We’re now Facebookers and Twitters

Posted in news on June 15th, 2009

Steal This Dance now has a group on Facebook!

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A simple beginning to a complicated subject

Posted in mashup, research, sampling on April 18th, 2009

As part of my initial research for Punk Yankees, I asked the dancers to make a list of what they considered to be the most iconic moments in dance. It seemed a logical introduction into sampling dance to reproduce some of these classic moments. At the time, Beyonce had just released her “All the Single Ladies” video in which she samples Bob Fosse’s choreography in a questionable manner, so we thought it would be appropriate to appropriate her appropriation, and of course use her song.

Ultimately we sampled and mashed up over 30 iconic moments in dance, and put it to almost as many music samples in a “Single Ladies mash-up” created by Yea Big. Can you name all of the iconic moments? Look for clues to help you.

You can also watch us perform this dance in various site-specific locations, or buy the “how to” version for endless personal enjoyment.

—Julia Rhoads, Artistic Director

Choreography: More than the moves

Posted in choreography, rehearsal, sampling on April 5th, 2009

When we set out to sample the moves from an excerpt video of “Seder,” a work by choreographer Ohad Naharin performed by the Batsheva Ensemble (the second company of the Batsheva Dance Company), I was interested in the strange concept of making one continuous dance from a series of excerpts. But what ended up becoming more interesting to us was that sampling the moves – without context or direction from the choreographer – is endlessly problematic.

For many people, the word “choreography” is understood as being just the moves in a dance. Yet in reality, it encompasses a theoretical ecosystem of things both ephemeral and defined: conceptual ideas, arrangement of bodies, relationship to space, interaction between dancers, and the attention to dynamics, energy, quality, immediacy, and intent, to name a few. Often wed to the choreography are considerations about the relationship between the movement and the music, lights, costumes, text, and other media.

So with our best efforts to exactly replicate the movements from the Batsheva video (which is impossible, by the way), without replicating any other aspect of the choreography, we have found the results to be far more flat than its already 2-dimensional source. We also weren’t able to teleport ourselves in and out of the frame to match the number of dancers in each video cut, taking us farther away from anything Batsheva.

With respect to the music, Corona’s “Rhythm of the Night” was chosen because at one point we talked about creating some kind of cyclical loop that connects several of our YouTube samples. And this particular song is the music for the ever-so-fabulous credit reel of the French film Beau Travail, in which the lead actor (Denis Lavant) is dancing in a club. We referenced this video as an example of impersonations in our research at the Maggie Allesee National Center for Chorography. Ironically, the video was initially given a copyright violation on YouTube for usage of the song (not the moves!), so we had to use the audio from the camera, which is why it is so quiet.

The next time we revisit this Batsheva sample, it might be to appropriate the movement into a derivative composition, or to mash it up with Sara Carlson’s ever popular “Fly to Paradise” (but probably not) …or maybe just wear a different shirt.

—Julia Rhoads, Artistic Director