Practitioner Study - Ghost Dances (5)

 I have chosen to study the piece, Ghost Dances, by Christopher Bruce. This piece is about people who have died, re-enacting specific moments in their lives. Bruce has used contrast between dancers, male dancers having more restricted upper body movements whereas the women have more of a free upper body. The context of Ghost Dances is based on powerful, political statement of human rights and how there are contrasting ways in which people live their lives, many suffering. This is shown through the contrast used with dancers. In the piece, some are re-living the happiest moments in their life before they die, whilst others are living the inhumane treatment that many occur around the world. 

 In this piece, Christopher Bruce works closely with the music in order to help portray the stimulus. He uses Folk music in the piece. Traditionally, "folk music fuelled both cultural spring and protest" (Foyer, 2015), and Bruce wanting the "wonderful music" to show people caught in "unnecessary violence" (Foyer 2015). Evidently, Bruce wanted to highlight how others were being effected by the inequality from political oppression through his choice of music, complementing his style of dance, using neoclassical movements. It is thought that folk music is the, "musical voice of resilience and resistance" (Newman, 2017). Bruce wanted to spread a message through the close relationship between music and movement, but through using more abstract ideas like the dead looking back on their lives. 

I also want to use my music as a way of portraying the protest against violence in war torn countries. The music I have chosen can help to show how peace should be incorporated into a society that is based on oppression. It does this by starting with strong dynamics, but through time incorporates more softer tones. I have complemented my music by incorporating similar dynamics in movements to portray my stimulus. Ghost dances is based on looking back on the past, whereas I want my piece to be more about protesting for peace in the present, amongst the violence. 



Bibliography:

Christopher Bruce's Ghost Dances | Playbill

Folk Music & Politics: Is It Still a Relevant Voice for the Resistance?| Billboard – Billboard

‌Foyer, M. (2015). Christopher Bruce’s Ghost Dances. [online] Playbill. Available at: https://www.playbill.com/article/christopher-bruces-ghost-dances.

Ghost Dances by Christopher Bruce Study Notes. (n.d.). Available at: https://www.rambert.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Ghost-Dances-Study-Notes-1.pdf#:~:text=Ghost%20Dances%20is%20a%20one-act%20dance%20work%20in [Accessed 4 Nov. 2023

Ghost Dances (rambert.org.uk)

.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BlUeaW8NEY&t=983s (8 mins-14 mins)

‌Newman, M. (2017). The Times They Are A-Changin’: Is Folk Music Still Relevant for the Resistance? [online] Billboard. Available at: https://www.billboard.com/music/music-news/folk-music-protest-politics-resistance-7694438/.

the Guardian. (2020). Take this waltz: Christopher Bruce on a life in dance and his Leonard Cohen dream. [online] Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2020/jul/29/dance-christopher-bruce-dream.


Comments

  1. How did Christopher Bruce create the choreography for Ghost Dances?

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    1. Christopher Bruce invented his own style of folk dance, based on traditional folk dance. He also combined both his own classical training, with Graham-based modern technique. Bruce used movements that demonstrated natural behaviours, for example sighing, heavy breathing and walking. He works closely with the music when choreographing this piece, and gives an essence of simplicity in his choreography. For example, repeating certain phrases throughout the piece, such as completely relaxed upper body in lunges and ripples of the body to show suffering and perhaps exhaustion.

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