Choreographers and Musicians in Collaboration, from the Twentieth to the Twenty-First Century

Press/Media

Description

Traditionally, dance has always needed music, although over the last century, this relationship has frequently been questioned. This chapter charts key historical shifts in choreomusical thinking, followed by a series of contemporary case studies demonstrating a range of approaches to, as well as commonalities across time in, the theories and practices of collaboration. Evidence shows increasingly independent, multidimensional, even oppositional relations between music and dance and a new fluidity in the behavior of artists, enabled partly by the advent of super-fast technology. In dance, relatively little information is available on the nature of creative processes, especially on musical issues. For the case studies, this chapter incorporates new interview material with choreographers and musicians based in the UK: Wayne McGregor, at home in both contemporary dance and ballet; Shobana Jeyasingh, who draws from South Asian classical and Western dance practices; and the performance duo Jonathan Burrows and Matteo Fargion

Subject

Engages with the collaboration Flickr, involving British composer Michael Nyman and Irish composer Jürgen Simpson with choreographer Shobana Jeyasingh. Considers also the earlier collaboration between Jürgen Simpson and south african composer Kevin Volans.

Period10 Jul 2018

Media coverage

1

Media coverage

  • TitleChoreographers and Musicians in Collaboration, from the Twentieth to the Twenty-First Century
    Degree of recognitionInternational
    Media name/outlet The Oxford Handbook of the Creative Process in Music
    Media typePrint
    Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
    Date10/07/18
    DescriptionTraditionally, dance has always needed music, although over the last century, this relationship has frequently been questioned. This chapter charts key historical shifts in choreomusical thinking, followed by a series of contemporary case studies demonstrating a range of approaches to, as well as commonalities across time in, the theories and practices of collaboration. Evidence shows increasingly independent, multidimensional, even oppositional relations between music and dance and a new fluidity in the behavior of artists, enabled partly by the advent of super-fast technology. In dance, relatively little information is available on the nature of creative processes, especially on musical issues. For the case studies, this chapter incorporates new interview material with choreographers and musicians based in the UK: Wayne McGregor, at home in both contemporary dance and ballet; Shobana Jeyasingh, who draws from South Asian classical and Western dance practices; and the performance duo Jonathan Burrows and Matteo Fargion
    Producer/AuthorStephanie Jordan
    URLhttps://academic.oup.com/edited-volume/42047/chapter/355802780
    PersonsJurgen Simpson

Keywords

  • dance performance
  • collaboration
  • Interdisciplinary
  • Contemporary Music
  • Indian Dance
  • Choreomusical relations
  • collaborative process