Saturday, April 28, 2018

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TAKE A LITLE TIME FOR CULTURE
    Living out here in the hinterland of apple orchards and vineyards, I was delighted to come across a couple of up-to-date  dances as I am frankly bored with classic ballet , not so much as their incredible technique but the use of the same old stories, no matter how great they were 200 years ago.  There are a very few Groups out there who ask "How can I utilize an old story
     and make it it into modern culture? I've already mentioned the fabulous movie made by Carlos Saura, a Spaniard, featuring Antonio Gades, who has a Flamenco School of Dance in a very modern building, Gades is rehearsing his contemporary idea of Bizet's 'Carmen" and significantly finds a young , beautiful student who fills part , at least in Antonios mind.  He guides us all the way thru he rehearsal, with all manner of Flamenco ; older women, who really know how to dance & sing, to guitarist such as Paco de Luca, some  fighting using canes for damage and rhythm. This is one video you will want to own. Which I did.  Done about 1970.  I recently found another version of 'Carmen ' by Gades & Saura. It was a performed in the Teatro de Madrid and a different version of the movie, but so well done.
   I became interested in the derivation of Modern Dance, which seems to have originated in North America, so I started with Ted Shawn, who seemed to be breaking the mold a bit, but he mostly had a male dance group due his preference for homosexuality. Maybe around  1916, But from his group came Ruth St. Denis, around 1916, and then, thank Allah, Martha Graham came out of that group. Then from there was Merce Cunningham and even later, Twyla Tharp. I got into all of that as I had met Cunningham in later fifties to help him set up a show in Scottsdale, then a small western type town in Arizona. By the way, Martha Graham died of old age and alcoholism and not by losing her scarf around a playboys sport car. (Sorry)
  Anyway, back to some great dancing for your enjoyment on You Tube. I might add that the artists Stella, Raushenberg and Jon Cage (music) worked  with Merce for quite a while. Cages music was the perfect foil for Merce’s movements.
  Next, I found Twyla Tharps 'Barishnikov  does  Sinatra’, and I was shall we call it "enchanted".
   Now I've set you up for the ultimate (so far) interpretation of the Tango by Roland Petits' . 'Bolero'.    Petit was the choreographer for the Le Ballet de Paris, the oldest ballet company in the world. (Yes, before the Bolshoi) .He used the music "Bolero" by Ravels and with only two dancers (Takes two to Tango,eh) did an exemplar art job of producing the ultimate tango, using Massimo Murro and Lucia Lacarra, she on points and he throwing her around except succumbing at the end to full blossoming love. I would like to watch it more but the Bolero music is the kind that sticks in your mind. I can't imagine how many years I took to clear the dancers' brain.
Wee, these will keep you occupied for hours on end but  you will gain  from it. 

  This all got me thinking about the reason and derivation of dance or 'Movements" as the highly esteemed and revered Georgi Gurdjieff calls it. he was an /Armenian (Russian) mystic who escaped Russia just before the revolution of 1917. He gathered a small group of "Seekers of Truth" and bounced around the Caucasus, evading capture by one side or the other. He was (is) a very controversial figure as no one seems to know what he was teaching. Anyway, he had studied much of the esoteric dances of the monasteries of the East and incorporated them in his teachings. His legacy is mostly from his music that he had Thomas de Hartman, who had done some work for Bolshoi Ballet, which spawned several CD's of the music One of the first was performed by Kieth Jarret, The jazz pianist.
   The derivation of Dancing turns out to be too much for your humble ranter to document, but at least let me get in a rough outline to begin;
  Who began dancing around after the apes? Or do apes do it?

1.      Did Mr. Caveman dance around the fire after a good kill?
2.  Were the first dancers organized  to transmit sacred knowledge?
3.  Each. Country seems to have a dance for festive occasions, where the whole village got involved, such as the "Greek" dances to the tune of the balaliaika.
4.  When did the first dances performed for an audience? Who were the audience? 
5.  Only as  late as 1400's did ballet (as it was called) appear on the French scene due the the involvement of the King.  Now you will know why all the moves are in French, even in Russia
6.  By 1800's the Russians had the franchise to develope it  to the greatest  extant  and become the premier group for hundreds of years.
7. But early 1900's The Bauhaus and dance schools in the US  and Germany (Bauhaus) appeared  were tired of the usual boring shows.
8.  Was it Ted Shawn who broke the mold around 1915?
9.  Ruth St. Denis followed suite in 1916. She had studied East Indian Dances that told stories (Although pretty uninteiigble to us)
10.  Was Martha Graham the truly first Modern Dancer?
11.  Merce Cunningham came out of that of those studios about 1940's, utilizing the talents of avant guarded musicians like John Cage, artists such as Frank Stella & Raushenberg for sets and costumes.
12. Twyla Harp is about last on my list as I have Been lax these last few years., although I thorouhly enjoy her use of Barishnikov interpreting some of Sinatras Songs. 
   If you don't believe me, see some of the Sacred Movements that Gurdjieff learned in the East and transmitted to his students. (You Tube) The difference here is that his 'Students' were all 'amateurs & seekers'  but not professional dancers at all. Google "Gurdjieff Dances".
13.  But I did come across some Esoteric Eastern dancers where the men danced mostly on their balls of the foot but more surprisingly, a few had on Toe shoes, looking pretty much like 'Pointes'. I'm trying to re-find it on You Tube. That makes more sense as there is little creativity in dance groups, except for the leader.


Old BMW??



CALIFORNIA MILLE MIGLIA
??
    This seems to be a secret but it happens every year at this time and the route is all around us. 
the original race is still performed in Italy but it's more of a Rally as they stopped racing when a car crashed into a couple of dozen by-standers and killed them all. They will be going thru Valley Ford Thursday and we'll be in the bar of the restaurant watching them wiz by in their old Bugatti's, Jaguars, Alfa Romeros etc.on their return to the Bay Area For details, see California Mille.  It's a strange sport group in Europe, fans will camp and wait for days until the bicycle or old classic cars flash by in seconds. And I suspect most of the old car owners are wealthy as some send their cars over from Italy on a plane.
  
FOR THE YOUNGER FOLKS who may not know;
  About the time you were born an artist by the name Jean Tinguely built some very complicated and incredible stable  machines that don't move but can draw, make squeaky noises  and will amuse you endlessly.

HAPPY ENDINGS
    What is it about ending books and movies with 'The Happy Ending' where everyone will be happy ever after? I recently had Seen the most recent version of THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME where the ending was kind of obscured when the couple walked out of a small portal  of the Notre Dame,  leaving me a little confused. Therefore, I bit the bullet and procured a copy of Victor Hugo's , which he wrote in 1831. I can't comment on the other versions of the movie but this one got it all wrong. After two hours or so of superb acting , the director or some idiot changed the whole sene, ergo, the entire concept of the plot. I saw the version with Anthony Hopkins as Quasimodo (Meaning half a person) and Rita Hayworth as Esmeralda.  They didn't follow Hugo's script as the luscious girl should end up hanging from the gibbet until dead, while Mr. Humpback  fell off of Notre Dame but should have disappeared and found the girl on the goul pile where  his  entertewined skeleton is found years later. The priest? Who gives a shit, he just died like everyone else falling or pushed off of the church, he just couldn't stand being I love with a teen-ager.

THINK ABOUT THINK TANKS.
   I've always been a little curious about how these illustrious schools for thought (Tank?) were funded, so I did the obvious and googled it.  I never thought much about them, but when I discovered Cato Institute had a FOX News person on the Board I thought I'd better take a closer look. It turns out 2/3 of the Think Tanks' took money from Oil companies. Half are funded by ExxonMobil, and 1/3 by Chevron. Koch, Shell Oil and ConocoPhillips-Phillips each funded three.  Hmmmmm. Do you think that has any effect on what they are supposed to be studying?   "Staffers are clearly instructed to check with the  'Tanks Development Team' before writing anything that might upset contributors