Dr_Jones wrote:I once read a report of a guy who was at the ballet. He said it was surreal, lots of industrial sounds. He liked it. I really need to find it again, it was somewhere on the internet.
That link is dead
http://le-club.mabulle.com/index.php/20 ... rseverance
However, I found it with the
Web Archive:
Tonight, I return to show business, for an image that dates back to 1974 I believe. I had the opportunity to see this year is a ballet called "contemporary" special order at very young artists. The ballet was built on the theme of the dance of seven veils in seven tables, therefore, with sets of lights, costumes, very simple music and "avant-garde." I am unable to describe the work, although I keep the impression of something pleasant. It is still not so old, and since then has seen other, so to speak, but for the time it was modern, very modern!
3 / 4 of an hour of dancing in a polite silence and anticipation, the curtain closes, then reopens for the greetings. And the chaos begins!
Not worthy of the celebrated rite of spring, but a beautiful ruckus nonetheless. Ballet salutes, stoic, and then turn it is the trio responsible, namely the choreographer, designer and musician. They appear on the front of the stage in a wave of shouts, cheers and boos mingled in a single wave, until the final closing curtain for the next piece. The choreographer is known to the world of dance, and become ballet master. The decorator was Wackevitch G., son of an equally famous designer, on the very young composer, looks unhappy, embarrassed, and not knowing what to do in the storm, his name, his name is always Jean-Michel Jarre.
Like what, we must persevere!
Love to all. Let us share your memories!