The Transparent Recital (2003)

This week we look at a commissioned work from the hugely talented and irreverent Tedd Robinson. The Transparent Recital premiered in Toronto on a program entitled Home, and then toured to St. Mark’s Danspace in New York City, coinciding - purely coincidentally - with one of that city’s worst-ever blizzards, the President’s Day Blizzard in February 2003.

Of Tedd and this work, Peggy writes: Tedd Robinson had provided my very first opportunity for a solo concert in May 1990 as part of the 6th Festival of Canadian Modern Dance, an event he established in Winnipeg in 1985 and which flourished over seven years. He and I are part of the huge cohort of dancers who entered the dance world in the 1970s – both of us Libra Dragons born in 1952 – and nonetheless artists who have pursued very different paths. Tedd’s extraordinary signature as a solo performer in self-made works, and his far-ranging pursuits and accomplishments as a choreographer, artistic director, and mentor have made rich and profound contributions to Canada’s dance milieu over five decades and counting.

An admiring fan of his work, I took the opportunity of commissioning funds from Danspace Project in New York to invite Tedd to create a piece for me with cellist Shauna Rolston. Working with collaborators John Oswald (composer), Caroline O’Brien (costumes) and the late David Morrison (lighting), Tedd created a 30-minute work brimming with both poetry and peculiarity. My own reading of it cast Shauna and I as itinerant performers who each carried with us our childhood fantasies of being on stage. A suitcase I delivered from place to place finally came to rest beside a child-size chair in which I sat to open what turned out to be a victrola. I pulled a 78rpm recording out of a paper sleeve and when the needle was set down it played a recording of Shauna whistling a melody by Bach. After being seated on several of the full-size chairs ranged about the stage, Shauna also eventually arrived on a tiny chair where she took up her childhood instrument – a viola with an end pin – and played the music for the finale scene. Asked by Tedd for a possible title, I suggested The Transparent Recital and it sealed our work. PB

Tedd adds: When Peggy asked me to contribute a work to her repertoire, I was very honoured. We had known each other a long time and our aesthetics were complimentary but different.

I have found a rehearsal tape of the work and I am looking at it now as I write. Peggy is fearless, and what might seem comedic is just so broken and sad in my seeing of it, which I love. She makes this disjointed and non sequential and awkward movement narrative tell so many stories to me. There is posing in front of a microphone as if something important will be said then she walks away, to become a weird creature with thumb horns. Nothing makes sense, it is just so abstract. I would call it body intelligent abstract theatre, as Peggy’s body has so much intelligence.

I enjoyed watching the rehearsal tape so very much. So utterly odd! TR

“Baker shared the stage with one of Canada’s finest cellists, Shauna Rolston… As is so often the case with Tedd Robinson’s work, the ghost of René Magritte and his fellow surrealists seemed to be lurking in the background.” William Littler / The Toronto Star

To meet Tedd in the classic BathTub Bran series, visit YouTube here.

Le charme de l'impossible (1990)

This week we hear from Peggy on the solo she choreographed for herself while in the midst of leaving New York City, and travelling to various destinations for teaching engagements:

“I bartered my way into my debut as a solo dancer by agreeing to lead the May intensive workshop for Contemporary Dancers (in Winnipeg, my fifth year in a row) if then-Artistic Director Tedd Robinson would program me in his festival there. I was extremely curious about what I might make if I stepped into a studio to choreograph on myself.

I teamed up with the accompanist for my intensive classes, pianist Mark Kolt, and we started out by designing an elaborate rhythmic structure that we each held to. Mark had the rare and magical ability to take a pen in each hand and write a single sentence, from the middle out, with both hands simultaneously! Riffing on this, we devised a multitude of arch structures where phrases mirrored rhythmically or went into retrograde melodically from their half-way point. Mark made reference to arch systems employed by the composer Olivier Messiaen, who had used the phrase “le charme de l’impossible” to describe his fascination with the subliminal affects of reversals.

As with every dance, you are working things out in terms of your artistic practice, and there are also the complexities of your life - your inner world, your psychology - that you are working your way through simultaneously. In this case, what I was working at and what I was carrying were inextricably bound together. From the compositional premise to the movement language, there was a primary set of influences at play that unmistakably drove the dance. The choreographer Charlie Moulton could just as easily have made the solo for me; and if he had, he would have been under the sway of no one but himself.” - PB

For more reading on Olivier Messiaen and his arch structures, visit the Pirates and Revolutionaries blog here.