Proving once again that Nashville’s Music City moniker isn’t limited to twangy tunes and honky tonks, Nashville Ballet is presenting their genre-jumping collaboration with musician/singer/songwriter/composer/producer Ben Folds for the triumphant return of Nashville Ballet Artistic Director Paul Vasterling’s The Ben Fold Project: Concerto at TPAC’s Jackson Hall, April 26-28.
Having originally debuted as part of Nashville Ballet’s 2014 season, The Ben Folds Project: Concerto has since enjoyed performances at The Kennedy Center in 2017 and the Chautauqua Institution in 2018. Folds has also performed the music from the concerto with various major symphony orchestras across the country, but the upcoming TPAC dates mark the first time since the collaboration’s 2014 debut that Folds will perform the music alongside the Nashville Symphony while members of Nashville Ballet dance the piece as choreographed by Vasterling.
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, composed by Folds and commissioned by Nashville Ballet, when released as a sound recording, topped both the Billboard Classical and Classical Crossover charts. The 21-minute, three movement piece will be presented as part of Nashville Ballet’s Modern Masters series, a collection of work highlighting the evolution and wide-ranging scope of the artful dance form.
The Ben Folds Project: Concerto will be followed by a brief 15-minute intermission before the presentation of three additional masterworks. Duo Concertant, Bloom Pas de Deux and The Lottery will also be presented as part of Nashville Ballet’s Modern Masters series each night of the program’s run.
According to information obtained from Nashville Ballet, “The works selected for this series illustrate the ways in which the artform has transformed in the 20th and 21st centuries by showcasing works from neoclassical and contemporary choreographers that have helped to challenge and expand ballet’s boundaries through big ideas and intriguing collaborations.”
Having made it’s Nashville Ballet debut last December during Paul Vasterling’s 20th Anniversary Nashville Ballet Ball, the central pas of choreographer Annabelle Lopez Ochoa’s Bloom returns to the stage once more.
Details from Nashville Ballet reveal, “The work, set on Ballet Manila, was Lopez Ochoa’s first for an Asian dance company. As a result, Lopez Ochoa uses movements and gestures reflective of Asian culture within the choreography. Inspired by a Balinese ritual, Bloom depicts a floral offering in which the male dancer represents gratitude and the female dancer represents the flower.” Philip Glass’ score will be performed by the Nashville Symphony as company members perform the piece while wearing costumes originally designed by the choreographer. Interestingly, Lopez Ochoa also designed the original lighting, which is being recreated by Scott Leathers.
Featuring George Balanchine’s original choreography and Igor Stravinsky’s beautiful music as performed for Nashville Ballet’s presentation by pianist Alessandra Volpi and violinist Christina McGann and staged by Balanchine Ballet Mistress, Victoria Simon, Duo Concertant presents the piece in such a way that the audience will no doubt immediately become immersed. In the first of the work’s five movements, dancers gather ‘round to listen to the musicians. During the next three movements, the dancers begin to feel the music, erupting in an animated dance that celebrates the joy of the music. In the fifth and final movement, the stage darkens with spotlights focusing on two dancers moving to the final notes of the piece in solitary circles of light.
Even the most casual ballet fan should recognize the iconic names most-associated with Duo Concertant—legendary 19th century classical composer, Stravinsky, and Balanchine, the father of American ballet, 20th century dancer/choreographer. Stravinsky first presented the composition in 1932 when he dedicated the piece to his friend and frequent violin accompanist, Samuel Dushkin. Some forty years later, Balanchine chose to choreograph the piece as a highlight of the 1972 Stravinsky Festival, one year after the famed composer’s death.
Following a second brief intermission, Nashville Ballet will close the program by presenting the Nashville premiere of Val Caniparoli’s The Lottery. Based on Shirley Jackson’s 1948 short story, The Lottery, in its original form is the stuff thought-provoking nightmares and required book reports are made of. Choreographer Caniparoli returns the audience to the familiar, yet hauntingly thrilling story of a unjust society as townsfolk prepare for an annual mandatory lottery. Unlike most lotteries, this prize isn’t highly sought-after, for the drawing will seal one person’s fate as their life will be sacrificed for the good of the community. In a creative twist, during each night’s performance, an actual live drawing will take place, determining which company member will be chosen for the ballet’s final solo, promising that no two performances will be the same.
The Ben Folds Project, part of Nashville Ballet’s Modern Masters series, will be presented at TPAC’s Jackson Hall Friday and Saturday, April 26 & 27 at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, April 28 at 2 p.m. Tickets to Ben Folds with Nashville Ballet featuring Concerto, Duo Concertant, Bloom Pas de Deux and The Lottery range in price from $40-$98. To purchase tickets, visit TPAC’s Box Office (505 Deaderick Street), or call the Box Office at 615.782.4040 or CLICK HERE.
Next up for Nashville Ballet, on Saturday, May 4, at 10 a.m., based on Laurence Anholt’s children’s book of the same name, members of the company will present a special FREE performance of Degas and the Little Dancer at the Williamson County Library (1314 Columbia Ave, Franklin, TN 37064).
Then, May 31-June 3, Nashville Ballet will dance to my absolute favorite classical piece, Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana on stage at Nashville’s glorious Schermerhorn Symphony Center. CLICK HERE for details and for the ballet’s full calendar of events. You can also follow Nashville Ballet on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.
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