Questo sito non supporta completamente il tuo browser. Ti consigliamo di utilizzare Edge, Chrome, Safari o Firefox.

The Creative, the Curious and the Courtly

There are two very distinct strands to Richard Alston's choreography. The first is a provocative, experimental path, where Alston's eccentric musical choices dictate the shifts and twists within. The second is a more classical, traditional route. Yet, both are never too sentimental or frilly, in spite of the craftsmanship. His is a “get on with it” approach, and there is an enormous amount of heart and humour, so it's really heartbreaking to think there have been recent cuts to the company, and they're winding down.

Performance

Richard Alston Dance Company: “Final Edition”

Place

Theatre Royal, Glasgow, November 19, 2019

Words

Lorna Irvine

Pierre Tapon, Nancy Nerantzi, Anelli Binder in “Isthmus.” Photograph by Tony Nandi

subscribe to the latest in dance


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.

Already a paid subscriber? Login

For an example of the traditional side of Alston, “Voices and Light Footsteps” shows a definite mellowing in this later work. There are ten permutations to the piece, with solos, duets and company work acting like a kind of dance haiku: one dancer, then seven, ten, one, and so on. (Okay, this isn't strictly a haiku, but not far off it!) with the order of dancers' movements constantly mutating as it develops. Its courtly leanings are offset with flicked wrists, half-genuflections and all of the rigid baroque gestures emulating the ballrooms of Marie Antoinette. Solos are like calligraphy drawn into the air, groupwork is stately and sensual, and it feels technically stunning, but not so easy to warm to.

Another piece fitting in this mode is the elegant “Blue Schubert Fragments,” based upon an early seventies piece. All classical vocabulary is there- a spirited cabriole or arabesque- but what is remarkable is how the dancers seem like chess pieces moving across a board, in simple white vests and black trousers by Inca Jaakson. A grand jeté is never what it seems here, a mere jumping-off point for more malleable steps. Yet, it's still not among the best work of Alston's.

More satisfying by far are excerpts from “Nowhere Slowly” with featherlight lifts, glides and bodies which seem to float to Terry Riley's dreamy saxophone-laced music. Although it's an earlier piece (from 1970) it feels absolutely timeless. The liquid pas de deux featuring the wonderful Monique Jonas and Nahum Mclean is ridiculously sexy- they seem to melt into one body at certain points.

“Mazur” is a genre splicing, fleet of foot moment, with a Hollywood era swing to even its most classical lines, and a Puckish, fraternal lightness from the superb Joshua Harriette and Nicholas Shikkis, “bros” in all but name. Their turns and bounces emulate Astaire in the mood of jolly insouciance, and they respond to the live piano from Jason Ridgway with an almost improvisational freshness that belies the dexterity of their footwork. Their bows are to each other, Ridgway, and to the audience, but seem like a bow to the freeing nature of the piece itself- and to Alston for creating it.

The best two works of the evening, and most challenging by far, for my tastes, are “Red Run” and “Isthmus.” Both are newer pieces. The former feels like a constant disruption of mathematical precision, always playing with the form. There is symmetry, and then dancers just so happen to fall into splits, or tangle limbs, stamp feet with tantrum energy, but then collapse like exhausted children. It's immensely playful.

The latter, to Jo Kondo's absolutely bonkers soundtrack of the same name, emulates the wild bursts of brass, and clanking percussion alike, with the four dancers—Joshua Harriette, Jennifer Hayes, Nahum Mclean and Ellen Yilma—playing a game of kiss-chase, wound-up and leaping like clockwork toys.

On the strength of this, the company are at the peak of their powers, as liberated and powerful as ever. They make it all look so effortless. Alston's work has one foot in the past, and one in the future.

We haven't heard the last of them.

Lorna Irvine


Based in Glasgow, Lorna was delightfully corrupted by the work of Michael Clark in her early teens, and has never looked back. Passionate about dance, music, and theatre she writes regularly for the List, Across the Arts and Exeunt. She also wrote on dance, drama and whatever particular obsession she had that week for the Shimmy, the Skinny and TLG and has contributed to Mslexia, TYCI and the Vile Blog.

comments

Featured

The Body as Archive
REVIEWS | Candice Thompson

The Body as Archive

All too often it seems the human memory is too short. History is easily forgotten and, in a week where Americans are still processing the results of the presidential election, it is hard not to feel like we are doomed to repeat ourselves. 

Continua a leggere
Dance not Tell
REVIEWS | Faye Arthurs

Dance not Tell

Eyeballs, screaming crones, and bloody axes were projected on a scrim at the top of American Ballet Theater’s new production of “Crime and Punishment.” Not bad for Halloween programming! Yet, despite Isobel Waller-Bridge’s cinematic, pressure-cooker score—which frequently evoked escape room music—there was very little suspense in Helen Pickett and James Bonas’s new narrative full-length.

Continua a leggere
Antony Hamilton, Keeping Time
INTERVIEWS | Phoebe Roberts

Antony Hamilton, Keeping Time

Antony Hamilton is on the move. When he answers my Zoom call, the world-renowned choreographer is at the airport about to board a flight to London. This isn't a vacation, though: the Australian native, who is also the artistic director and co-CEO of Chunky Move, a Victoria-based contemporary dance company, is traveling with the troupe on their latest Europe and U.K. tour.

Continua a leggere
New World Record
REVIEWS | Gracia Haby

New World Record

Records are for keeping. A record of the past in permanent form, an account. An official report. The sum of past achievements. The best, most remarkable event of its kind, a world record, no less. 

Continua a leggere
Good Subscription Agency