Saturday, August 17, 2019
Notes on Cry Essay
The danceââ¬â¢s intent is to portray the struggle & strength of the African American women who were in the slave trade; how women so enslaved & trapped can still manage to be so free. ââ¬Å"I heard about lynchingââ¬â¢s, Having that kind of experience as a child left a feeling of rage in me that I think pervades my workâ⬠Alvin Ailey. ââ¬Å"She rises again to wear the cloth as a shawl, then steps on its ends as if bound by it to the groundâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ ââ¬Å"The final posture mirrors the opening posture of the dance, suggesting a cyclical inevitable progression of frustration and despairâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ Ailey has abstracted this narrative to portray the womanââ¬â¢s despair. BEEN ON A TRAIN The use of the percussive piano accents in relation to movement. For example, the dynamic emphasis of the gestures Ailey uses. ââ¬Å"The power of Cry emanates from its defiantly shifting images of identity in its first section, the bottomless abyss of sorrow approached in its second section and the transcendent quality of ecstatic faith engaged in the third section.â⬠ââ¬Å" Cry became emblematic as an act of simultaneous defiance and release. As a depiction of contemporary African Americanà identity, the dance liberated audience and dancer in itsà modernistic layering of movement genres, especially itsà conspicuous use of neoAfricanà body part isolations.â⬠In this work there are three distinct sections and for each new section, there is a new song that is played. The songs used in this work are ââ¬ËSomething About John Coltraneââ¬â¢ by Alice Coltrane, ââ¬ËBeen On A Trainââ¬â¢ by Laura Nyro and ââ¬ËRight On. Be Free.ââ¬â¢ by The Voices Of East Harlem. In a couple of these songs the word ââ¬Ënorthââ¬â¢ is used quite a bit. My personalà interpretation is that these slaves perhaps saw freedom and/or refuge in North America, wished to be there but something stopped them.à She clearly demonstrated Aileyââ¬â¢s motherââ¬â¢s struggles as well as any other African American womanââ¬â¢s struggles at the time as a slave to their fight for freedom.
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