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Pianist Joyce Yang, choreographer Jorma Elo bring Schumann to dancing life with Aspen Santa Fe Ballet

A scene from an Aspen Santa Fe Ballet open rehearsal in March at the Aspen District Theatre with pianist Joyce Yang.
Anna Stonehouse/The Aspen Times

IF YOU GO …

What: An Evening with Pianist Joyce Yang, presented by Aspen Santa Fe Ballet and the Aspen Music Festival and School

Where: Aspen District Theatre

When: Friday, Aug. 10 & Saturday, Aug. 11, 8 p.m.

How much: $36-$94

Tickets: Wheeler Opera House box office; aspenshowtix.com

More info: The program will feature Jorma Elo’s ‘Half/Cut/Split’ and performances of Jiri Kylian’s ‘Return to a Strange Land’ and Nicolo Fonte’s ‘Where We Left Off.’ Yang will perform live for all three ballets. aspensantafeballet.com

Pairing one of the world’s great concert pianists, Joyce Yang, with the versatile dancers of Aspen Santa Fe Ballet and the ingenious choreographer Jorma Elo produced one of the more astounding premieres in the dance company’s history.

The collaborative “Half/Cut/Split” blew away a local audience when it premiered here in March, bringing Robert Schumann’s “Carnaval” to stirring life.

This ballet, and Yang, are back for a two-night encore during the height of the summer classical music season in Aspen this weekend for an evening of live piano by Yang accompanying the Elo piece, which is the centerpiece of a three-ballet program.



Yang’s concerts at the Aspen Music Festival and School have become can’t-miss summer events over the past 12 years. Elo, likewise, has created works that have been a cornerstone of the Aspen Santa Fe Ballet repertoire over the past two decades.

This milestone collaboration between two of Aspen’s most revered artists began with Yang, who loves dance and had a wild idea.




The Grammy nominee and Avery Fisher Career Grant recipient and much in-demand concert pianist is also a devoted ballet-goer. She has long wanted to find a way to collaborate with a choreographer. The idea for this project began taking form a few years ago when she saw Aspen Santa Fe Ballet perform at the Joyce Theatre in New York.

“I was like, ‘This is it exactly!’” Yang recalled last summer on the tail end of two weeks working and rehearsing in the Aspen Santa Fe studio. “This would be my dream scenario, to work with them, because they are so versatile.”

Through friends at the Aspen Music Festival, she met with Aspen Santa Fe Ballet directors Jean-Philippe Malaty and Tom Mossbrucker. It was not the usual way to embark on a new ballet, but they were excited to work with Yang.

“Usually it’s the ballet company or choreographer going after the musician, not the other way around,” Malaty said.

The ballet directors immediately suggested Jorma Elo as an ideal collaborator for the pianist. Elo plays the piano himself and is known for the deep connections between music and movement in his works.

He and Yang met for the first time last spring, over a piano, at Steinway Hall in New York to discuss Yang’s ideas about Schumann and “Carnaval.” They clicked creatively and got to work.

“Carnaval” is at times joyful, and has notes of humor in it, but it’s also about Schumann’s psychic pain and his struggle with mental illness. The composer suffered from multiple personality disorder and composed as various personalities. Elo captures that duality in the dancers’ movement, aiming to find the tension between joy and madness.

“There’s an underlying stressful, unpleasant place in this music,” Elo said. “That’s there all the time. So, how can I make choreography to match that and maybe enhance that even more?”

Schumann’s piano piece consists of 24 short and distinct movements. Each has its own tempo and temperament, meant to represent carnival characters alongside some of Schumann’s personalities. This unusually hectic and scattershot structure posed a challenge, and presented an apparent structure, for Elo’s choreography. He has crafted sort of mini-ballets, in 11 distinct sections, for each of the movements while trying to make them cohere.

“That’s how the music is written, in these split-personality sequences,” Elo said. “But there should be something more unifying from the whole.”

Elo also made some inspired choices incorporating the pianist and the piano into his dancers’ movement. At one point in “Half/Cut/Split,” Aspen Santa Fe Ballet company member Anthony Tiedeman leans against Yang’s piano and gazes at her for several beats, then drops his head comically onto the piano housing. This moment of whimsy, breaking down the wall between the worlds of the musician and the dancers, drew audibly gleeful gasps at the premiere.

For Elo, Aspen has long been a place of creative discovery. He has worked with some massive companies through the years, including New York City Ballet and the Bolshoi Ballet. Collaborating with the smaller company in Aspen and finding new ideas here has been key to Elo’s practice.

“It’s like a cocoon of creative space,” Elo said of Aspen Santa Fe Ballet.

Yang has been playing “Carnaval” at recitals over the past 10 years and has studied its labyrinthine intricacies and mysteries deeply. But seeing how the Aspen Santa Fe dancers react to the music — with a dancer’s visceral and physical response, rather than a musician’s analytical ear — has changed the way she hears it.

“They’re making me do new things every day,” she said. “I don’t even think of it the same way anymore. It’s transformed so much. … It’s a new landscape to familiar music. It’s mind-boggling to me.”

Watching Elo work with the dancers, Yang said, was also a revelation. She studied closely as he made adjustments on dancers and gave them steps and movements — often working in silence for long periods — and then she was amazed when she began playing and found those movements worked perfectly in time with Schumann’s music.

“It’s as if somehow he can slow down time in his mind and create one move at a time,” said an astonished Yang. “It’s like watching some weird miracle happen day after day.”

atravers@aspentimes.com

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