Imagine two tribes, each with their own bizarre rules, rituals and mythologies.
Now imagine them interacting in the most awkward, affectionate manner possible.
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Imagine two tribes, each with their own bizarre rules, rituals and mythologies.
Now imagine them interacting in the most awkward, affectionate manner possible.
Thats the central concept behind StringWreck, a playful collaboration that brings together the worlds of dance and music on stage.
Created by choreographers Janice Garrett and Charles Moulton, StringWreck is an adventurous cultural collision pairing two San Francisco performing arts groups, the Del Sol String Quartet and Janice Garrett & Dancers.
Weve created a new thing. The dancers are dancing, the musicians are dancing, and the musicians are playing, Moulton said.
StringWreck makes its Central Coast debut on Friday, the first time the show has been performed outside of the Bay Area.
The story of every piece that we make is to try to get into as much trouble as we can, and then rely on the brilliance of the performers to get us out of it onstage, Moulton said with a laugh.
Breaking boundaries
According to Garrett, the choreographers approached the Del Sol String Quartet with a more traditional collaboration in mind.
Charlie and I would make some dances. Theyd play music for us, she said, noting that they chose Del Sol because of its reputation for boundary-breaking experimental music.
As the two groups started discussing their approaches to performance, a more radical idea arose: What if the musicians joined the dancers onstage?
Our goal at the beginning was to find things that everybody was uncomfortable with and really make them more uncomfortable, Moulton said. For instance, he explained, Musicians dont like dancers careening by and knocking their scores over, or picking their scores up, or eating their scores.
Theyre particular about who plays their instruments. And they prefer being within hearing range of their fellow musicians.
Its difficult to play quality music when youre being tossed around like a sack of potatoes, Moulton quipped.
Dancers, meanwhile, use a different counting system than their string quartet counterparts, he said, making it difficult to match meters. Those differences only served as creative fodder for all involved.
The dancers and the musicians really began to find a common language, Garrett said.
After an intensive brainstorming workshop and months of rehearsal, StringWreck premiered in April 2008 at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.
The result, which marks the choreographers first collaboration as a couple, could be described as cheerfully controlled chaos.
During the course of StringWreck, four dancers interact with four musicians with irreverent intimacy.
Music stands and musicians alike are picked up and positioned around the stage. Dancers waddle like ducks with violins tucked between their legs. Instruments fly through the air.
In one of the shows most humorous moments, dancers and musicians gargle water in unison.
They actually sing, Moulton said.
The action is set to a stirring soundtrack that includes Astor Piazzola, George Antheil and the classic childrens song Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star. Theres a feeling of two groups coming together to share their humanity, said Garrett, noting that much of StringWreck was inspired by improvisational games and exercises.
Moulton, her collaborator and life partner, agreed.
Whenever two groups come together like this, its very human, he said.
Connecting with audiences
So far, audiences and performing artists alike have embraced StringWreck, Garrett said.
She points to one review by San Francisco Guardian writer Rita Felciano that begins with the line, Gimmicks are all the rage these days.
Feliciano goes on to explain that while pulling the members of a string quartet out of their chairs to have them interact with dancers sounded like a clever marketing device, StringWreck is actually a deliciously entertaining, slightly wacky evening of music and dance that could charm a turnip.
Theres something about the piece that people really seem to connect to and resonate with, Garrett said.
We are very concerned with making work that reaches across the footlights of the stage and collects with the audience, she said. Were really looking at that process of trying to build connectivity.
Reach Sarah Linn at 781-7907.
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