Alvin Ailey leaves us in a daze

Dance Dance Revelations
By CASSANDRA LANDRY  |  April 30, 2012

AAADT-in-Alvin-Ailey's_main

Anyone who has seen them — dance enthusiast or not — can tell you that Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is a feverish love poem to the human body. Performing at the Wang Theatre through April 29, their arrival has sparked a palpable magnetic pull in the Theater District.

Rather than tell you about the minutia of the choreography, something that only holds meaning when seen in the moment, I can instead speak to the emotions that pulsed off the stage last night. Attempting to take notes, even blindly scribbling in the dark while I watched the stage, became laughable the second the music began to ebb from the speakers. I couldn't move, breathe, much less try to formulate feeling into words on a page in my lap. This is exactly the way Alvin Ailey is meant to be experienced.

The programs change each evening, and due to sheer luck, we were treated to "Home," the latest from choreographer Rennie Harris, and the newest addition for a company whose signature number was first performed in 1960. Taking its inspiration from a "Fight HIV Your Way" photo/essay contest run by the pharma company Bristol-Myers Squibb, it's a heart-achingly complex piece, full of explosive, hip-hop-infused energy and release. (I can't help noticing how ripped every dancer is. I make a mental note to do extra crunches this week.)

The curtain drops, and we're all left catching our collective breath before it rises again to show a dancer standing alone. "Takademe" is a solo piece, composed in artistic director Robert Battle's living room in the late 1990s, and set to the primal spoken song, "Speaking in Tongues II," by Sheila Chandra. The combination is the single most accurate physical embodiment of sound and silence I have ever witnessed, and I'm left staring at dancer Kirven James Boyd in disbelief for all of three minutes and twenty seconds. He has transformed himself into a molecule of the music, all frenetic movement and rollicking motion.

"The Hunt," another piece from Battle, is startlingly aggressive. It's just six men on stage, in a composed war dance, alternately fighting each other and joining together in circles shot through with screaming bursts of adrenaline and testosterone.

Everything up to this point has been magnificent, but we all know why we're really here, and as the lights come up for the last time, the crowd bursts into applause, unable to contain their anticipation.

Everyone and their mother will tell you that Revelations is perfection. I'd seen snatches of the choreography throughout my life as a dancer — sinewy company dancers reaching for the sky in a tight clump, center stage — but was completely unprepared for what was about to happen. I should preface this by saying that I'm not a religious person. Spirituality, however, I can relate to, and "spiritual" is the only thing I can come up with to encapsulate the ups and downs of founder Alvin Ailey's claim to fame. The whole of "Revelations" is composed like the greatest album in your collection, in that it rises and falls in all the right places. Each section is a study in athletic control and pure, unadulterated motion; the trust and observable connection between the dancers of "Fix Me, Jesus," a duet of the first movement, brings a weird catch in my throat, and "Sinner Man," is quick, catchy, and shows off the sheer technical skill the group is known for.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Review: Alvin Ailey's Revelations headed to PPAC, Happy returns, Offerings, More more >
  Topics: Dance , Dance, Alvin Ailey, Rennie Harris,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY CASSANDRA LANDRY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   DIY DRINKING: HOUSE-MADE INGREDIENTS ARE RAISING THE BAR  |  March 12, 2013
    "When I moved to Boston," UpStairs on the Square bar manager Augusto Lino explains, "it was uncommon for bars to have anything house-made beyond a large container of vodka filled with pineapple on the back bar."
  •   FRESH BLOOD: MEET BOSTON’S NEW CULINARY MUSCLE  |  February 21, 2013
    Whether behind the line of a critically acclaimed kitchen, holed up in a basement pumping out some of the best nosh in the city, or braving Boston’s pothole-filled roads to bring you ass-kicking bites, these chefs are fast becoming ones to watch.  
  •   THE STEEP ASCENT OF TEA CUVÉE  |  February 13, 2013
    We've all been told that once upon a time, angry Bostonians dumped three shiploads of English tea in the harbor to protest taxes, but let's be real here — it was probably just really shitty tea, and they were doing what any of us would do when continually plied with subpar beverage choices.
  •   BEE’S KNEES TAKES FLIGHT: CHEF JASON OWENS READIES HIS GOURMET GROCERY  |  February 04, 2013
    "There was a bit of a setback with the wood for the floors," Jason Owens says, a facemask hanging from his neck and a trucker hat perched on his head, his easygoing Nashville drawl rising above the sound of electric saws.
  •   THE CHALLENGE? TURN VALENTINE’S CANDY INTO HAUTE CUISINE — NO DESSERTS ALLOWED  |  February 04, 2013
    As adults, we find ourselves missing those halcyon years when Valentine's Day was just a Halloween knock-off with no pressure and lots of processed sugar.

 See all articles by: CASSANDRA LANDRY