This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

Skeleton Song

Skeleton Song,” by UK-based singer and composer Ana Silvera, is the second song from her BASCA-nominated song-cycle Oracles, released by Gearbox records. Written following an intense period of grief, Oracles was Silvera’s way to transmute her emotions into a cathartic work of art: “I wrote Oracles in a state of absolute urgency and emergency—it felt like I had been buried in the ground myself, and writing this music was a small pocket of air, my chance to breathe again,” Silvera notes. The dance film/video clip was a unique collaboration between Kate Church (dancer, director, choreography) and  Alice Williamson (co-direction, costume and choreography), shot by DOP Mats Willand and produced by Stephanie Moon.

Still from “Skeleton Song,” a dance film co-directed by Kate Church and Alice Williamson

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

“Skeleton Song,” an Inuit myth-inspired tune about a woman who is sung back to life, is a fragile yet powerful paean to the female figures surrounding Silvera who “painstakingly pieced me together again” following the untimely death of her brother. Compositionally, the piece follows the arc of a quest—a folk tale that begins with a search for a tangible or symbolic goal and ends with a triumphant return home. The song-cycle was performed as part of a sold-out concert in 2012 on London's Roundhouse Main Stage, earning Silvera a nomination for a British Composer Award.

Shot on an eerie expanse of the North Danish coast, dancer and director Kate Church embodies the Skeleton Woman, who wakes from her deathly slumber and slowly returns to life. Church, a former ballet dancer who trained at the Royal Ballet School, began her career in film and television on the flagship documentary arts series, The South Bank Show. This is her second collaboration with Silvera, who composed the score for Church's 2014 multi-media dance theatre production, “Cassandra” for the Royal Ballet, co-created with choreographer Ludovic Ondiviela.

“Skeleton Song” marks the first foray into film for creative director Alice Williamson. A trained classical and contemporary dancer, in 2008 Williamson founded Designed by Alice, maker of coveted ballet skirts and unique objet. As well as choreographing and co-directing “Skeleton Song,” Williamson designed and sewed the costumes. She documents the process on her Instagram, recalling the moment of having “‘the best costume idea’ and having to call Ana and Kate immediately!! .... the costumes were fun, surprisingly complicated in their simplicity.” In the dance-film, Church wears an ethereal 'ribcage' of ribbon and tulle representing the polished bones of the Skeleton Woman, with the presence of a life-affirming embroidered felt heart tucked within.

“Skeleton Song” had its digital premiere on CLASH magazine and can be watched in full above, or on YouTube.

Penelope Ford


Penelope is the founding editor of Fjord Review, international magazine of dance and ballet. Penelope graduated from Law and Arts with majors in philosophy and languages from the University of Melbourne, Australia, before turning to the world of dance. She lives in Italy.

comments

Featured

Lists of Promise
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

Lists of Promise

“Lists of Promise,” a new work currently in a two-week run from March 13- 30 at the East Village cultural landmark, Theater for the New City, promised more than it delivered, at least for now.

Continue Reading
Heady Notions
REVIEWS | Karen Hildebrand

Heady Notions

“State of Heads” opens with a blaze of white light and loud clanking onto a white-suited Levi Gonzalez, part Elvis, part televangelist addressing his congregation. A pair of women sidle in—Rebecca Cyr and Donna Uchizono—dressed in ankle-length white dresses and cowered posture.

Continue Reading
Winning Works
REVIEWS | Róisín O'Brien

Winning Works

The late John Ashford, a pioneer in programming emerging contemporary choreographers across Europe, once told me that he could tell what sort of choreographer a young artist would turn into when watching their first creations.

Continue Reading
Ballet at 41° South
REVIEWS | Leila Lois

Ballet at 41° South

Last weekend, the Royal New Zealand Ballet hosted two nights of performance in collaboration with the Scottish Ballet at the St. James’ Theatre in Wellington, New Zealand. The bill included two works by choreographers affiliated with Scottish Ballet, and two by RNZB choreographers. There was welcome contrast in timbre and tempo, and common themes of self-actualisation and connection, through a love of dance. As RNZB artistic director Ty King-Wall announced in the audience address, the two-night only performance was in the spirit of “bringing the companies together in mutual admiration and respect.”

Continue Reading
Good Subscription Agency