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The trick seems to be to craft dance material that embodies the self-identified monumental nature of the music, to find the kinetic equivalent of a power chord. In "I'm Italy Now," Juliet Waller Pruzan recites the lyrics from Ozzy Osborne's "Crazy Train" with manic zeal, like someone learning fractured English from MTV, but her teeth-chattering, full-body vibration is a dead-on physical expression of feedback. Like Cardiff, she eats up the dancing space, matching the freedom of an extended guitar solo with long strides across the floor. A final trick, pretending to eat the head off an extra in a bat costume, is a silly coda to an otherwise powerful transformation.
Alex Martin's "no big thing" deftly comments on female stereotypes in both rock and roll and feminist scholarship. Her trio of students at "Buttrock State University" prance cheerfully to Van Halen's "Hot for Teacher" while "professor" Laura Curry gives adulatory comments on Lita Ford. Martin's choreography takes the kittenish postures from the original videos and animates them in a larger space, making the panting students into powerful women.
Most of Buttrock Suites II has the happy feel of a big party, with loud music and plenty of beer, but parts of it manage to get inside that music, underneath the spandex and big hair and show us its ongoing vitality.