Showing posts with label mixed programme. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mixed programme. Show all posts

Saturday, 7 April 2012

Polyphonia/Sweet Violets/Carbon Life - Review Roundup

Bill Cooper - Royal Opera House
When I saw this new mixed programme on opening night I wasn't overwhelmed, nor was I dissapointed. It stood somewhere is the middle of the two. This is what the critics made of it:

The Telegraph
Sarah Crompton in The Telegraph gave the programme a generous four stars and stated that she thought Carbon Life was 'a blast', though she wasn't 'entirely sure that the piece...will have that long a shelf life' - something which I agree with and wrote about in my review. Crompton continues by saying that 'it looks lovely' and that 'the whole thing has visceral energy'. However, she was 'less keen of Gareth Pugh's angular costumes'. 'It feels like a young man's ballet, but the talent shown within in it is seriously mature' is how Crompton concludes her review of Sweet Violets - coming to the conclusion that it is 'Polyphonia which provides the most thoughtful and refined treat of the evening'.   

The Independent
Zoë Anderson in The Independent gave a less complimentary review of the programme, giving it an overall rating of three stars. 'Busy' is how she describes Wayne McGregor's Carbon Life - Anderson also states that the 'music and dancing both get repetitive', yet the 'gorgeous beginning' is 'shamelessly pretty'. Sweet Violets is decribed as being a 'mess of bad and good ideas', but also compliments the 'superb cast', which I found was 'perfect'. Like Sarah Crompton in The Telegraph, Anderson calls Polyphonia 'sleek and just right' - a sign that they found the two new works inferior to the opening of the programme.  

The Guardian
Judith Mackrell in The Guardian has given the Royal Ballet's new mixed programme an average three stars. Like the other reviewers, Mackrell found that it was Polyphonia which 'takes the honours' as its 'scrupulous, passionate cast, exposes the excess baggage' the two new works hold. Talking of Liam Scarlett's Sweet Violets, Mackrell states that it 'could be a seriously fine ballet' if it weren't for 'too many characters' and 'too much back story'. When it comes to Wayne McGregor's new work Carbon Life, Mackrell believes that it 'lacks the eerie internal beauty' of his 'best work', though also pointing out that it 'rocks, exactly as it was meant to'.

Financial Times
Clement Crisp in the Financial Times has awarded this programme two stars, beginning by saying that 'Polyphonia came to the rescue of an otherwise disappointing programme'. Crisp states that Liam Scarlett's Sweet Violets is 'emotionally clogged' and a 'long-winded event'. Carbon Life, a new work by McGregor, is stated to have 'superb lighting', yet 'the innate classicism of his [McGregor's] dancers and the tics of his mannerisms...distorts...the qualities of his cast'.  

The rest of the reviews are not out yet and I will add them when appropriate.

Friday, 6 April 2012

Polyphonia/Sweet Violets/Carbon Life - Royal Opera House

Christopher Wheeldon's Polyphonia
Before coming to see this new mixed programme from the Royal Ballet, I had little knowledge of Polyphonia yet knew quite a bit, surprisingly, of Liam Scarlett's new ballet Sweet Violets and Wayne McGregor's new piece Carbon Life. Of course, they were the ballets everyone was waiting for, but did they live up to the hype they created?
First up was Christopher Wheeldon's Polyphonia, an abstract piece set to György Ligeti's sharp and jumpy music. As much as I enjoyed this refined and visually beautiful piece, it's quick wit and soft touch made in lose focus for me. Many of the sequences were haunting and emotionally taught, but when the odd humorous gesture was thrown in for good measure it lost some clarity of the direction it was heading in, and how it wanted its audience to view it. Despite this, I did enjoy this quick and lyrical work which no doubt will remain in the Royal Ballet's repetoire for many years.
Carbon Life, on the other hand, will most probably not stay in their repertoire. I say this not because it is bad, but that to create the full effects it would need the original performers and band. Carbon Life is the new ballet by the Royal Ballet's choreographer is residence Wayne McGregor - it combines dance, music and visual aesthetics to create a show which is maybe trying to be a bit too clever. Split into segments, this ballet charts the cycle of life and love. The opening of this new work shows the dancers naked as embryos - their bodies flowing in pools of gold light - and it ends with them in Gareth Pugh's multi-angled black hats, tutus and gloves. As cutting edge as this new work was, some of the segments were messy and badly calculated, whilst others were tight which created a polarisation in the piece.
The inclusion of live music from Mark Ronson, Boy George, Alison Mosshart and many others provided the audience with some great and memorable tracks. The problem, though, with this very direct musical approach was that it was distracting as I found myself focusing of Mosshart's fiery red hair instead of some of the duets between the dancers - which was taking a backseat? Sadly, I would have to say the dancers who came across as backing dancers throughout. I did love the individual components of this performance, but something just didn't fit; it was missing a gel which, if present, would have made Carbon Life a highly successful and breathtaking work of epic proportions.
Liam Scarlett's Sweet Violets, a new work taking inspiration from Sickert's paintings of the Camden murder, is full to the brim of sex and violence - making this work a passionate and enthralling piece of dance. Steven McRae, Alina Cojocaru, Laura Morera, Tamara Rojo and Thiago Soares make for a perfect, principal, first cast of this chilling tale set in a world of prostitution, political corruption and bribery. The set, like the action holds a few surprises and the atmospheric lighting adds another dimension to the best work in the mixed programme.      

Playing at the Royal Opera House until Monday, April 23rd.