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SOUP
D-9 Dance Collective
March 2-4 at Odd Fellows Hall
But it's a reunion sponsored, at least in part, by a new generation of Seattle dance, not so clearly tied to these influences. The D-9 Dance Collective comes from a different, more diverse background, and for many of them, this is new material.
Coleman and Freedman often make highly dramatic works, and Dent, a duet to excerpts from the Neil Young score for the film Dead Man, is in that vein. They've described it as an exploration of intimacy, loss, and reconciliation. Their group work for D-9, Falling, set to a compilation of Roy Orbison songs, sounds like it has a more ironical twist, an "ode" to love, longing, and ugly prom dresses.
Madsen seems to alternate between theatrical material and what performers often call "dancey dancing." It's there that we see his Evans heritage most clearly, with its compelling sequential quality, the spine unfurling from tail to head, the arms almost boneless as they fold and refold around the torso. Dress, a solo set to Andrew Lloyd Weber's Requiem, is so beautiful it feels almost disturbing, rather like Charlotte Church, the wunderkind soprano. This is in contrast to his campy work, which Flame, using the Peggy Lee recording of "Fever" promises to be. Between those poles he's made In Search of Dulcinaea for his own group, based on the Cervantes novel, and Speed of Time, a new solo for himself focused on Einstein's concepts of time and space.
Although plans for the concert have come together more from serendipity than design, it does serve to reinforce and enliven part of our local dance history. It may not be a deliberate cross-section from our family tree, but it's a good snapshot for the album.