poster image for Songs for a siren

Songs for a siren

for orchestra

Ballet for Joseph Hernandez, the Semperoper Ballett and the Sächsische Staatsoper Dresden

  • Orchestra
  • Ballet
  • Once he hears to his heart’s content, sails on, a wiser man.
    We know all the pains that the Greeks and Trojans once endured
    on the spreading plain of Troy when the gods willed it so –
    all that comes to pass on the fertile earth, we know it all!

    — Homer, Odyssey. 12.188–91, Fagles’ translation.

    Knowing all is knowing nothing. Knowing some is akin to knowing much, but often not enough.

    “Songs for a siren” is a work that deals, compositionally and choregraphically, with states of being most closely tied to loss: anger, grief, numbness, destruction, creation.

    In ancient Greek tragedy, the choir recites verses of an ode, one after another, traversing the stage. The first stage of their recitation, the strophe, has them processing from east to west: the first statement, of praise. Second follows the antistrophe: the procession from west to east, where the chorus replies with a somber return. The last bit, the epode, is sung as an attempt to reconcile the former arguments while walking toward you, the listener.

    The folk singer Tim Buckley wrote a “Song to the siren,” where he pleads,

    Here I am, waiting to hold you

    Collaborators

    Joseph Hernandez, Choreographer

    Yannick Cosso, Scenographer

    Jordan Pallagès, Scenographer

    Performances

    Labyrinth

    Semperoper Ballett
    Nov 03 – Nov 26 2018
    Semperoper Dresden
    Performers
    Nathan Fifield, Conductor
    Sächsische Staatskapelle Dresden
    Program
    George Balanchine, “Four Temperaments”
    Martha Graham, “Errand into the Maze”
    Ohad Naharin, “Black Milk”
    Joseph Hernandez, “Songs for a siren”
    Reviews

    Ritual and myth in the Labyrinth mixed bill from Dresden’s Semperoper Ballett

    Maggie Foyer

    Songs for a Siren updates the theme of ritual and tribal energy to today’s contemporary dance within a timeless setting. The set, a crater down which dancers slide to enter the arena and an extended lip to create a second level stage add interesting complexity. The commissioned score by Barret Anspach is appealing, ranging from folksy interludes to pounding rhythms of driving intensity.

  • poster image for Songs for a siren

    Songs for a siren

    for orchestra

    Ballet for Joseph Hernandez, the Semperoper Ballett and the Sächsische Staatsoper Dresden

  • Orchestra
  • Ballet
  • Once he hears to his heart’s content, sails on, a wiser man.
    We know all the pains that the Greeks and Trojans once endured
    on the spreading plain of Troy when the gods willed it so –
    all that comes to pass on the fertile earth, we know it all!

    — Homer, Odyssey. 12.188–91, Fagles’ translation.

    Knowing all is knowing nothing. Knowing some is akin to knowing much, but often not enough.

    “Songs for a siren” is a work that deals, compositionally and choregraphically, with states of being most closely tied to loss: anger, grief, numbness, destruction, creation.

    In ancient Greek tragedy, the choir recites verses of an ode, one after another, traversing the stage. The first stage of their recitation, the strophe, has them processing from east to west: the first statement, of praise. Second follows the antistrophe: the procession from west to east, where the chorus replies with a somber return. The last bit, the epode, is sung as an attempt to reconcile the former arguments while walking toward you, the listener.

    The folk singer Tim Buckley wrote a “Song to the siren,” where he pleads,

    Here I am, waiting to hold you

    Collaborators

    Joseph Hernandez, Choreographer

    Yannick Cosso, Scenographer

    Jordan Pallagès, Scenographer

    Performances

    Labyrinth

    Semperoper Ballett
    Nov 03 – Nov 26 2018
    Semperoper Dresden
    Performers
    Nathan Fifield, Conductor
    Sächsische Staatskapelle Dresden
    Program
    George Balanchine, “Four Temperaments”
    Martha Graham, “Errand into the Maze”
    Ohad Naharin, “Black Milk”
    Joseph Hernandez, “Songs for a siren”
    Reviews

    Ritual and myth in the Labyrinth mixed bill from Dresden’s Semperoper Ballett

    Maggie Foyer

    Songs for a Siren updates the theme of ritual and tribal energy to today’s contemporary dance within a timeless setting. The set, a crater down which dancers slide to enter the arena and an extended lip to create a second level stage add interesting complexity. The commissioned score by Barret Anspach is appealing, ranging from folksy interludes to pounding rhythms of driving intensity.