Bandaloop © SKepecs 2014 |
by Susan Kepecs
Around the world the number of popular uprisings
against the oil, narco, racist, sexist, military and political forces of global
capitalism increased this year. But can the people ever win? While you ponder the question, remember this:
at least there’s respite in the arts. Here,
in no particular order, are the performances I was most grateful for this
year.
Madison Opera’s Dead Man Walking,
April 25-27, in Overture Hall. Based on
the made-into-movie book by Sister Helen Prejean, composed by Jake Heggie with
libretto by Terrrence Nally, and directed and conducted by Maestro John Demain,
Dead Man Walking was the year’s most powerful production. The structure of this opera offers all the
elements of its traditional, nineteenth century predecessors – love, violence,
high drama – but the work is set compellingly in the zeitgeist of today. The music
– Stravinskyesque modern with touches of gospel, jazz and blues – plus the
industrial, Broadway-style set – grab a musty old artform by the horns and flip
it smack into the present. In Madison
Opera’s production the performances, especially by the leads – Daniela Mack as
Sister Helen Prejean and Michael Mayes as the murderer on death row, Joseph DeRocher
– were beautifully turned. The emotional impact of this opera on the audience was astonishing, and colossal social relevance of this exceptional
work of art was driven home again three days later, when the botched execution of an
Oklahoma death row inmate monopolized the national news.
Madison Ballet’s Repertory II program, March 21-22, at the Bartell. Three short ballets were on the
bill – two by artistic director W. Earle Smith (La Luce D’Amore, a pure ballet piece to a set of
Neopolitan folk
tunes, and Groovy, an ode to the
1960s), plus the concert version of Who
Cares?, George Balanchine’s Broadwayesque, Gershwin-scored gem from 1970. Much of the dance performance I saw this year
was formulaic and dull. But these
ballets sparkled, setting the company’s strong, polished dancers free, within
the neoclassical canon and the parameters of the choreography, to let loose and
dance for joy.
"Who Cares?" © SKepecs 2014 |
Juancho Martínez (L) and Aurelio Martínez © SKepecs 2014 |
Two
selections from the Eleventh Annual
Madison World Music Festival, Sept. 12-13, Memorial Union Terrace, the
Wisconsin Union Theater, and the Willy St. Fair. One was Aurelio
Martínez and the Garifuna Soul Band, from Honduras (Sept. 12, Shannon Hall
at WUT). No place on earth has more social problems than this crime-ridden ex-banana republic, and few people are more marginalized than the African / Caribbean Garifuna of Central America’s Atlantic coast. “I write songs about social problems,” guitarist / bandleader Martínez said onstage.“We are the voice of silence.” But no music has ever been more alegre –
smooth, rhythmic, tropical and transcendant, with a moral message for the ages:
you gotta dance to keep from cryin’. Congas,
hollow-log Garifuna drums, bass, dueling guitars – plus invited guest Juan
Tomás “Juancho” Martínez, of Golpe Tierra, Clan Destino, Acoplados and other smokin’
Mad City bands, on cajón and congas – put out irresistable punta and parranda
beats. Aurelio, possessed of a powerful
deep tenor and a supple guitar style, sang like a preacher, scatted like a jazzman, danced with the
spirits. “Like it?” he asked. “Garifuna soul!”
Bandaloop © SKepecs 2014 |
Million Dollar Quartet, May 13-18, Overture Hall.
The ebullient jukebox musical, revolving around a 1956 recording session at Sun Records in Memphis, featured killer musicians playing standout songs from the dawn of rock n’ roll. Corey Kaiser (as Jay Perkins) didn’t get as much spotlight as his collaborators (little brother Carl, Elvis, Johnny Cash, and Jerry Lee Lewis), but he was oh-so-cool, daddy-o, slappin’ and spinnin’ that standup bass, jitterbugging a foot all the while. James Barry (as Carl Perkins) pounded out hard-driving, two-fisted boogie-woogie and occasionally rippled a foot across the ivories for extra effect. And John Countryman (as Jerry Lee Lewis) stole the show, boppin’ his head and stompin’ his feet as he shook, rattled and rolled.
The ebullient jukebox musical, revolving around a 1956 recording session at Sun Records in Memphis, featured killer musicians playing standout songs from the dawn of rock n’ roll. Corey Kaiser (as Jay Perkins) didn’t get as much spotlight as his collaborators (little brother Carl, Elvis, Johnny Cash, and Jerry Lee Lewis), but he was oh-so-cool, daddy-o, slappin’ and spinnin’ that standup bass, jitterbugging a foot all the while. James Barry (as Carl Perkins) pounded out hard-driving, two-fisted boogie-woogie and occasionally rippled a foot across the ivories for extra effect. And John Countryman (as Jerry Lee Lewis) stole the show, boppin’ his head and stompin’ his feet as he shook, rattled and rolled.
Kanopy Dance’s performance of Martha Graham’s “Steps in the Street” at American
Kaleidoscope, Overture’s tenth anniversary celebration show, Sept. 27 in the
big hall. “Steps,” from 1936, is an absolutely striking
example of Graham’s early work and a veritable lexicon of her brilliant
modernist vocabulary. It requires
exacting, difficult modern dance technique, and it was rendered splendidly by
Kanopy’s dancers.
I’m giving
two local saoco salutes this year, both to institutions that serve up big doses
of performing arts happiness to the community on a regular basis. One goes to the Cardinal Bar, for all those Friday
happy hour jazz jam tribe
gatherings. Tony Castañeda’s Latin Jazz Quartet plays most first Fridays; the
rest of the month varies, but the rotation, mixing up Latin and straight-ahead,
often includes Golpe Tierra, Acoplados, Samba Novistas, El Clan Destino, the
Dave Stoler Trio, and Gerri DiMaggio among others.
Tony Castañeda at the Cardinal © SKepecs 2014 |
The other goes to the Greater Madison
Jazz Consortium for its 2014 Strollin’ Jazz Crawls. I only did the First
Settlement event, on Sept. 26, and even then I didn’t catch every act. But what
a pleasure to amble along East Wilson on a warm late September afternoon with
the community out in full force, relaxed and diverse – so conspicuously
different from the establishment formality of Overture’s American Kaleidoscope
show the following night. Such a stroke
of genius, turning Crowley Station (aka the concrete top of Municipal Well #17) into a bandstand for Jamie Kember’s Madison College Big Band and later,
Ladies Must Swing! Meanwhile, the great Jan
Wheaton’s joyous groove rocked the packed-to-the gills Cardinal across the
street. Formidable guitarist Louka
Patenaude plied his alt-country side at Tempest Oyster Bar, accompanied by
another guitar guru, Richard Hildner, plus John Christensen on bass and Juancho
Martínez on cajón.
© SKepecs 2014
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