Friday, March 19, 2010

Playlist FSB 19.03.2010

Hawksley Workman - Song for Sarah Jane
Bell Orchestre - Stripes
Jay Malinowski - There's a light, Narceritos
Interview with Brad McNeil and Al Connors of Crush Improv - Monday All-Star Make-em Ups @ Cajun Attic 7:00 pm  with the Canadian Improv Games judges
Meredith Luce (Sunday @ the Manx Pub) - Lawnmower Dogs, Pennies in the woods
Joel Leblanc Quartet - Third and goal
Beautiful Nubia - Coming Soon
God Made Me Funky - Phantastik, On the line
Interview with Deniz Berkin & Matt Clark of IFCO - IFCO Winter Gala, March 20th Library and Archives
Jason Collett - Rave on sad songs
Elizabeth Shepherd Trio - What Else, the Taking (tomorrow night @ Mercury Lounge)
Hawksley Workman - (We are no) Vampire bats

Review: Rachid Ouramdane's (Loin....) @ NAC

Last night I witnessed my first performance where the audience booed a professional dance performance at Canada's capital arts institution, the National Arts Centre - and I can't say it wasn't entirely undeserved.

The 55-minute long programme addressed the issue of torture and its effect on families, memories and cultural identity. It travels from Algeria to Vietnam and America. From a purely information point of view, it was interesting. Artistically, it was stunted. The performance incorporated a lot of media but was really a mish-mash of half-baked ideas and soundbites: spoken word, interviews and soundtracks on film. The coolest feature was the rotating loudspeakers on stage. The problem is that the audience was there to see dance, not a movie. The lame, repetitive movements contained contrast but were not overly original or lead to progression. In fact, the constant picking up of microphones or clicking foot pedals was distracting, but not as distracting as the subtitles that accompanied the quick and monotone recitation of poetry.

The statement the choreographer, Rachid Ouramdane, was trying to make was not best executed, perhaps, with a single person on stage, either. Lines and character were not well-defined. One audience member commented that the accompanying film provided some momentary relief from the movement on stage with its backdrops of landscapes and faces, but in doing so detracted from the point of assembling at the Studio: to watch great contemporary dance, which this piece certainly was not, despite considerable investment by the French government and others.

Friday, March 12, 2010

FSB Playlist 12.03.2010

K-OS - Dance in your car
D'bi.young - Animal Farm (performing in Bloodclaat @ The GCTC)
Ana Miura - Dragonfly, La Dee Da
Ryan Mitchell-Boch - Leaving this world behind
Harry Manx - Running in my heart
Urinetown the Musical - Cop Song
Interview: Natasha Royka (Choreographer) & Matt Minter (Director), Sock 'n Buskin Presents Urinetown: The Musical
Urinetown the Musical - It's a Privilege to Pee
The Polymorphines - Let Love Fly, bring your love back home
BBC News
Interview: Chelsea & Phil from Insensitivity Training Improv Troupe talking about the Ottawa Improv Festival March 11-14
Joanna Chapman-Smith - Urbanity, Arbitrary Lines
Jason Collett - Rave on Sad Songs
Interview (re-air): Von Allan talking about his graphic novel, the road to god knows where, launching @ Perfect Books Sunday 4-7 p.m.

Monday, March 8, 2010

The View from Here: Fall on your knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald

What's a girl to do with a day off that she's too sick to enjoy? Blog, of course.

I will endeavour to keep these reflections on Ann-Marie MacDonald's Fall on Your Knees coherent in spite of the two days' worth of decongestants, plugged ears and periodic sneezing and wheezing.

In the last two years, I have come to detest modern tragedies. I am talking about the drivel generally found on Oprah's book lists: hard-core dramas full of barely likeable characters where circumstance, not choice, is the order of the day: think Million Little Pieces meets White Oleander. It was with grim hesitation I picked up Fall on Your Knees at a recent book-swap party. It had received a dozen respectable accolades and the jacket's promise of a jazz-era story lured me. However, once I had read the first hundred pages, I could foresee the same withered hopes, the same trite enabling, pity, guilt and curses only parents could wield upon their own children. I expected to put it down out of sheer boredom. But I didn't.

This book is written more like a poem than a novel. Sentences are short and sometimes choppy. MacDonald plays with memories and re-creates scenes to project characters' perceptions directly into the heads of her readers, so if we see through Frances' eyes, sometimes we do not recognize the difference between the reality and fiction within the story.

 MacDonald also plays with olfactory senses without cumbersome exposition. The smell of the hidden cedar box and the memories it instantly conjures is expressed in a five word sentence; the disgusting taste of stuffed cod heads, contrasted with memories of tabbouleh or the horrific snip snip of steak and kidney pie is pungently concise. The sensory overload I enjoy about poetry keeps me engaged in the novel.

The changing perspective swirls memories, prejudices, anxieties in a constantly evolving and fresh way that is sorely lacking in books like White Oleander, which allows the reader to gradually uncover the story. I feel as if my veins conduct the electricity that emanates from the characters, and I am electrified over and over. With each sentence, I yearn for the thrill of MacDonald's language.

In contrast to the language in which they are encased, the characters are not all that interesting, despite the tangibility of their feelings. I am not reading the book to find out what happens to them, which I think is an obvious drawback. They grow up in a circumstance of frustrated and stunted success for women in North America, a baggage  I know continues to beat up generations to come. James' character is stalwart but generally flat and it was predictable that Frances would be the woman to sell herself. Boooooring. I find myself asking, "why is the end tragedy of a woman always the selling of herself?" I am tired of the oppression, selling, sex and shame cycle that plagues women in this genre. In fact, I would argue that I have become desensitized to its overuse by authors and that it is an impediment to my ability to relate to the character, rather than an effective force of empathy or realism. Why are these antiquated terms of honour still salient in the modern novel, supposedly being largely consumed and tolerated by a predominantly female readership?

I have a third of the book to finish. Despite its flaws, I look forward to being transported to the end by its crisp and poetic language.

Friday, March 5, 2010

FSB Playlist 05.03.2010

The Hilotrons - Lost in yichang
Amos the Transparent - the love you had for the life you choose
Blackie & the Rodeo Kings - Swingin from the Chains of Love
Joanna Chapman-Smith - Melodies, Paris Song
Kevin Fox - The Signs
Good 2 Go - Accessorize
Missy Burgess - We all ride the same train
Amos the Transparent - Can you remember how it feels to be free?
Sarah Slean - Hopeful Hearts
Ghost is Dancing - September '01, The darkest spark
Bop Ensemble - Flower
BBC News
K-OS - Equalizer (Go! Remix)
Rascalz - Fitnredi
Misteur Valaire - Press2
Delhi2Dublin - Supafunkadholic
Klezfactor - The Jewce
Hugo Torres-Cereceda - Amor Por la Vida, Me voy al Sur
Nomadic Massive - Nou La
Wio-K - Sunlight
Harry Manx - Afghani Raga