Of the many forms of artistic expression that humanity has contrived for purposes of aesthetic fulfilment and popular entertainment, ballet is the one that leaves me coldest.
I can just about tolerate, in a maudlin Merry Christmas sort of way, a very traditional comic piece like The Nutcracker – or maybe I can just tolerate The Nutcracker. And even then it’s the music I enjoy, not the prancing. Just as the tone-deaf Captain Hornblower would rather be on deck receiving a full broadside from a French frigate than be forced to sit through a musical concert (to him all music is a mysterious, meaningless cacophony of scraping and yelling); and just as Britterina would rather undergo root canal work than watch a cricket match on television; so it is with ballet and me: I gaze on, nonplussed and frustrated, at professional dancers going about their business, helplessly searching for some kind of cultural connection, or at least basic amusement.
Ballet criticism, however, is another matter. The writings of Clement Crisp – one of the most acerbic and pithy critics of the London theatre scene – are well worth reading. In a review of the show “Bussell and Zelensky” in today’s Financial Times, he neatly encapsulates everything I most fear and loathe about my artistic nemesis:
Zelensky then appears in 18 minutes of Russian angst (even more fraught than the usual brand) made by Alla Sigalova and “inspired” by a poem by Osip Mandelstam about “a man who is trying to learn infinity’s rules and understand himself”.
Black curtains are lowered behind him, he flails about as a Handel concerto grosso wends its way, and nothing happens at all, save the thought that differences in our views about what is “choreography” and what is dreary posturing are as vast as the distance between London and Novosibirsk, where Zelensky now directs the ballet troupe.
After a gaping interval, three couples from his Siberian troupe appear in “Whispers in the Dark”, one of those murky exercises in which the performers romp in all-too-familiar permutations over a stage made less than interesting by shafts of light and dry ice. A score by Philip Glass. Exquisitely predictable activity from girls in flat shoes and horrid little black frocks (which make them look, shall we say, stalwart, as does the choreography) and men in black leotards and bare chests.
The Nutcracker at Christmas is one thing. But in my vision of Hell, a man in a leotard endlessly dances a Russian poem about a man who is trying to learn infinity’s rules and understand himself, on a stage made less interesting by shafts of light and dry ice.
Precisely - I accept that the skills are impressive - but then I'd rather watch gymnastics or acrobats for physical excellence.
ReplyDeleteAnd even then, as you say, interest can only be sustained for so long.
I can marvel at one teenage elf performing quadruple somersaults with twist and pike or whatever, but by the seventh almost-identical-but-disinguishable-by-the-expert-eye-of-the-judge teenage elf routine I'm ready to clean out the oven or defrost the refridgerator in preference to more.
I've had enough of watching some bloke in spandex illustrating his inner existential torment by writhing around as if in physical torment, and demonstrating his internal cries for help by making pleading motions to the stage wings, and of representing the societal binds that constrain him by doing all the above in a giant theatrical cage.
ReplyDeleteSo yes, let's do The Great Train Robbery - but instead of prancing about we'll make the actors walk, and instead of conveying the plot through elaborate mimes and gestures, we'll simplify it by giving them lines to speak, and instead of a 'ballet' we'll call it a 'play'. Now that I could dig.
It's a dead cinch that ballet wouldn't exist except for Team Estrogen. Whether TE intrinsically enjoys ballet, or finds the spectacle secondary to their ability to subject us to torture most exquisite is a matter of some debate amongst experts.
ReplyDeleteAs it happens, my one and only visit to this particular rack was in Oxford, at the behest of TE (but not SWIPIAW -- let's be clear on this), to see The Nutcracker.
What I remember are two things:
shuffle-tromp-shuffle-shuffle-tromp that so much seemed to go on for ever that I am probably still there in some alternate, and ultimately disagreeable universe --
and
the immersion in an ennui so thick, lifeless and gray as to be a reasonable simlacrum of this universe's ultimate thermodynamic death.
It is a very close call, though, as to whether it is worse than opera.
Mind you, "an ennui so thick, lifeless and gray as to be a reasonable simlacrum of this universe's ultimate thermodynamic death" is pretty much how I feel about Formula 1 racing.
ReplyDeleteRe opera, Nabakov claimed that our existence is but a brief crack of light between two eternities of darkness, and opera is tolerable for those brief moments - the Big Tunes - between eternities of the "Recitative" - the interminable wandering bits necessary for maintaining the plot.
Brit:
ReplyDeleteMind you, "an ennui so thick, lifeless and gray as to be a reasonable simlacrum of this universe's ultimate thermodynamic death" is pretty much how I feel about Formula 1 racing.
Mind you, I am a F1 fan.
And, oddly enough, completely understand the intense boredom field that would nearly instantly envelope all but the spectacularly brain damaged.
Peter:
ReplyDeleteThe real name for golf is Whackdamn, and there is no more sure way to ruin a fine afternoon's walk.
As for opera, your comment reminds me of when I a discussion long ago between one guy who owned a Mazda RX-7, and a couple of us who owned a different kind of sports car.
At one point he said, in as concise a refutation of philosophy as I have ever heard: "You guys aren't having as much fun (or in the present case, boredom) as you think you are.
Brit:
ReplyDelete"...instead of prancing about we'll make the actors walk, and instead of conveying the plot through elaborate mimes and gestures, we'll simplify it by giving them lines to speak, and instead of a 'ballet' we'll call it a 'play'. Now that I could dig.
Precisely. This encapsulates exactly why I can't be doing with ballet (or indeed opera, though I have never sat down and really tried hard to enjoy either). Good music should make you want to close your eyes and sink into a state of blissful exploration of one of your senses. I don't want to be watching someone acting out the story of the music at the same time, partly because I want to create my own stories and subtexts.
Opera, I like, though I haven't been to one in ages, due to the lack of a willing partner. My wife, while we were together, would never step foot in an opera, or even suffer to have it on the TV. In most marriages it is the other way around. What's that line about irony and the universe?
ReplyDeleteThe Nutcracker is enjoyable, for all the reasons that Brit can't stand it - the so called maudlin angle, which for how he uses the term I take it to mean music that is, you know, musical. But for most other dance performances I would have to agree with the consensus. Dance really has a very limited vocabulary. It is ironic that in the art forms that have greater vocabularies, such as painting, modern artists choose to paint about nothing, whereas with dance, which is really about nothing, choreographers try to get it to make some statement or tell a story.
Peter,
ReplyDeleteWhile awaiting our host's reply to your request, let me venture my own explanation. It seems that our host, judging from the recent photo of him reading "young hornblower" on the veranda of his Greek hideaway, is considerably younger than the rest of the PostJudd nexus, and would qualify for the title "Gen-X'er", if not of a later lineage. We of the Boomer lineage grew up listening to our parent's recordings of 101 Strings, Ferrante & Teicher and other postwar romantic throwbacks to a simpler time.
We then went on to popularize 60's era Rock & Roll, which for all its purported rebelliousness was suffused with emotional earnestness and romantic idealizations of its own.
Then the Gen-X'ers came along and needed their own cultural Zeitgeist in reaction to all this emotional earnestness, and irony as a lifestyle was born. Irony is about not taking emotions and ideals seriously. It is the opposite of earnestness and romanticism. Gen-X ironists like to play with the emotional repertoire without really admitting to it. It is like OJ's recent aborted book deal. They like songs that make statements like "If I cared about you leaving me, I'd sing a song like this".
It is a phase. Their children will react in turn, and Montovani, Tammy Wynette and Barry Manilow will be redeemed as musical gods.
Peter, there was more to 60's music than just sex 'n stuff. There were the Cowsills, as you pointed out (from my home state of RI, by the way). There were songs with lyrics like "it is soo groovy now, that people are finally getting together", and "up up and away in my beautiful balloon", and "he ain't heavy, he's my brother". All that Age of Aquarius optimism and stuff.
ReplyDeleteHave patience - a forthcoming post will define 'maudlin' so that there can be no further doubt on the point.
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, I am Gen-X, but that fact has never influenced my tastes.
Peter, sex does not negate the earnestness angle of the 60's. In fact, I'd say that sex is the thing that humans are the most earnest about. Do you think the great, maudlin romantic symphonies of the late 19th century had nothing to do with sex? Do you think the ballads of Frank Sinatra had nothing to do with sex? They were just more discreet before the 60s.
ReplyDeleteBoomers were very earnest about sex, because they somehow got it in their mind that they invented it, and that this discovery of theirs was going to change the world. Make love not war. Once everyone gave up their sexual hangups and let it all hang out, we would all live in peace. John Lennon's "Imagine" is nothing if not a treacly, maudlin anthem to earnest hippie idealism.
Wasn't that by the Little Rascals?
ReplyDeletePeter, you seem to have an enormous mental block where the 60s are concerned. All you can see whenever that decade is mentioned is flashing red neon "XXX Sex, Sex, Sex XXX". Even with its excesses, 60s music rarely expressed sexual desire that crudely. That had to wait for Hip Hop.
''"Even with its excesses, 60s music rarely expressed sexual desire that crudely."
ReplyDeleteVelvet Underground did, though, start 'Venus in Furs' with the lines
Shiny, shiny, shiny boots of leather
Whiplash girlchild in the dark
and went on to talk about a "tongue of thongs" and "tasting the whip".
And it's interesting to note that that particular band was a big influence on the very irony-rich Generation X-ers mentioned earlier in the discussion.
I thought it began in 1963.
ReplyDeletePeter, so were you a hippie? Young Augustine, maybe?
ReplyDeleteThanks Peter. That's all I needed to complete my psycho-sexual profile, the dossier is complete. My masters are very demanding, need to get it to the courier by 4:00 this afternoon.
ReplyDelete