flowers. The actors took care to use the cloth to its fullest potential: a moth- er holding a baby in her arms might transform into a nearby tree. In one scene, Minerva the weaver explains the stories illustrated on her tap- estry. Four actors stretched out a sheer golden cloth to the size of a classroom wall, and actors gathered in clusters behind it. A young man doubled over in sadness from the loss of a loved one while two stu- dents crouched before him, each at a different level. The man flung out a thin blue cloth to drape over the bodies before him and the mate- rial up to his face so the audience saw the "tears" cascading in front of him. "Within the usual rehearsal schedule, our approach has been to explore and create right up to the last minute," said Malcolm Tulip, Music School prof. and director said. "The design emerged from the work in rehearsal with the major- ity of the creation coming from the students." With such a stellar group of stu- dents showing off their theatrical range,x stage, n steal th, Each Ac first in tragic M uated w sun go. equal fo The tations mythst a group the gro no one tale dominated the direction, imitating the river carry- sor did a single individual ing King Midas's body. e show. "We had to find away of not dou- character's story, from the bling images with narration," Tulip said. "As the story was told with dialogue, what happened onstage had to give the audience an experi- department's ence beyond a simple recreation of the action." t performance The majority of the stories kept those in the audience speechless, a new studio. like the tragic story of Arachne, while characters like the god Bac- chus, with his sweet childish inno- cence, had the audience smiling. dirah (a young woman infat- With the occasional line provoking vith her father) to Apollo the a burst of laughter from the audi- d, held the audience with ence, the cast performed piece after rce. piece, switching roles and relation- students' physical interpre- ships - without for the most part complemented the ancient changing costumes or sets. they narrated. For example, "I hope (the show) has exposed of actors stretched out on the students to a different way of und and rolled in the same tellingstories on stage," Tulip said. r 1 S e e k i n g cFeG*%.Ve ChCRY In the limelight, a girl and her artist By JENNA PARKS as the blonde superstar. Daily Arts Writer Sienna Miller ("Casanova") as Sedgewick captures the vitality A film about a woman who and carefree demeanor of the 1960s inspired artcannothelpbutexpress socialite. With dead-on looks and a sense of artistry itself. Full of childlike excitement, Miller and the Andy Warhol- real Sedgewick are nearly indistin- esque visuals, guishable to the untrained eye. "Factory Girl" is Guy Pearce ("Memento") is also saturated with . a step above impersonation with colorful images Factory Gi his portrayal of Andy Warhol. and even more Atthe The mannerisms and speech pat- colorful people. . terns are classic Warhol, while his Covering Edie Michigan behind-the-scenes candor is a skill Sedgewick's life Theater surely adapted for the sake of the from art school to MGM film. Warhol's infamous two-word her 1970 exit from responses to any interview ques- a California rehab tion would not have made for very center, the film paints a picture of good entertainment. an innocent girl who led an any- The film follows the chemistry thing-but-innocent life. between Sedgewick and Warhol In a film soaked with '60s glam- from their meeting in the early our, sex, drug abuse, rock'n'roll and 1960s to her death in 1971. Warhol betrayal, Sedgewick's life has final- is the crazed artist, and Sedgewick ly been given a voice. There were a just wants to be loved - and to be handful of failed movie attempts in famous. After leaving art school, the'80s, including Warren Beatty's, Sedgewick moves to New York which tried to cast Molly Ringwald under the steam of her wealthy family. S and beg leaves h her abus the frier Factory, in the pu Beh gre( some After and han Warhol I the youn depende The u Girl" in' thing-bu adds an, sympath tions to ;he meets up with Warhol eight brothers and sisters and now ins a spending spree that only has six; the deaths of two sib- er bankrupt and without lings caused a wound for Sedge- ive father's help. She learns wick that never really healed. nds she made at Warhol's The film has stirred quite a bit of are as fleeting as her place controversy from those who were a blic eye. partof Sedgewick's life. Abrief rela- tionship with Bob Dylan translates into the Sedgewick character's fling L d great art is with Billy Quinn (Hayden Chris- tensen, ("Star Wars Episode III"), at romance. Or a fictional hybrid of rocker Dylan and other influences in the young ything like that. starlet's life. Dylan's lawyers have threatened to sue, claiming the film depicts the folk singer as instigat- ing the downward spiral that lead Sedgewick meets a dark to Sedgewick's death. dsome folk singer, she and Filmgoers should stay for the have a falling out that leads credits, where the director throws ng blonde deeper into drug in some interviews and archival ncy. photographs and comments on the nderlying plot in "Factory real Sedgewick. Although details volving Sedgewick's any- of the film may have been altered, it-ideal American family the prevailing sentiment of her life element of discomfort and remains intact. She was simply a y to the story. She men- girl who met the cruel truth of the a friend that she once had fickleness of fame. Join The Michigan Daily's advertising design team as an outlet for all of the creativity that's stirring inside your head. 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