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Celtic bird movement
MATTHEW HAWKINS applauds two evocative new productions that have premiered at the Edinburgh Fringe before touring nationwide

The Flock and Moving Cloud
Scottish Dance Theatre, Zoo Southside, Edinburgh

 

 

IN a festival strewn with autobiography and confessional stand-up, it’s arresting to witness the facial neutrality of a dance troupe bent on conveying the ideas of an objective author. 

Scottish Dance Theatre (the only full-time contemporary dance company extant north of the border) invites dance makers from far afield to their Dundee base. The visitors encounter a team with the discipline and skill to stick to a choreographic script, in conduit-mode.

SDT’s current double bill (at Zoo Southside and touring Britain until the end of September) opens with The Flock, a buy-in production initially staged in Catalonia. Migratory bird behaviours are cited as inspiration. 

Creature imitation is always a safe topic; yet these performers retain much that is human, including a non-avian propensity for casual dress. We witness calisthenics amid a mathematical sequence. An insistent beat falls silent, the lights go out. Scene two starts with a haunting image of where all are heaped in states of apparent collapse. Survivors self-nominate. They gradually revive the comatose. 

At the rigorous behest of choreographer Roser Lopez Espinoza we are all drawn into this powerful episode and its feats of weight-bearing. Sculptural acrobatics ensue, where some behave as jugglers’ semi-animate implements, albeit life-sized and in enigmatic states of deep conscious trust.

Fascination diminishes when the dancers, soloists now, begin to enact high-risk, high maintenance moves using the currency of a global contemporary dance movement. The repeated flash of credentials keeps this viewer at arm’s length, especially when pack manoeuvres accumulate. There again, poignancy is present in measurable achievement — how this results from years of investment, vulnerability and commitment. Individual prowess “takes a village,” as we know. Being in this audience was akin to being part of that village.

The Flock’s varied registers of watchability invoke distanced thinking: following an interval A Moving Cloud proves refreshingly immediate. The vibe here is one of second wind. Stocking-footed guests seem to have snuck down for a nocturnal fridge-raid in some baronial kitchen. Nightshirts a-billow, they catalyse each other to a pre-dawn romp. 

Traditional Celtic music is played live by TRIP at some performances — though not acoustically (sigh). This sound world is perfect for a dance we might be doing. Must we be wallflowers? 

With adroit flair, Sofia Nappi finds a choreographic language of impulse and detail that is fully involving for dancer and witness. We are looking at a rich multimedia counterpoint. 

Conduit changes to ownership. Our venue is packed to the rafters. These were raised.

Runs until August 25. Box office: (0131) 662-6892, zoovenues.co.uk; On tour in Britain until September 28. For more information see: dundeerep.co.uk.

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