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Several of Lamblin's musical sculptures are making a return appearance here, such as the "Rumitone," which is named after the 13th-century Persian mystic but resembles a kind of spinning nose cone with violin strings, and the "Longwave," a set of harp strings stretched across the width of the stage. In one black-lighted section, the performers' white-gloved hands seem to play the "Eensy, Weensy Spider" as they climb up the strings, then are transformed into a white-on-black version of an old Disney Silly Symphony, where the obsessive synchrony of music and movement has a slightly macabre feeling.
Lamblin has added several new pieces. His amalgamation of a playground turntable and a set of metal pipes spins like a prayer wheel, with Lamblin and Mann curled up in the center. As they shift their weight toward the edges of the base, they slow down, and the rumble of the ball bearings seems lower pitched; when they pull back together, the pitch rises as their bodies do. These simple demonstrations of music physics have a hypnotic quality.
Lamblin's most recent creation takes momentum on a much wilder ride. Suspended above the stage, an aluminum double hoop hung with bells acts as a trapeze and a gyroscope, spinning in two planes simultaneously. With Lamblin riding in the center, stretched out like da Vinci's Vitruvian Man, he makes music through his dancing in a kind of chaotic balancing act.
Lamblin and Mann call their work "physical music," and the evening's most powerful moments are when they are totally involved in making music from a pair of metal bowls or a Styrofoam cooler. When they put down the instruments, they lose that sense of intention as their movement becomes "just" dance. The work doesn't have the gimmicky feel of Stomp or Blue Man Group, but as section follows section, most of them resolving in a slow deceleration and a blackout, we could use some kind of connecting thread to make sense of the collection of sounds and images.